Earth's Noblemen. W'r* of that band that till the land. And draw from earth her *tor. Right happy iniiwd la the life load. While our day* are pausing o'er. Many there are in rich** far Surpaaaing the farmer'* pnr*c, While other pur*nit* may field more fruit*. Yet often produce much wore. We envy not the etatemnan'* lot, Still olamortitg for hi* dam, Nor hi* that light* far glory * right*. At norne redoubted pai>. No risk hare e on boiateron* nee. No fear* leet teuixwt whelm And we pi wee** without redreaa. While laboring at the helm. The frnitfnl field in boantiea yielda, A rich reward for toil; Re onra Uie trade to ply the apade. And deeply plow the aoil; We walk abroad oar carpet *oJ, And floweret* kia our feel, Whoee odor* n*o to aoent the akiee - A tribute pure and tweet. To all we giro the mean* to lire, A* brother where* with brother. And thu* fulfill the holy wtU That hid* u* lore each other. Oh, life aecure from guile, and pure. To thee our lore cling* ever, With all it* might end fond delight - To change from thee, no, never t FARM. HARDEN' AM) HOrSEHOLII. SMMHMI lllat* lar tk* fua. Top dressing at this season, with any tlriug but the very finest ami best ma nun\ except on m*l for cwu, is a waste of time aud labor. The effect comes too laU to benefit the crop. Some active commercial fertiliser should be used instead. For grass or wheat one hundred and fifty pounds of nitrate of soda, or the same of guano, per acre, would lie a good dressing. In using commercial fertilisers, it is well to make experiments as to quantities and va rietiss for different soils and crop*. Foj the coru crop we have found the sooner the plauting is done after the plowing, and while the soil is moist and fresh, the bettor. A top dressing of IMMX' manure upon the sod would bo au excellent preparation for this crop. Many Western fanners lis TO msd< flax a profitable crop, the seed l>eing in demand at the oil mills at good prices. It is a useful crop to mellow and clean the soil, and may precede fall wheat with advantage. A bushel and a half of seed per acre may be sown this month upon a corn stubble. liaise the beet calves, and thus gradu ally raise the quality of their herds. A good calf is well worth a month's fresh milk, and if their coming was timed for April, they could have the April milk, and the dairymen be richer and they the l>et tor for it Early lambs should be pushed for ward for market by giviug extra food to the ewes aud increasing the flow of milk. To feed the lambs meal or other food, for which their stomachs are as yet unprepared, binder* their growth. Ton pigs may be pushed as fast as possible. When a week old they mo be taught, without difficulty, to drink milk from a shallow pan, and in doing this the young animals maybe tsmed and rendered perfectly docile. To have tame aud tractable animals about the farm will add much to their value, and the ease and comfort in tending them. Feed the nursing sows well, and keep them warm. The roller should be osed with judg ment. it is a valuable implement, but sometimes it is used injuriously. It is most effective upon dry soils ; when the soil is damp clods are easily crushed, but the surface is packed and crusted. M.adows, on the contrary, should be rolled while moist and soft, that stones and rough places may be pressed into the soil, and the surface leveled for the mower. Fall grain may be rolled with advantage the day after it is harrowed, if rain has not fallen. In purchasing tools and implements those that are lightest, other things be ing equal, should be chosen. To handle a heavy tool is a waste of muscle, now that steel is in universal use for the best kinds. Even a hoe should be aharp and bright to be most effective, and in a mower a doll knife will double the draft. This is equally trr.e of horse power machines and of hand tools.— ApriculturiiM. Sw*fikl>i A beat Apple*. 8. E. Todd said before the American farmers' club : The standard by which the qualities of a.i apple is judged con sists of the binte and flavor of certain apples which have been pronounoed by consent of pomologists to be the best. Best represents the acme of excellence in superior taste and in aromatic flavor. The antithesis of best is represented by poor, or very poor. Between these two standards there are other standards, such as fair, good, very good, good to best, and almost best. By common agreement, the Newtown pippin, the Esopus Spitzenburg, Early Joe, King of Tompkins County, Wagoner, Peck's Pleasant, and some other varieties haTe been designated as the best, as for taste and aromatic flavor. If one smells and tastes a Newtown pippin at a period when this variety is in its beet season, he wiil be able to understand what con stitutes the highest standard or best, when judging of the quality of any va riety of apples. I*he Northern Spy is judged to be very good to l>est. The Fameuse is al most best. The Red Winter pippin, Red Afdrachan, Ben Davis, Swaar, Early Harvest, and acme others are ranked as good to very good. The Bald win, Rhode Island Oreening, Yellow Bell Flower, and Wine Sap, are ranked as very good. The White Astrachan and Red Winter Calville are ranked as poor apples. From poor, the gradation de elioes to very poor, wo. 1 Mass cider ap ples, which neither man nor beast will eat unless half famished. Now, if one desires to determine whether an apple is one of the best varieties or not, let him procure a few Newtown pippins, or Esopus Spitzenburgs, when these va rieties are at their best season, and then compare the taste and flavor of the varieties named. A competent judge of the nuality of an apple must be possess ed of an educated taste and olfactories. Pomologists cely quite as much on the sense of smell as taste when testing fruit If a score or more known varie ties of good and best t >ples were min gled with inferior varie ies, and all were plaoed in a dark room, it would not be difficult to select every one of the good varieties, and identify them all correctly, simply by tho taste and sme 1L With only my limited experience with apples, I feel confident that I could do this without making one mistake. The Heuekeeper. To DBIVE AWAT ARTS. —Put red pep per in the places the auts frequent the most, and scrub the shelves or drawers with strong carbolic soap. COOKIES. —Two-thirds cupful of but ter, half a cupful of milk, one egg, one teaspoonful of soda dissolved in the milk, four cupfuls of flour, nutmeg to taste. RICH JUMBLES. —One cup of butter, three cups of sugar, eight cups of flour, six eggs, one teaspoonlful of soda, two of cream of tartar, one grated nutmeg. Roll tolerably thin, form in rings, and bake on fiat tins. WHITE POTATO PIE. —For one good sized pie take half pound potatoes, boil and mash, and while hot squeeze one half a lemon into it, with a good sized piece of butter; add one cupful white sugar, two or three eggs, half tea- and grate nutmeg on top of pie.*, -i Wans ll RABKBIT.— Cut a pieoe of bread about six by three inoheH ; take off the crust, toast it and butter it on one cide ; cut a slice of rich cheese of the thickness of the bread and sufficient to cover the bread ; place it before a char fire at an angle of forty-five degrees, where it will toast briskly. STEWED BEEF.— Take two poands of raw beef, cut it in inch-square pieoes, put in a saucepan, and cover with cold water ; let it cook, slowly for four hours, •* then the gravy will be rich, brown color ; dredge sufficient flour in to thicken Uie gravy, add ealt and pepper to taste, and serve; it liked, two onion* may lie added when half done, but it ia very niee without. Mprlna riewlan. We always advise plowing the laud once, at least, and in aome cane* twice, in Uie spring before planting. This work should not be done until the ground has become rather dry, MI Uist as the earth i turned over, it may tie well pulveriaed, and made flue for the plants that aro to be grown. We have seen ground plowed early before it wotiM reatlily fall apart, and there would l*i luuqis left that would remain sometimes through Uie season. We have observed that oil sncii land Uie crops do not thrive as on similar land treated in Uie right way. We prefer raUier de

