The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 03, 1876, Image 4

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    Looking Forward.
Why torn, faint spirit, to ths vanished past )
Why grieve thet eome vein longing might
here beer. ?
Why brood o'er broken bonre no lougtr thine.
Or sigh for conquests thon msy'st never win ?
l.nsre lbs poor feded hop# end trust long deed.
And nurse ihchearl'eunfolding bloom instead!
Fling yonr misgivings to the idle wind 1
Fruition is the patient soul's reward -
Thy psth through trouble to ths good man ►
goal
Let not these petty weaknesses retard -
l'read with unfaltering etep the rugged way
That lead* this trial to the perfect day 1
Ties# cot thy b-isom, like the tmptleoned bird.
In ek repining* 'gainst the bar* of fte
What though the skies are eonetimes hung iu
cloud.
IVrm n therefore, thy whole life desolate ,
Make tiiy own destiny, thoughdsugriv throng •
i .slices advance, with every step grow strong !
Turn uot thy mind's eye iuward, where a waste
Spreads heath the spirits sky ot doubtful
gloom.
But look thou rather to the seeues without.
Where all Ood'a fairest, holiest treasures
bloom;
Forgot tlij self-caet each dull clog aside
Avd look in trust above, w hue w lends 1
Fold not thy hands in weary, dull despair.
Whatever shadows thy fair hopes enahroud -
Sloop uot thy life away tu idle dreams ;
Nerve thoe for Ood's own work—nor hsed
ths cJood
That breaks above thee ; tot) w,H bang release.
Oar* fade away and struggle end in peace!
NO ONE TO LOVE.
There had been a summer ahower;
roof, window, garden, were washed to
daxxling polish, and the wonderful
liquid eouleur de rose of the moment
poured over all an air of enchantment.
The slender young woman in deep
mourning whom the stalwart proprietor
of the vehicle lifted dowu like a feather
accepted her dreaded destination with s
smile.
" How lovely !" were the first words
that escaped her hps; and they were
appropriated as a lilting compliment by
a r.istilv clad man, who seised the little
gloved hand vigorously in his horny
palm, and "hoped he saw Miss Thatcher
quite well."
"Supper's bin ready this half hour,"
was the laconic amlmot amiable saluta
tion of Mr. Seaman's spouse, who re
ceived Louisa ia the porch.
" Au' the boys is goue flshiu', you
see," said the host " When Solon's to
hum from grammar school, Exri's sure
to jine him, an' take a day off."
After tea, served iu a narrow, white
washed anteroom to the stiff, funereal
parlor, where Miss Thatcher was bid
"takeoff her things," the young lady
begged to lie shown to her own room,
and wa- led up stairs to a low-windowed
bedroom, carpeted with braided rags,
and furnished with reddened pine and
calico counterpanes*. The luggage had
been pushed in with a mental ejacula
tion: " What on earth can a distnc"
schoolma'am want with two big trunks l"
and the audible information: " I've
filled your pitcher. Here's a candle.
The git-np bell "11 ring at six."
With as slight preparation as might
be, the overwearied girl—homesick to
her heart's core—crept into bed.
She awoke with a start. The room
WAS quite .lark; a cool, damp mountain
wind mslied through the open windows.
Sue lighted a match and glanced at her
watch. Only nine o'clock, and the
world still wide awake. A burst of
hilarious laughter arose from the kitchen
below, where the returned fishermen
w* re scaling their fish. From the boose
beyond the orchard came the tinkling of
a piano, and a thin, sharp female voice
practiced gingerly a song just then come
into vogue:
" No one to love, none to c treat.
Traveling alone through life's wUderueea."
"My serenade," thought Louise, as
she tried in vain to reoompose herself to
deep. "Conld any words express me
better ? An orphan, without brother or
sister, penniless, nearly friendless, the
one King chat I loved and adored gone
from me forever. 'So one to love, none
to caress.' Could anything be truer of
me than that I"
The village schoolchildren were en
chanted with their new teacher. She
was gentle and firm, interesting and
companionable. There was not a sunny
day all summer when some of them did
not com** after school to take her with
them to Red Cedar pond, the holiday
rendezvous of the country round.
If the afternoon proved rainy, and
this juvenile escort failed, Miss Thatch
er, wrapping herself in waterproof, and
taking a book with her, would go down
the orchard's -deep bank to the old mill.
She made friends with Tim, the miller's
boy, and Bill Bowles, the miller, and
"the old deacon," the prehistoric pro
prietor of the premise*, who had not
failed a day these fifty years to look in,
rain or shine, to see "if things was to
rights."