*k la xheep. A farmer discovered a year ago that a lot of his sheep had this disease. The first thing he knew, they lost their wool, so that bv shearing tune they were almost bare, llaviug heard of tobacco as a cure, and failing with other reme dies, he procured some thirty or forty pounds of the leaves, and boiled it up in a great kettle. When cold, he poured the liquor into a large tub, and, after shearing, plunged each sheep that was affected by the scab into it up to the neck, and then turned them our to pas tore. The liquor must be strong enough to change the color of the wool to a light red, aud, according to this man's experience, they will be cured, not oulv of the scab, but if the lambs are dipped too, of all the ticks. Stalks of tobacco, cut up and boiled the same as the leave*, will do equally well. Among the Sharks. A large lifelnsU, eroaeiug the bar o( the San Joan river, upset, pr cipitatiug the crew, consisting of two officers and ten men, int v > the water, the ttoat being turned upside down. •' 1 ft-lt," says the narrator, " that my life was not "worth half an hour's purchase. The coxwain to the boat, a weakly man, rose along side of me after the plunge. He was in great terror, and I felt that if the sharks did not liarm him he oouid scarcely reaoh the shore without help; so I encouraged him by telling him I would swim by him, and give him a hand if he felt tired. We were literally in the center of a shoal of sharks, whose black triangular tins we could see on all sides nailing round us. As the beach was quite close ,we first endeavored to make that, but soon discovered that the current was so strong that we made no headway and we were forced to turn toward the boat, which was 150 yards away, drifting out to sea, with the rest of the crew astride on her kctsL There was nothing, how ever, for it but to swim to her, and, aid ed by the strong current, we soon short ened the distance. All this time the sharks were around us, making, 1 fancied, smaller circles, and once or twice I thought I felt something Duch my feet with a rush, as these horrid brutes do before they bite. If it was my imagina tion it was not a great stretch, however, for we hail not got twenty yards ahead of the spot when my companion shrieked, threw up his arms and disappeared be neath the waves. A rush of black fins and their sadden disappearance under "water was the last thing I remembered until I found myself alongside our ship in the steruaheebt of the cutter which had been sent to our rescue. What a Sneeze DM. A sneeze delivered by a draper's assist ant led to an action which was tried liefore the Lambeth county court in England. The plaintiff was in the ser vice of t'ne army and naw co-operative stores, Westminister, in tLe drapery de partment, of which defendant was mana ger. About ten o'clock at night, when assisting to take stock, having a oold in liis bead, he wvi compelled to sneeze. He sneezed ra. ier loudly, for defendant came up to where the plaintiff and others were at work and demanded to know who sneezed. The plaintiff at onoe magnanimously admitted that be was the sneezer, upon which the defendant told him that the next time he wanted to sneeze he must go ontsido and do it. Bhortly afterward the plaintiff felt him self impelled to sneeze again, and, put ting on his overcoat, said to defendant; " Please, sir, I am going ont to sneeoe." He was thereupon told by the defend ant that if he went outside he must go altogether, and, upon his proceeding to do so, the defendant insisted on his re turning the week's wages he had ro oeived a few hours previously, the week's work not expiring until the afternoon of the next day. As he declined to comply with the demand, the defemlant took him by the collar and pushed him down a spiral staircase a flight at a time. He was subsequently man-bed off the prem ises l>etw-en a policeman and the door keeper. He claimed damages for the injuries he had received by his rapid descent down stairs. After several wit nesses had been examined, and the de fendant hail given evidence, tho jury rendered a verdict in favor of the sneezer, for twenty pounds damages. VanderbilFs Career. Cornelius Vanderbilt, iu th" year 1810, when only sixteen years of "age, and New York had but 80,000 people, began his career as captain of a sailboat which used to run from the beach at Whitehall to Staten Island, carrying fassengers at eighteen cents each, 'rom that day to this, through a period of sixty six years, Vanderbilt has been steadily engaged iu carrying freight and passengers by land and sea, by steam boat aud railroad. His first vessel was the Charlotte, launched in 1815, by him self and brother-in-law. With the Charlotte he ooasted to South Carolina. In 1817 he was engaged as captain of a steamer plying between New York and New Brunswick, New Jersey, at which latter place Mrs. Vanderbilt managed a hotel. In 1829, at the age of thirty-five, he was worth $30,000, and determined to start for himself. The first steam boat he ever built was the Caroline, which finally went over the Niagara Falls. To-day those who are most fa miliar with his affairs rate him at from 370,000,000 to $80,000,000. It is under stood that the bulk of his fortune will go to his son, William H. Vanderbilt. Mr. Vanderbilt first married, in 1813, Miss Sophia Johnson, the daughter of a neighbor living near his fathers farm on Staten Island. She bore him thirteen children. He married a second time, at the age of seventy-six, a lady from the South, some forty-five years younger than himself. The old gentleman looks hale and hearty. The monotony of life is wearing. Any change is better thau an empty pocket. Tliu Hunker on IVlutorn' Ink. " Ham you got a game nutter I" said Jake Frtuk U) me one morning lant wyk. at* he cam* omr to our hotue. •' No, I haven't. Wlutt'a U|> uowf" 1 inquired. •' Why, yon *ee, Squire Hunker, that boy of mine, up tu the White Ouka, has got it into hi* head that if he nan mine aome game obiokaua, he oau make hie fortune tu a short time - aaya he Won ten dollar* on a liet last wx>k on a tlghtiu' ooek at a little tad toaouio of liia luigli IHUW had in hi* Imrnyard, and if he had aome smart mater* that would ntand steel every time, he could make more money in a cock pit in one mouth than he oouUl pcddltu' charcoal tu a hull year -and I gtiuM he'a rite. Say* he'* got two pullet* that t* all rite, ami if he can git a ru*ter that in dead game, he would r*im aome chicken* next *ennon Dial would have Uie grit in 'cm, and ho would liet on the White Oak* agin the hull State of Oouuectiout. 1 knew you kept blooded fowl*, and 1 didn't know but you might have Mime of that kind." •* No, 1 don't keep tliat kiud. Why don't yon u*o priuter'a ink I" *" Printer's ink !" exclaimed Jake, " 1 should like u kuow what that has got to do with it. I've heerd of printer a ink for canker worms, but 1 never heard of it for ruster* how d'ye apply it f" ••Just put it in Uie Uookertowu (fa tfttr under the head of Wants like this: " Wanted to buy a yearling cock, warranted dead game, Jacob Prink, Hookertowu, ft." " Never did sich A thing in my life. Taint no use. 1 never read advertise merits, and guess nobody else don't. They're pretty much all doctor stuff. Might l>e some use iu it ef I was a steam doctor." "Ju*t try it," said 1, "and if you dou't hear of roosters ia h-ss than n week, I'll pay the bill." 1 didn't much think Jake would ad vertise, but the notion seemed to work, especially my paying the bill, aud i guecM the thought of getting that ou to me had more to do'with it than his faith in printer's ink. lie made a straight wake for the (hi zettr office, and told the printer to advertise for a game rooter as above, and send the bill to me. The Hookertowu Oajrtits is printed ou Thursday, and distributed to town sub tcribfti "by carrier, and the rest M-nt off by mail. Jake got his paper the atone evening, and for the first time tieguu to look at the advertisement*. It was quite a while Imforo he could find hi* rooster, and when he did it only occupied the space of two lines, and seeuied so ridtcu louslv small that nobody cvmld uotioe it. lie certainly would not have seen it if he hail not known it was there and leen looking for it. lie thought he hail struck Timothy Bunker this time, and would get .square on the horse poud lot trade. Next morning Jake was waked just after daybreak by a loud knock ou uis door. Jake poked his head out of the chamber window, and shouted " who's there t" Hilly Beckham's voice answered from below": *• I saw your advertisement in the paper laal evening, Mr. Friuk, and I thought I'd catch my rooster this morning before he got off the roost, lie has licked in six fights, and will kill any rooster in town. He was a year old last spring, and cos! me ten dollar*. But if you want him for Kier yru can have him for five dollars. If the White Oaks are goin' in this business, I guess I'll sell out." "Couldu't think of giving that," Jake answered, and shut the window iu disgust. He put on his clothes, and while he was kindling his fire in the stove, another rap at the door. lieu Porter had brought up his rooster iu a covered t*u>k< t, said he saw the notice in the paper, and thought he would bring up his black breasted red game, that he would warrant to stand steel, and lick all the roosters in town. The bird oust him fifteen dollars, and he hail made a hundred on him, knowing just how to bet. He could have him for twenty dollars. Didn't care a cent whether he took him or not. Two men were after the bird, and he ouly offered him as a matter of neighborly accommo dation. "Twenty dollars," exclaimed Jake, " that's all a feller can git for a two-year old steer. 1 ain't a fool quite." Jake started to milk lus farrow oow, and on his way to the yard h<- met a boy with a game tiantain cock under his arm, in earnest to selL He admitted the cock was small, but ho was true as steel, and hail whip]>ed Deacon Smith's buff cochin, five times his weight, in a pitched battle. He hated to part with iiini, but would soil for three dollars cash on the nail. When Jake had done milking, be fonud ftt the barnyard bars two more boys waiting for him. one with a cock in a bag, and the other with a bird under his arm. They were only ooinmon roosters, and Jake declined to bar. As he came ont from breakfast, and was going to yoke the cattle, Mike Flaharty met him with a dresaed fowl in a basket—"And sure it was a dead-game rooster that ye were wantin', and I thought Mistress Friuk might bo hav ing company to dine, and I brought him up airly." .Take thought there was a difference between a dead game cock anil a cock dead, bnt failed to make Mike see it, and he went off in a pet. He now started ou his sled for the wood lot, and was hailed seven times in Hook ertown stri-et abont that "dead game raster." It seemed as if every man had rooster on the brain, and the boys roos ter on the tongue. He l*-giui to think Hookertown had done nothing else but breed game birds for the last few years. Saturday he went down to the grocery store, where they keep the post office, for a jug of molasses, and Colonel Sixer, the ]Kjstmater, told him he had some letters, which was n very rare thing. He thought at ouoe that some of his wife's folks must be sick or dead, espe cially as the letters were all jwmtniarked Shadtown. He was thiuking of a funeral when ho ojiened the first letter, but there was nothing dead but that " game raster.'' Every letter offered gan e birds varying in price from one dollar to twenty. As he opened the eleventh and last letter, and caught sight of that game bird, he dropiied bis s|*nversions. Not one farmer in ten pays out a dollar a year for advertising—either for what he wants or what he line to nell. lie does not read the advertisements in his agri cultural paper if he takes one—and if bo ever ventures upon fine stock of any kind, he grudges a few dollars for prin ter's ink, and sells them to some mid dle-man who advertise and doubles his money. lie thinks fine stock don't pay. Printer's ink would make it pay, and everything else worth raising upon the farm.— Amrrican AgricuUitrint, Two Mothers and Two liahes. Two women in Dos Moines, lowa, gave birth to children in the same room and at the same time. The woman who cared for the little strangeis, bathed and clothed tho'u, and started to present them to their waiting mammas. Then she made the startling discovery that she had inextricably mixed the infants so that sho was unable to decide which was the mother of either. The two mothers cast lots for choice, agreeing that if the children should, when grown, develop family traits sufficiently to identify them they should Ixi exchanged if the selection shonld prove to be in oorrect. The Signal In the Air. The room became so crowded that they bad to procure more seats. There were chairs stowed away in the attic; one of the members went up to hand them dewn; the leader gave out the hymn—"Hold the Fort." The attic floor consisted of the plastering, which constituted the ceiling of the room be low, and just as the choir commenced the first stanza, down came one leg of the unfortunate chair hunter. The choir, however, did not notice the cir enmstanoe, and went on singing: " Ho 1 my comrades, see