She found a love of a corner where,
through the cracks under the great
beams, she could see the water wildly
rushing, and where she could hear, iu
its grand excitement, the grind and
whirl, the boom and splash, of the mad
flood whoie sound up on the hill yonder
assumed such a drowsy monotone.
" You be so fond of readin', miss,"
said Tim, the miller's boy, " mebbe
you'd take s shine to a i urn* book we've
got 'ere. There was a time when all the
visitors to Bed Cedar pond cum down
to take a look at it; but it's grown rusty
like. A hand-writ book, miss— a man
scrip sum folks ~alis it. It I/longs, you
might say, to Bowles' mill, for it was
left with ' the old deacon,' to be kept
till called fur, an' wns writ by the curu
sest spesmin of a human cretur; but he
died afore my time. I'm a stranger in
these ports. " I wus reared twelve miles
back."
" And uo one has called for the
book ?"
" Not yit," said Tim, mysteriously—
"not yit. Folks is too snp'stitioua.
There be sum who say it never will be
called fur till ' the old deaoon ' lies aside
o' the cretur who writ it. He died snd
din, an' was bari'd up in the deacon's
buri'l lot. An' sum say he wasn't
buri'd, but is goue a sea v'yage, an' 'll
come back ; an' sum say he's been need
round Bowles' mill moonlight nights.
But you needn't be scared, mine. The
book is uat'ral harmless. An' if you
say so, I'll git it fur you this minit, an'
when you're through seadin' on't, I'll
put it back."
Up to the rafters he climbed nimbly
by certain footholds not very visible,
and brought down, with a flying leap
that startled Miss Thatcher to her feet
in nervous apprehension for his safety,
a dusty volume, which he gallantly
wiped upon his coat sleeve and offered.
An autobiography, not so very old,
for its closing date was 1847. Four hun
dred pages of yellow letter paper
stitched together by the dozen sheets,
and finally b-nud in a wrap of black
leather. Written in a fine, pointed
hand, difficult to read at first, but once
mastered in its idiosyncrasies, legible at
ease. And hiving this peculiarity :on
almost every page,' mixed in the text,
were maps carefully drawn and dotted,
inclosed in nt Uly ruled parallelograms,
bat without any figures or marginal
references to show connection with the
writing.
" I am oueof two brothers," the narra
tive commenced, "in all points as un
like, from the moment of birth, as Jacob
and Esau."
Then followed, interspersed with the
incomprehensible maps, a brief history
of an unhappy childhood, unloved as
childhood could be, an adolesoenoe
utterly unblessed and dissatisfied ; and
after a page of atheistical triade against
the inequality of fortune and the bitter
tyranny of fade, the personal history de
veloped into a descriptive diary of
travels and business connections in
Sooth America, whither the writer had
immigrated in his twenty-sixth year.
So far, and little further, the manu
script bore marks of having been read ;
pages were dog-eared, and there was an
occasional thumb print. But the style
was so dull and monotonous, and the
detail so lacking in adventure, that not I
one of "the viaitors at lied Cedar pond" :
had been inspired with sufficient curio#
ity to rent! the volume to it# done.
Not one—except Mia# Thatcher. She
rem! every carefully, even with
avidity.
One Saturday morning—a beautiful
annny morning, for rainy days could no
longer lie waited for, the intori<t of tlie
diary had bcooma no absorbing- Mm*
Thatcher wax early in her favorite place
at the old mill, when Tim, witli a anr
pricing ly loug face, aoeoeb>d her in n
startling w lusjvr :
"The uiaiiscrtp's bin called fur."
Miss Thatcher turned quite pale, "la
it gouef" ahe asked, faintly.
"No, miaa, not gone," mud Tim, ra
diantty, well aatisthsl with "the start "
he had giveu her ; "tit tok away wtnui
you wan a readin'ou'L Catch me! Says
I: 'Sir, yon must bring a written or
der,' So he went up the hill to the old
deacon's —that wus yesterday. He'll be
here fur certain to-day. Hut you've
got the m antiacne, mis#, to look at once
agin, auyhow. Catch me a givin' ou'l
up till 1 had tcr."
"Tini, you are a very good, kiud fel
low," aanl Miss Thatcher.
She took the manuscript, and it was
tbeu that, before she rood a word, alio
wrote iu flue pencil mark np u tlie margin
of cue of the sallow pages —a page she
turned over leaf after leaf especially to
tiud :
"No out to !eo. none to oarees
Hardlv had she written this when tlie
aouud Of a crutch was hearvl on the mill
bndge, and voice#, and in another mo
meut the auuuy doorway of the mill WAS
darkened by two figures.