the signal waving in the air." OUT OF I'llF SHADOW. The Mamanlle atari eta New Yerk Olrl ■ tier tosilrllon ami Pardon. litwtto Jones, a young, well educate,! atul pretty girl, a..uio time aitioo arrived in New Aork city from her mttivo place in the interior of the Hhtle, where nhe lived with her aged }>*roi>U. Hhe hud there fallen in love with it young man of the neightiorhood, who, after du< oourt ship, made proposal of marring*, and they were betrothed. Hut her fatiier opposed the match, and prohibited their marriage, on the ground thai her afllanoed lover waa addicted lo liquor. Her grief and despair were no violent that her tuunl benune alfeobwl, end the onoe gay daughter of the htrttanbohi turned melatieholy, tn>h on strange ways, talked and laughed whimsically, fell into Ilia of alMtracUon, and waa no more herself. For the aake of her mind, and in hope that a change of ncouo and cir ouinatauoaa woul.l bring her out of her condition, hrr father aeiit her to New York city to take up her slav with aoiue relatives. Anxious to earn uerowu live liliood, she quickly found a place an servant for a wealthy family. Hhe had luien there but a few days when she wan accused of atoaliug a gold watch, arrl lifts sskixl to gwuit her arrival. " Futh< r!'* she cried out amid her tears when she saw the face of the venerable old tunc, and the twain, sire and child, wt re or or come. The gray beard told hi* bene factress how he had " wejtt every dav and every night " for the low of h# iUughU*r, ftid how he would take her back to his home in the country to live always with her mother. " Is this the court house where the judge ial" Lixme hail asked, as she aa ceuded the stejwi of the Quaker tuanmon, iu front of which was a hue of carriage* waiting for a fashn-liable marriage which was taking place in the church on the opjHiaite aide of the street, Lixxie was n-assured of her safetr ; but the mar riage was not that of neraelf with her affianced lover. * The pginArch bud hia doughter walked awaj from the lUAUsion through tlie auuAhiDe an J left for the home of her childhood in the interior of New York StAte. —Aim. Too Small to he Whipped. A few d*jß sin on a but T teacher in one of tii primary schools* of Boston WM waited on by a oouplo of mouiU'r* of the school committee ami requested to ox plaiu why she had rxjieHod a little boy from the fchool under her charge, as the child'® parent® had bulged a com plaint ngwinst her for doing ao. She stated that the l>oy watt one of thuae real lefio, mi-vhievons little fellow* upon whom neither threator }u-nmadon had any effect, and that in consequence of bis freak* and jokes the rest of her pu pils were kept in a constant state of re prehensible hilarity, lie was too small to whip, and altogether too annoying ly impish to control by any other raniin, and, therefore, in order that the studies of the other children should not bo in terrupted, ahe ha Haiti of the sensa tional publications inspired by the grood of gain. FOR THE CHILDREN.— Lime and milk, according to tho testimony of an experi enced physician, in a moat useful com pound, not only for infanta, hnt at a later period of life, when tho funotiona of digeation and aaaimilation have been aerioualy impaired. A goblet of milk to which four tablespoonfula of lime water have been added will agree with any person, even when other food ia opprea aive and fails to afford proper nourish ment. HIMIAKf OF SKWN. leiereetlsa Item* ffts Hem* aed tkiMi. The revolution tu lleyti la triumphant. Do minique, Ute tele president, lie* fled. Vloe- I'reaidont tteiueeu end Imequet, the general in command of the government fnmea, have tieeu aiiol ~ DIP ludtetie Democrat* nouil usted Jemr* |). Williams. 11. 0.. fur governor, end e full Hlate ticket The Stale dulngeliou to tit lamia was pledged to liov. Ilaudrk-ka The platform declares fur hard money, oppoeaa uuntracti.iu, helievee In a greenback currency, calls for cuuliuued tuvealtgaUuue. and oppuaee any |ieytueiil of the Confederate debt The Meilean revolutionist* have taken puees*- •h>u of Mler, llie citiaeiie making no resist ance. Ttie itiaurgeiil* having called on Ameri cans lu Now Laredo lo pay a levy, our govorn- Uioot eeut word lu Uie oftloer lu .vsaisaiKt of the Bio Orands department lu prevent Uie enforcement uf the 1evy.,.,. Montane In structed her dolegetee tu the Itepubltoan ua llbual convention tu vote for Mr. Itlatue The Host. 11 /'Uol has been purehaeed by Arcb- Uahup Wil'iauis and J, Boyla o Iteilly Tbay piujxiae tu pay every dollar lu the |x*>r people •ho dopuelted tuonsy in the former pruprle lur's Kaiils. 'The Utter 00-operates A man named Hhuck committed eiuctde by eboouug lu l'hlladelpbla, and hi* wife shortly after took pruasic said with the same result. .... Urwaka lu the Ulratealppt levee uociured lu Darrell pariah, La., and near Hauoihal, Mo., doing incalculable damage ...Nee York city's school rolls for March allowed 111,630 nemos of eoholar* Two rubber* rushed into the Baxter ttprings bank, at Fort Hoot I, Kansas, durlug busiueas hour*, preaeuled ptetola, *tolo #3,000, and •*- caped The Ballon Mauufaoturlng IV)., of Woouaockot, 11. 1, oxtcnaive mill owner*, have made au a*niguui*ut lhair UabUiUee amount ing to over #1.000,000 .... lu four days lu Bagdad there were 146 new case* of the plague auJ seventy-five deaths Ihe dlseeee ha* now appeared cm the left bank of the Tigris ~ Fifteen pilgrims were drowned while crossing Uie river Vteuue, near Pareac, France..., Ten thousand dollars In currency were exchanged for silver at the New York ■ub treasury the first day of the resumption. The total expenee of the Philadelphia expqylUou la put at #3.600.000 A party of whites were attacked by Indians fifty mile* frotu Custer City, in the Black Hills. Two men and a woman were kitted, three men aertoualy wounded, and a colored woman rai ned off. Three broken wagons found In Buffalo flap unheal* that another party had heeu overtaken and ca|>tured by the eavagte. .... Nebraska Democrats apputnled to the ua tloual convention are eutqwrtere of Tilden. Offoubach, lb* opera composer, baa left l'ana for thle Country Colorado aenla bar ltepubhcau delegate* to lb* nfitiocfil oou vwntioii uiuiiouucuj Fire luardtiora were hanged together at Fort Houtii. .irk Three uf tbriii were ChuuUw Indiana, one colored, and the other a white man. There were aereu thouaan J a; oeiaU ra preeeul M -Uie lir-an refuaed to marry Wm Cooper, who had been alteiiUve fur aume udh In be louia. whareapoo be abol her twice and then blew out hla owe hralua. The young wumati died from the wound*. . .The Hp*nteh govern mi-nl announcea that they will not '>■ any dlaUuctioua belaeeo t alhnhcw and I'role* tan la in regard lo chapel* and cemvterlee. a* ha* heretofore been done California'* grain crop prmntaoe to b* unuMadiy good. Fnnl alao look* well ui m.edietrlcia. Tli* iroopa of (ißuoral Mebna lb* revotu- Uonaiy prwudant uf Itunduraa, Central Ameri ca, won badly bnateu by lb* army I'retadcxil of I.eira.and a fa a day* Iheraafler Medina u reported dead ... Hy an i plow lan of gno powdcr Ui a railway tumel la eouraa of cos atmettau, near NeaUi, Huutk W alaa. ibe entire roof fell in, burying the workmen Al lb* tliue of tbl* dupatcli Uniteau dead bodice and a number of wounded bad been recovered ... Numeruti* outrage* by Indian* are ro portad. ...Tba Vrc*de. al FHarvon. N. J., waa destrt'Ted and a number of uatgbborlng etorea injured by fire. Ixm*. 975,000. .. Two carnage ahofi* and mvaral katui vera de stroyed by fire at New Canaan. Conn The kteiboliat camp meettag ground* at Taraiilum, Fa , oootaicung IVO cotugea. many of tlirtn fumtahed. were runted by fire Vitiile four men and a buy were deecendlng a coal abafl at Itrown'a Ntaucn, Mo , in a bu.-ke' the rope broke and the party fall one bun 1 feel. Three of Uie party Were killed out right and Uie other* died eburtly after A twelve-year-old eon of John It Hchermer horu area killed at Schenectady. N. v., by Ui* breaking of a burr aaw with which he waa aawtug w00d.... The bid* for Uie AT* ) liretrJ. Morgan A Company for one hnndred and three cento eeventy-eight and aeven-sixteeitlh hutidredtha The Egyptian troop* bar* begun their homevarJ movement from Abveeinia.. ..lUots have occurred throughout tbe Island of liar twdoea. and an Immense amount of property bs* been deelroyed. The troop* are actively engaged in soppfiMaiag the rioter* wherever they appear. and already more Uiau forty of the latter have been *bot Much dmeatle faction t* eiprtwaed tn England over the bill creating yoeen Victoria vmpre** of India. A landslide 200 by ninety feet occurred In a Rot dont (N. Y.) brickyard, and I workman was cangbt and instantly killed Filaha Berapeou, of Denlrory, Mute, silly seven yean old, was murdered by an ineana eon wtio wee ui the hand* of the sheriff The re-w porta from the seal flab one* In the north of Newfoundland are favorable. From forty thousand to fifty thousand have bees hauled eahoro on that ooaat. FORTY-FOURTH COX WRENS. Tb* Rsslneae el Uesrrsl letereel True*, arte*. •UUTB. The House bill to define the tax on ferment i*l and mall li<|aor* as taken up and passed, witli an amendment providing that nothing in the act shall have the effect to change Uie present rules of the lew respecting evidence in ativ prosecution or suit. Mr. Thunnai) fl>em.x of Ohio, sailed op ttie motion to leoonsider the vote by which the bill in regard to counting the votes for Frmident and Vice-President was |jumd. After some discussion the vote was reconsidered yeas, SI nsy*, 23, and tho bill was plaocd on the ealondar. Mr. Frellnghtirneii fltep ), of New Jersey, called up tho bill in relation to the Japanese Indemnity fund, and eubnuttcd an amendment to atriko Out the ctau*e authonring the Presi dent. after correeponib-uoe Willi the Japatieee government, and in a tnauner aattafactory to it, to tran*fa perpetually unod for the edniwUon of labor in Japan. Agreed to. Mr. Morrill (Rep ), of Vermont, Introduced a bill authoii/ing the *i-<-r*tary of the troaniry , to allow Mr* Minnie Sherman Fitch to rtvoivo free from duty a wedding present from the khedivo of Egypt, and It wax pawed unanl monaly. Mr Sargent (lien.), of Oa'tfomia. *ubmittod tl.e following which wan ordered to be prtnteil lte*olvod, Tliat the Senate recommend to the Pieeidont that he cause negotiation* to be entered upon - ith the Chinese government to effect ru h change in the existing treaty Is-tween the United State* and China aa will lawfully periuit.tho application of restrictions upon the great inthii of t'hineae subjects to this ooutitry. Mr. Booth (Lib.), of Oalifornia. from tho committee on peneioos, report d favorably on the hill to amend section 4 6'JH of the revised statute", <> a* to allow a pcimum of (37 per month to soldier* wiio have lout both an arm ; and a ley, lu place of the (24 pier month now allowed. Placed on the ealondar. Booaa. Mr. Whitehooae (Dem.), of New Yotk, Intro duoed a bill for refunding the interext-bearliig , debt of the United State* into United Stat. * consols hearing four per cent, gold interest and having forty year* to run Referred to the committee on eav* and mean* Mr. Cox (l)om.), of New York, presented the petition of publisher* of New York city aga'unt the excessive rate of the Senate postal billon lunik* and other printed mattar not ntsnt dat etated interval*, and for the rc*'.ortlon if the old rato. Iteforred. • Tho iiouM reniimixl the fconaiiioration of the Floride contented election o*e. and after *OlllO dnci**ion tho rei>ort us* adopted - jee*. 113 : ll*)*. S3—and J. J Fiult-y ss ilodered ontitleJ to'the seat Mr. Singleton (Dom.), of from the committee on appropriations, reported back the Senate amendment* to the Consular and Diplomatic Appropriation lull, and moved that they be non-oonrurred In. Agreed to. Mr. Young (Dem ). of Tennessee, offered a resolution reciUng the uneettlod oonditl in of the Moxioan republic, aud the many outrage" o< minuted on the peraona and property of American citizen* living in the neighborhood of the llio Grande, and requesting the l'resl deut of the United States to order anoh mili tary forre to rendezvous at some nuitable point on tiio Iho Grande aa will be able to enforce existing neutrality laws, to prevent hostilities on the border, and to preserve tho peaceful relations between tho two countries, and also requesting the President to direct thejrwneral of the army lo proceed In ixiraon hi the scene nf III* threatened outbreak, and to tab* auob measures a* may lx> necessary to maintain |>**o* and protect the tumor and dignity of this govern menl Iteferred to tha commute# on foreign affair* Mr. Knott (Dem ), of Kentucky, Introduced a bill to regulate tb> privilege of a writ of habeas corpus in certain rases. which waa re ferred to the Judiciary commute* The llouae rem lined the oonaideratioti of Uio bill to transfer the Indian buroao to the War deparintent, and after some debate tha hUI waa l*eaad yeea, 13V ; nays, V 4 A MAM'FAITI'KIMU NATION. The t eeieantal Kapeetllse as ea Klsmeel Is Ike Ur veieemrel el ear V|n safari ar ise lelrrrsis. There can l>e no reastuutble tloubt thai the UuiUwl Htalns is atrout U> as sttniu a now and |Hiaitiou as g manufacturing nation. Hula few abort years ago, vy< were known sa an agricul tural onintry, having vast tmnentl rt aottrtvna lying idle atul unproduutive. Our itnjvorts of the various metals and of manufactured goods were aotuethtug enormous, we lutve just emerged from a war uusurpaMed in its expenditure of human life, money, and national sub stalliv-, a war ill which the whole loaaaa of b. >tii sidea fell upon one nation and ]>eoph-; and yet niuoe the done of thai conflict, we have made our ilrlrut as a uuuiufacturiug |>eople and mainbaiired a rate of progreas hitherto unparalleled in lite history of nations. To thin fact more than to any other will the Ceuteu uial exposition jruuL Of the sixty acres of ground covered by the exhibi tion buildings, only about twelve acres are devoted to agricultural mad horticul tural pursuits, while there are fourteen acien devoted to the products of ma chinery alone. Time will prohahy show that the markets of the world will be ojienetl to American msuufwcturtww, and the t'cnteuuial ex|iowUuu will do much to bring the demand for our mineral and