There was no escape for Louisa. She
arose from her love of a corner, with the
uiauuocript iu her hand*.
"I am sure you have come for this,"
she said to the old deacon. Then alio
glanced at his companion. She caught
the impression in her rapid glance of a
scholarly hacking young man, with a pale
forehead and a dark mustache, who wore
eyeglasses.
"I believe 1 am the owner of the
record left here so many years ago," the
young man explained. " But 1 have no
reason to carry it away at this moment.
1 shall be in the village over the Sab
hath, perhaps through the Week. If
yon have uot finished reading it, 1 shall
leave the L>-k with you gladly."
" Oh, no," said Mis* Thatcher, quickly
—too quickly she afterward thought;
but emliarrassmeut, or perhatm fate,
urged her to decline the stranger*'
polite ties*.
She WHS going, and as she went au un
controllable impulse caused her to turn
back and say : "If you are kindred to
the man who wrote the book, 'twill make
you Terr sad. I hope—l hope you will
feel a little IOTC for him."
At chnrch on Sunday the claimant of
the Bowles' mill manuscript appeared iu
a conspicuous pew, and Louisa Thatcher
felt, eTen when he was not looking at
her, that his thoughts were studyiug
her through and through.
Ou Monday morning, as she trudge* 1 ,
along the highroad to the schoolhousc,
she met htm, and he evidently expected
a recognition; but intent upon the ueees
aity of absolute dignity in a "district
sehooLua'am," she vouchsafed him
uone.
"She blushed, though," the young
man reflected, eonsohugly. That eveu
ing he called at Mr. Seaman's with one
of the village dignitaries, but the desire
of his eyes was "upstairs correcting
compositions," and he did uot gain a
glimpse of her.
At noon the next day the mother of
fiaxeu-liaireil Nettie, pet of the baby
class, came with Nettie's luncheon, ac
companied by the indefatigable young
man, who was theu formally presented
to Miss Thatcher.
From that tune they met daily ou the
wav to school and the way from school,
walking slowly along the highroad and
the pretty wood path that closed it, and
giving each other gradually, with all the
trustful facility of youth and irresistible
attraction, the confidential histories of
their young lifetimes. At evening he
came to see her.
One evening the young couple were
sitting iu Mr. Seaman's parlor by the
dim lamp, dignified by the mercenary
genius of Mrs. Seamen into " an extra, '
looking together over the mill manu
script.
" I find it so dull," said Leonard
Mansfield. " Were it not for oue con
sideration and one conviction, I should
never be able to finish. The considera
tion is for your sake, because you like it,
Louisa; the conviction w , the founds
tion of my coming to claim the record.
When my nude's will was read seven
years ago, one clause struck my imagi
nation.
" • If any of uiy heirs feel sufficiently
interested in me to inquire into my per
sonal history, they will find my diary in
the old mill where it was written, at lltxl
Cedar pond. Personal application to
l>e made to Beacon Treat or Squire
Wells.' The heirs noted this direction
with indifference.
" My share of the legacies too* me
through oullege—as my father, one of
"the dearest and uobie&t of men, but
never fortunate in money makiug, could
not afford—and furnished me with a
small capital to commence law pr ictice.
T had more than one compunctious
thought about my benefactor. It seemed
to me a shame to accept such benefits
from a man in whom I had not even
sufficient interest to acquaint myself
with hia personal history. This year,
when I became for the first time en
couragingly established in my profes
sion, I determined to commence my
vacation by looking up the neglected
diary. I confess Ido not find myself in
spired by its revelation. What did you
find, dear Louisa, to kindle yon into the
request that has haunted me: 'I hope you
will love him a little.' "
" I found worlila iu it," said Mias
Thatcher, sighing so sorrowfully, as she
had not done since she had entered her
new world of love and loving.
" Worlds of what, my dearest f"
naked the light hearted vouug lawyer.
He was clasping her hand in one of* hia
as he spoke, and with the other he
turned absently the leaves of the time
stained book that lay on the table. A
little Bit *of handwriting that he knew
struck bis vision; it was the line on the
margin:
"Noooe U> iuve, uuut to •<#*. '
Miss Thatcher saw it too. " Yes, I
know," she said, softly. " I wrote it
there. I could not help it. ' Twos the
tribute of my sympathy."
He turned to her very earnestly.
Something >n the tremulous sensitive
ness of her face smote his heart pain
fully. Tears started to his eyes. He
folded his strong arm around her with
a sense of infinite tenderness.