manufactured products in direct contact with the supply. Tbe more wo examine into this view of our subject, the more impressive it be comes. During the last decade, the prior* of our raw taaU-rml all J labor have ruled exceedingly high; and Jut we have driven foreign steel front our market*. Oar un|M>rUi of ootton uud of nearly ail ottnr manufactured guuda are largely anil ooutiuujoalj on the drw of tu-'ti price*, we developed our uuneral r* •oiuctw and learned to manufacture high class go.Hie, and to spin and weave our own proruudable a* competitors in the world's markets. I hose arc the fact* which evidctien the existence of a feeling that the Centennial will b come the means through which -r elnmnela of trade are to be opened up, and long established markets are to be do**!; and through which, while new custom cm are to be louud, old ones are to be ivrWnly lost. Among the branches of American trade to lie the most largely benefited, we may dcmUleea mention the iron, steel, ma chine, edge tool, saw, agricultural im plement, wood working machinery, gen eral and special tool, timber, and cotton manufacturing industries. Nor will the intelligent foreign visitor fail to per ceive that our remarkable progress in manufacinres is largely due to the com parative liberality of onr patent laws, and Uie encouragement given to inven torn Uirough the progressive character of our people. That the number of visitors to the eihihitou will be Large, the traveling proj>ensitce of Americans are protiably a sufficient guarantee ; that the attendance of the business cwm mum ty will I*> proportiorately larger than at any previous inter* itiuual exhibitiun, there is every rwaa. 1 to presume, for the reason that comp. itinn is here uu usually clogs. Every tradesman con siders it his duty to bo " posted as to his competitor's gmxl* and facilities to carry on hisluisinoss ; the "drummer," as onr genu* of the commercial traveler is facetiously termisl, is a profuse Amenivan institntion ; while an Ameri can housewife scarcely makes a purchase witliout having price*! the doaircd article at two or mere stores. We are eonvincctl that the honors in tlie shape of awards will tx> oagerlv sought, and that their jxsiscamon will largi'lv inflnunce many branches of trade ; while tltelioueflts to be t>e*towcd upon ns by this peaceful industrial monument are st present almost incal culable.— American. The Value of Our Crops for 1*74. Tin' total valnc of all agricultural prtv tlncts in tho United States for tho year 1874 was $2,447,638,869. The products derived, directly and indirectly, from thi' grass crop, are estimated at 81,292,- (**l,ooo, itemized as follows: Hay, 27,- 000,(**) tons, at S2O per ton. $500,000.- •*X); live stock, $l,52o,000,000; animals slaughtered for food, $808,000,000; but ter, $514,000,000; tuiik, s26,(**),(**); wool, $26,000,000; cheese, $6,000,000. The estimated total derived from grass is prolwhly too large, for the reason that the hay crop, the value of which isgiven as one of the items, must have been used to some extent in swelling the other trainee. Htill it is doubtless safe to say, allowing more than half the value of the hay to go to this account, that in ronnd numliers the value of the produc tion* depending upon the grass vield of 1874 was $1,000,000,000. Wearing a Head Man's Nhoes. I f there is any one thing jmrt icuiarly vulgar, it is the practice of poor peoplo openly calculating upon the money they are to receive on tho death of some rich relative. A severe rebuke was adminis tered by the will of A. T. Stewart to the " rotisins-in law by marriage," who have been "swelling," like an expanded frog, for years past, over the " million " they were to get whenever he should die* And now he cuts them off with a pittance, or with nothing. We should think any sensitive man wonld foci himself strongly tempted to disappoint those who, as he is well aware, have lieen long—not to say oager ly—waitiug for his decease in tho ex pcetation of clutching a part of his property. —AVte York Sun. At onr request Cragin 3t Co., of Phil adelphia, Pa., have promised to send any of our readers, gratia (ou receipt of fifteen eents to pay postage), a sample of Dobbins' Electric Heap to try. Send at one*'. * T. J. Megibben, of Paris, Ky., has lost tho short-horn bull Second Dnke of Oneida, for which he paid $12,000 at the New York Mills sale. The cow, the Duchess of Oneida, for which he paid $25,000, had died previously. Pimnlea on the face, rongh akin, ohappeu bands, saltrhenni and all cutaneous affections ourod, the skin made soft and ■month, by the use of .lirNii'RaTAß Soar. That made by Caswell, Hazard &. Co.. Mew York, is the Only kind that can tie relied on, KM there sre many imitations, made from common tar, which are worthless.—C'tmr. |rv.-> Ikt m. 1e.4. two The Narcnufnl Pkjtlrlu. There te probably no man to whom the om muulty owe* eo much ae to the hoe eat, fair spoken pliyateian. who does hie actual duty Im.Ui to titmaatf and to hts patient* fleaily •killed physician* are not eo nttmeruus tliat their vlrtuaa need no mention, and henoe the advertisement uf Ir. U V Pierce uf Buffalo, may well claim the reader* attention. Dr. I'iero* la a type of a elaa* of man who obtain •uouaa* by -areful and wall du acted effort, nut attempting too much, or cteaung false idea* aa lo aUllty The only reliable physician In Uieae day* of complicated disorder* and high pressure living U the "specialist," lha man who understand* lp* one nrauch of tha hiiMlnee*. Huofa in hie line Is Dr. Plaroe. for (he benefit of his reader* he has written a ''Common Hans* MndloaJ Adviser." which la wall worth reading by those who naed ■ooh a work With at net business honor, high pto foeatoiiel aklll, reasonable fees, and a large corps of competent Beat*tenia lr. P-erre will doubtless make hie name fsimilar li ' house hold words" * Y'r.ußTiB.- - Hy its use you will pro vent many uf Uie dlawaew* prevailing In tha spring and summer season. * Ohkmnic liwKasM OuKKih—-In oom uiunities remote frotu larger loam* there eeems tu he but two alter neUv es fur lira atck , either to employ Uie family physMtan or to patronise Use j-alent medicine venders. Those who are driven to IbM extremity. If eaffartog with chronic dlseeee, we would advise tu write to Dr. K 11. Fuurt of ISO Lexington avenue, N. V. Dr. F. is tho noted author of "Plain Home Talk, ' ' Vedieal Coauno* Hens*," "ttcienoe lu Ktufy,' and otliar popular medical works winch have had e wide ctmdaUou ail over the glob*. In Dr. fwe have a physician who has had extensive experience in treating the sick eta dietanoe from hie office, and. moreover, hi* cunanliatlowe are frm. Any an* of oar reed. • is at liberty to oouauH htm with the more uutlay of a puetaga stamp. Ha is sard to have patients at tine moment In Oer maay. Ureal Britain, Liberia. Clunese Empire, end Uie West Indies If patent medtalnee ceo now and than hit snows fully when adcqdad by people who have Uul* kuowledg* at thatr own organisation* ur of their disnsses. how much mure suooeeefully can a physician, after inamuUng all ueooeaarv itqutruw, prepare remedies preoieely suited to the organiaaUuo and dle*ne of tha luvalid, Just ae a tailor cut and flu a ooel to the back. In this mar* important mailer relating lo the health and life of people, there is all the difference which allele between Dhelhem street otothing and that made by a Arwi-daa* tad >r, after taking the most minute mwuramants. Da Four* la a reoognisad suocese in hM epeoalty. * He* nolioe Family Hitters * Important to Penwn* Visiting New Vork or the (eutennlai. The Otoe OnM Hum, New York, oppo aiu the Grand Central depot, baa orer 390 eto garni? fßraialked ruutna. Elevator, auvun. a ma all uud am improvement*. European pits Carnage hifa la aaved. a* baggage ta taken U> Bud from the ilepvt, f of elpouac Thf roSUuranto aappliod villi tii* beat. GueeU oau live better for lea* money at lii* Grand Dtaoti, lliau at any utbar first-class botal. Htage* and car* past lb* hotel constant!) to all part* of the city, and to Fbiladelplua depot Dr.M IIXVtm'N HTAHUAKO KKVfKDIRH. TU aiaa rtarg will* tat all aI Ita lung, *<* atuii'i tn oMuair Siat-r. acasaca** Uu Wast. Teste. aeg Aanon Masi.a*aa mil* as*.lf lfit U- t*a* an twuifta. a tpwti mm kaftan* TV IS a* I lira ■aHltana* Ita J U Sahart. a* Valla, galyfala. ova* fata sarttala* aaaaaai ta Ita lialml a* pulutoukiy dtl— mmm Ttaa Maiak Srt-ap nll a* a to# nertad Malta* ta ttal liuogs . aalara iiirn It *4f by aa aaa* *•!**<*■ I,ki*. tar •tan ta* pfalagta or taataar ta rip* a aSgfai aaagfa artll lArow II *6 ta* rallaal *** Mai lot tba loaga bagta la faaal. TV aual.l* lb* Puliaraeu Bfia* tag* Uta. Intaagi Kachata PUta and AcaaaakW Itaa Waeg Taalc neat la (Mali '..awl lo l*tana, lb* tantaitai aag ttaar HobaeeV* Haudraka PHta as as la* tie. aatanatag all atlre* One*, ralai ta* gall 11, Hm. Ifaa Ml* Malta tuili.M* ta* itver U aaoa rallarag. netaeao*-, Saa Waag Taata ta a rta.ua taHaal,m ul altaeaUee Ita alkali at akk* Uk tiiaiiaa,l bim, (ta taa food an *i *ata aoarta*. ll aaaiau ta* dlrta Una kf lialkg a* ta* Mutaiak ta a kaalifar anadlltaa a Ifaai ta* faed aag ta* l*altaaal brrap will make food u*g. tba ta* taa** h*|. a*t taa paUaat wtll ,a**t| *i call If ear* ta tab** ktmiai tiaafa eold All efao atafa ta *uo*all Of SeSae>. mum pna •allj - ua * k% Lamia 1* * It CVje—Middling lit# lib Fkier -It kit* Wtatarc 111 * T 1 0 gtaln ten I M * 7 CO Wbaal—Mad Woafcra . 1 M # 1 al 1 Mb# 1 Mb Kf*—tit.'*. k # IKb Karl*} euai 1 01 # I ot uarlrj Ma 1 t (w • I M> Jet*—Ml and Waatarn O • 47 Oorsr—Mlkad Waatare...... *7 . I 9 M l etrolwro ibode. t* ggg l.ef.eod, Kb Weel —California n*c* 11 • Term# J # M A v-irallan " ............ *0 0 49 Belter—Slal* . 14 • 17 Wfwlsra Hairy 9 0 1 Weatera Yellow K A eatare thdJnary 1* # 9 Obaaeo—Slate Factory 7b# tab (Sat- Skimmed 04 # trt Waalare Skg 11 . ta-a*t* 'H A I*l ALA4MT mi**!..... 1 17 # 1 97 Rye—Mat* 1 # N Corn M rod k* # *4 BarSej —siel* M J S4 Data—Sla'a # M IMNM. Fleer g #lO SO Wheal - No. I Spring I 19 • 1 M Oorn—Mlvsi..... P g Oat*.. 8* # W Rye M • Darin 71 # 71 •aLVTBOM. Oettao -Low Ulddiiuca..... lib# lib r.otir—Ktlr* * 71 # t 71 Abaal—Rod Wartara I 10 # I 10 Ay 71 0 W Oore—Yallcw ... 10 00 Oato— Mlkad It • 4* IVTro.i ore . 00b# 00b pmanu.pßU. Boat OaUla- Kitre 04 # 07 Kbaep (*%• 07b Hoga— liraeaad 11 S# l?b Ploer—Pennsylvania Krlr* • * M Wbaal—Waotarn Bad II': 0 1 10 Ry > I 0 I 0cr0—Ta110w....................... *4 0 te Ms tad ... HA b tWU-M.iad 4k # 4k Patrelamc - Oroga KVAIC* Raft nag. 14 WaTCATOWB, UH. Beef CalUa—Four to Cbelee 1 00 0 * Khaep I 10 # 7 00 Unfa 1 00 • • SSfWMWHM Tb* AUn l OeM* I* * nation* IFIDLJJLS '"SILVER TIPPED SBUM FW eUlidran SEW wi FIW"! . Mil 3fa* Um-ngk *1 tb* to* kaahfeiASfi A I*.. Irj Wlr.gmil< - ie*'.< * STANDARD 3 " * "SCREW GovtnumiL ONLY ABSOLUTE-——• mm 4v • bmnm LmU wml* . AtttfvMla. Mtkinm k > T Bur* 1 mi'Pnlsl 4 ArHa, with nam*. ltVt ted AI.V. J 11 IIUSTRD. Rnmn lUn* I-. V Y . FAX V v||\Fl t IKII*. i lint*, with te< ' *•. til •i- N .xirnwOo . Imi. R I. APhllllt Tpi //III: Send toet* to tb. Itoyt KT It'll CO . Pir.rl.l.nc* K I Hoi 1141 |.tl>lK*: Snrwflu n u*tf Mrmnnratl, muliwted Crte* Mk d •lamp t'nlon To4l*t tv* .Indlnnanelw.lnd w ARTKII AtiKNT* W- *>. l o.td A TV S-rrm lAn 4..-M A IXH'I.TKH dOO . < Won*. Prnfli nble. 11nu.nl work , hundred, now employed hnndredi in r* wanted M R Id rt.l. Sri- P I,'lt II (.in f • Ftenofur dMrtbnttn*n r flrrtltn r Addtwm t' S nSoiVx.RI Hmedw*r.R*wV-k ® C In ton i da* At liomn Kanird** worib 9 I **ot JO STIRMIR dbo .Pot-Und. Ik C.),WI 4 MIIMTII. A*-nl. wanted Kind f iPteOO Co. i.,| Mlehte** Arn-ivw. Cl>loa<. 11l r> VKHV RSW AHTIt'I.KS for Am* ► X-i'i br J . Oh~btr*7oonn. > rr JKTt A1.1.1X; C 4Rl>w.-Uhnnm.l..l ,"r FANCY t'AKim, all ttnte. with name. SO* Addieee J R Horlli.Rasao. KwwOo..N T fY - Reed w OrwtfitbtaXewi J> I U 3td : H fti-wronc* tb.nn I teles. Mas* AUKNTN HANTKU.-Twantr Hill Mounted A Chrnmn* for RI. ( aunple* by mall.pnet-paid.lMte. OO*TI*VWTAI tlßsowo Oo . 37 Raeaavbt.. Row York. &'>KK -MONTH TO AUKNT" to Mil V e*M 'mr new ra>mi Steam CV,kin* Mnoblor." AddreM, wMh aUrap, T S. PAt-K, Toledo. O. T. E AAP,r JUU&t F.JUV JLJ MhN And LAIHKn AtidrMfi. with unip JL *• II KK MAN TKI.. I <.. OhKHI.I.N.O. k| HI lo WOO s Week and Kipenms. or RHK) tu**V " forfaited Atl tb. new aud alandard Rondtlna. Ohmtnie, *to. Valuald- Mimplai frM nllb Olreniaie. K~ I. kI.KTOHKR. 11l llumleri Street, Raw York. I ntmmn A f.'ll-thooaaodaol line and A I'll N'i'V tslilloo* <>f propeiir ur*d hjtt-fortatue HIT Pi ll In made with It partlonlam free. U M. " Lotntwrow d H*o .RewYm kdOhloagu. (Ti| f| > FKK WKKK Ui'A iiASTKKD ta> Aganbi Jib # # Male and female, to Uralr own locaHtj 11/ I I T*rm* and OUTFIT FKKK. Addrem z_ P. O VIUKKKY d ., St. Loula, Ma Agents Wanted! Medeli and Diploma* Awarded MR Pictorial BIBLW. IH4H> llluMlriUloitfii Addrem for oti* otrotiUr*. A.J. HOId.M AAN ilt CO., 030 ARC 11 Btrtmi,PiilU KtsjttKifßSaea'csw!* OPIUM Addmaa Mr. aVSm. Ular.. *ll.*. nDITTM ||t*||||V| i* lal.ito.. toßh > til w Maaa- WA lUITI j*J \tnjro*i>, t mTO. 505SpeSp .71 ZL-rff *- " £\vßSSn2gat WUALAaH.bu f '-.-a Warri fta.Beataa.lUa. You Can Bave a Dollar atMoM warr 4u la Ito >M> aad taafta ay . 4atw by air waali itwaMi. PVtaßaa B—i mU It** pmmr ftiwa, aa4 u a and hiu .1 aa uni la a abaft Utaa Baar..ii laarri#oeri.Wne**Sß*.ewst •.4 Uvaa 1 - vtuitii oarad la a tor dam Ow. nua, tnanuii baarou4)iaßt. Ban a.aad ab Beta. PBUIW tff jfrtfytaf Ifta ftlaad Tbaf rtu aat SSMTRL.VV* * > RTLASLIU' Eilß DEHTEHHIAL VXItMMMAL HISTORY TbtbaataaaWlbaßMl I (Ml faam af aai Kattoaal lada MOdeaee, anedudUM M BMIMM mi Um mMm Urrad OASSICUM PLASTER ru. V# LOCAL * RHEUMATIC PAINS. B.tlaf ibaa Mamd Ooaa aat bIUSa. IT b linmil aa aiaatta aad p.l aa la aaa and ftaa fr4 ralb' iw mux Uc.U rattoaa. (Auulk lUtI'IUTIL afU.at Hkw**-"? 'Pbtoi pataa. apMal I ftlßia ; (aftaßSar) PanUa; tortrw Bar Xmauo. brtartra. Ma ilbaWlMto"iAicmtlumtH" an. **•'' J eLooopiaiiTtiH, U ae BikJAlfa. 1 UUIMUI Hoaaa , Bt fuat tuorftum (OBPOCBU Vtoa. Ifaaaa. Luat u) iW. ' -IW-T— ut "'U Tttltf ba. I'Ht 1 Bit af HfUrtaa. Uaouofta tat Wat Ooa. •DtapUua. Kldaa, Itbiii . Hal an) lritnilta. him w, Alult. bbatuar. Baby etodteVltaliae aei llaum lata UM (nam Uial ouadULM ut " HoraA d -ai. ' rmmums t,mm Matotal aad llfni Baaaat aad Otd 3hgaaßg tin CONTINUED OB OSlflHiL NII jssr^z^s;sa 'ssssa ■IV '"> EuLMKUIhM twui ir Ttitih' cou uKLT Ail im Hute of Mmi Au> Ml fltfK tor > • out mmi H. K. I l SAVE MOHEY Bo M*aa 14.14 lor oa • Martina 4 TBI VIULY TRIHUM* . paatpald Imtlo LARGEST. HANDSOMEST, BEST, Mi Ml atdolj Miimlitod Itio.ufn la Mm *M •aad Moaor addiaoaai THE IJCUCKB. CMocaao. ILL. SPRING DEBILITY, SPRING DEBILITY, SPRING DEBILITY, LANGUOR, LASSITUDE, AND TUAT LOW STATE OF THE SYSTEM Peculiar to Uw SPRING OP TUB YKAR. era IK dlatsty n wvad by tlx PERUVIAN SYRUP, OR Protected Solntioß of Protoiide of Iron One of the Most Eminent Jurists of New England H'liM to I frtaed u follow, " I lan bad PBRt' VI AN RYHUr. end the ■ null full* ndtlu yomr pre dlruw It KM m*K t >'KW MAN of a*. wfuMd Into ay ayetwrn MAM MD MAN* IHI M K|W lreitlul.ua and debilitated. M when you IMI uw a*, bat stronger. teallhlar. sad with Ivan e parity fov labor, mental and phyeteel, than a an* tune during Uw last Itr *ea t" An Eminent Divine of Boston says: ~ I have u.ed the PERUVIAN SYKL'P for aoao time rnt It gi.ee ma NKW VIGOR. BUOYANCY OK SPIRITS FLAKTIOITY OF MUSCLR." From the Trumpet and Universalist Magazine. " Man* of oar poraonal frtaada have baaa cored b* Uw TF-RUVI AN SYRUP, bat wo ham one proof mora ptwe,fol than all Urarn. and that la- OUR OWN PKR HONAI. EXPERIENCE! No autbortt* caa pot .hta down-no arfrmut aan oontradlat It. and DO food word ah all ba (pared oa oor part ontil a koowlodfa of this bloosing aba 1 ba aptaad broadcast amoof tha people." PERUVIAN SYRUP Sopp'loo the blond with Its Vital Principle af I.tfo Klewm.l, IKON, I fusing SlNiltk, Vlftr and New I.lfe Into all parts of the system. BKING PRE! FROM ALOOII .L, Its e-ergHlng offsets are not follow d b* co reap ndtrg reaction, but am pama- SfcTH W. FOWLE A SONS. hU Hamate Aranua, Boston. Proprtatora. Hold Up ad druggists Pamphlets free. Hand lor one. FITS, EPILEPSY, PALLIKO PITS CURED. Sa£gEfrssg33isfi SdUotdM Ftwtseh Burr Mill Awns & i!W- ;£esß** -.ASTHMA rIE niiwnbmar BMMJo/mHor.r*and proprt*- lom of Dr. * W. Bradb Oatafaralad Aatlsma Ba rtM I* otdMrtMl IM —t AaUma Bataady ya. 4MrL tnauai raitof I* itttnbMd or pw etaaa arte* rafmdad. Wa pat m U>. IMIMm la botoa of iftraa SIM, *bi-b ratal! for JSe., SOt. awl SI. PMM* Ntniuinc ratal! prle will fcara UM madlelaa pranpU) iJtnmOtl by mail. i-wt-pald. A too rvr-f- OMU fro* to any wbo may daafra. l-noaa j-w do* , fl TS; |M> abdro: *•Prtor. |li; MS: |Tt Wkotoaala arasta : iojtt IT. Jlaarj, Cmttm ft Co.. *. I.; JobaD Dark * Moos, Cuurfa uau, Obio : Bkfcardaon ft Lawa, Uo.; lord, tomitb ft Af.CMcafß, UL; O. D. Ooadtrtn ft 00., lieaton.lCaaa.; rraw-b Ilwharda ft rio.PblinMpfcia. Pa. Addfaaa RTHKhIbOE, TCU.KK ft 00, B'tmr W. Y. HALE'S HONEY or HdftEBOUVD ** TA* FOB TBI 00 SB OR Goran, Cow*. Inuxmut, BOAM* seat, Dimoviit BBJUTBIMO, ad Aii. Amonoas or m TWWOAT, BBOXOUAI. Towm, awd Lcnot, Uicaa TO Ounn,i%soa Tliis in fallibki remedy la cumpoeed at the HOWRY of UM ptaat Horeboond, la chemical onion with Ta*BAX*. extract ed bam the Low Painorus of the foreat uee Arate Bftihtsntft. or Balm of Gileftd. , ' The Honef <* BanbomA toorum AWD ecarmwe ell tmmdomi and bittern mattn— and the Tar-Balm CLftAsme ftjto wuxe the throat yd atr-peseefee tending to the tang*. FIYW odditioanl lacredietu k-p Um organ cool, moiet, rut In healthful action. Let no pf keep jot bam. ttjte* hMfin* nedkiae of a fiuaoue doctor, who has mted ttirmmiids of Um by It Is Us Urge prime prmctko. K. fc—The Tic Balm bee no BftS Tamer eaeiL tnaon,oanna a*ft rni-**' *- Ormtaaras to bap iaff* a* Bold by all DrucgUla -PIKO B ToothMhe D.OM* rare In 1 miaul®. The Wonders of Modern Chemistry. SarSdjanMi asl Rs Assaoates.' ( KUM ae SM> aal Ml at Ttoj Dnltr Own after UWs a hr fttm rf Dr. Radway's Sarsaparillian Resolvent, THE GREAT BLOOD PCRIPIER. 1 iLa.m 1 Bti aatfik taooaaooa, oo|Wki iMfii iak mMtk lor food, ao oon ator II a ilaMiai or wiOritairli, goad MLgMlm tMatfcSl ><* artaaj bM and ofcmdr hhhiiim Ik a oddk* ooarr, at ambar t-r . Mo lIIMM troaly from tkr bladdr! iknmgb Uao arotfcra a-ttknot pata or I It 111 iUttoor ao ordaaaut. "Vldlrkod*dtmteotiaa of fooaiMo aad fiiooaoii at Kirotootarr OMiMKo dMeMkfoo U aSUotod Ikal au i. •Ilk crnastf of paramtoaat Ma. taaoaaoad toroortk mkfaai Ml Ik* aooaotoap fkak. aad tadkal kar aiMllltllld to Iko ■mmf.rri'O 4 Yollom am oa aba wMM of iko apaa, aad tka Omar. Up. ladi ii al Miaa u af Iko tMa rbiagtd to a door ImmJm aad *- - - M Im bM Md at ahoralad taag.or *c!.rrr!ra m-.il raaltaa float laaakt to aipaetoraUot zxszr&zzf'.zzz irqs £53 •affaratkaa. kard tmiiklaf aad aaroiiiroi of coagkoa lytafd oor orator to lb. ow-fnji* Mlkaoßiia 11 M I , i—lt. - J.. j- J <—- —j tka vataaad taado mf ood kaafcor: atoota. fooor inn. Mpkfild oofka. lAaoalr Us daiiaii gradaaUr alf . id jut J*M fdwarlfkad TillliSßSlPSfillßS. BMKMBhBI ad u maaa earn trff rtfTrrfTotMAMm^iaMala'. . .- a - ikaMmiit ta tka tinool aknta atr caoataf aartm oa will from bMtor aad la U Tba ft~l poamr a rromdj Mla Oil MM tkal r^fcd^iTit til'' iiif* - - *-•-*r' ——~ SSsbw£^^3^ diinm. mhan "" bmaa bod lorn l^'Q 1 " a ni Mfliia •rr. t. aad wtiofa owr Boar af amiiom to twtarr dtoM. Iltol M M ao r MwZXSE* aIMdMH • am oada foa toxDoa tot tka MM aramtad>>fato. * a por "TTJ, 'wfOt akroalc dtooaaai MkhiM jfQ rofcooj; a piokaoa .xotaintnf •'!<>"" kIiSS aardatoMi.or AA poiLilf dotaa kotUn.or Rl par oak 0. Koid W rfrifftita RADWAY'S READY RELIEF WILL AFFORD INSTANT BASS. INFL (MM AVION OF THE KIDNBTS, INFLAMMATION OF TUB BLADDER, , INFLAMMATION OF THB BOWRLB (VNGRSTION OF THB LUNGC SORK THROAT. niFTICULT BREATHING. IY H .KlfC fYY.rr %PVtTHE*Ii. "^sSaslwSnae i. .pi L.te. .( u IRtny iKLHr.I. part or part* where ttw pain Ol difficulty axiata will afford eaae and eemfort. Twenty dmpatn half a tumbler of wator wtlL to A tow RHKA. UVBKNTKRV. OOMO. WIND IN THB BOW KIN. .and at INTERNAL PAINS Trailer* should always rarry A bottle of KAIL W %Ve UK.I.LH'K with them. A fsw drops la wata win prevent s'ckosaa nr paloa fraa change of water. IT IS BKTIVR THAN FRKNT'H BRANDY OB BTITEKS AS A STIMULANT. Price AO (eats. Maid Br Drag GISTS. DR* RADWAY'S REGULATING PILLS PerfsoUy tasteless. elegantly ooatsd wRS awsst purge. regulate. pas f*. cleanse and strMWtnoa KALB At 'A 1' 11,1,5. tor the curs of all dkatasw tha Siomaon, Liver, Rowels. Kidneys* Bladder. Narrow Diseases. Heed sobs, OsnsUpstton. OustlMiisw Indiges tion. Uyapepal*. Btlroaaneee, BIHPUSTSVST. rnflaams. Hon of th. Bowels, Piles. and all IX HgiiinnU of Uw I rtrrna) Viscera. Warranted to effect a posMlte sore. Purely Vegetable, controlling no mercury, islswah, or (IntpißrfHitdniii. ... , Cinftrri thf f* YVxrto* •rmptatß* from * r +** ol tbt DlfMtlM Orgui: . pitJoa, inward Pito. FuUnj* of tbm Wood to tho HYMI, Acidity of (hnßjjdtora, and DON Pate in the Hand. Deficiency of Pamalretioa, Yell rwoete ef tot Skm andßr-TRATA to E Side t boot, limbs, anu Sodden Flaabss of Hoof. Burning LA "A R A PffATW JMLLH wfll fraa Uw , 86 Rend "FALSE AND TRUE." Send one lsttsrtdamp toRADWAT A.OOU Wn. 32 W'urren Street, New York. Is tenalgia -orrh ihonsaedswtßba— tpoa. MY N U ' *t_i2 WYS^TSSWr-SfWaSaK: mrat In this paper. * •■—en ■ --