Let me tell yon," nho said, disen
gaging herself from hi* embnw*,
" what a strange thing I found, or
thought I found, iu that diary. First
of all, yon know, I ww drawn singu
larly into rapport with the writer by
my own Had loneliness. I felt the depth
of meaning in hia complaint. Yea," nhe
Raid, trembling, " I mnat confess, and
I do repent, even in hia complaint
against Heaven. Alone in the world.
Sometimes that happens."
And here let it be explained to the
reader that by an accident in the cradle
the writer of the diary had been made
physically repliant, and his sensitive
soul exaggerated bis misfortune into a
barrier between himself and the loving
sympathies of all mankind. As for wo
mankind, be knew not—for his mother
died at his birth—even its maternal ten
derness.
" Leonard, dear," Miss Thatcher went
on, "yon will think me, perhaps, the
most superstitious being ; but 1 think
—and the idea has gathered some rea
sonable pleas—l cannot help thinking
that this book is framed as a mode of
bequest. I believe the writer, your
father's brother, stung with the bitter
thought that hia hard earned fortune
wonld be spent by those who never
knew or cared for him, devised a meth
od by which a part at least should be
the reward of affectionate gratitude."
She explained to him then her theory of
the mape, and her instinctive construc
tion of one particular map which she
had studied at the very last reading in
the old mill.
Leonard Mansfield's cheek flushed as
he listened. At the close he t aid: "Your
rcosouing is sufficiently plausible li do
serve to lie tested, and no it shall be.
But first promise me one thing ; prom
ise me that if this mil aide of intuition
prove# true, you will lie mv wife to-mor
row. Mv darling, you shall uot say
1 No.' " He prevented her, indeed, in a
lover like way from saving anything.
Aud silence is " ve* " to love.
The last day of August the whole vil
logo was thrown into a torment of ex
cited curiosity. The exoltement lw<gaii
in one of the twin houms on the " Meet
uig house hill " at five o'clock iu the
morutug. Mi-* Taintlia Hutt* stood in
her nightdress peeping through the
blinds of a dormer window. Hhe never
could tell, aa she declared afterward,
what made her peep.
She saw the liack dmir of " llick Sea
man's " open, and Louisa Thatcher look
uiynteriotisly out. Then she saw Tim,
the miller's boy, creep st<altluly arouud
the porch with a pickax and a tq*de,
which lie gave to olios Thatcher, who
disapjieared Willi them into the house.
Then Tim, stealing Itack again an far an
tlie lilac buahott, ami cautiously survey
uig all approaches, put his hand over
his mouth ami gave a low whistle. lm
mediately from tlie horse shod by the
church a iuau came very quickly, and,
nodding to Tim a* ho passed, hastened
to the highroad. Miss Tabu ha wan
sure, although his cap was drawn over
his face, that this mau was the ycung
stranger to the village who had IKWU SO
lufatuatt'd with Mum ThaU'her.
Then Miss Thatcher came to the door
again and lovkoued to Tim, aud wlus
pervd; and he went, nroumt byway of
the church, down the plum orchard, to
the mill.
A pickax ami A spade ! Mm* Tabttha
had cold skivers; she coubl think ot
nothing but a grave. When, two hour*
afterward, thn coast being elear, alio
sped aero** the garden patch to the
" meetiu' house sW," her fancy lost
none of it* horrors, for there, in the
northeast corner, win a spuv of fresh
turned mold.
Miss Tiibitha wri ut home, put on h. r
*uutK>nnet, and wms"dowu to the vil
lage iu no time. "
The u xt excitement Witt at the* *>w
noleut dwelhug of old B,] aire Wells.
Mr. Mausfidd had bet-n closeted with
him an hour. And wb-u the squire ro
appeared ho Hourly apurt hi-t ancient
wife iu the hallway iu haste to get his
hat and coat, and .hoked till ho was
scarlet, screaming into In r wrong oar
that he was going to U. "on turniss I"
Off he went at such a novel pace that
the poor dame's feeble fm ultit* aroused
themselves to concentrate upon one fatal
remembrance: " When an old horse
that has allora walktsl takes to rtinuin'
•way, there's no iud o' damage."
Excitement third WAS a sealed letter
draped by Mr. Seaman's Ezri into the
|H>st office at ten o'clock, the hour of
gtnel al delivery, directed to th<' trustees
of the district school, which body, be
ing in quorum on the soot, opened at
once the resignation of Miss Thatcher in
favor of the highly recommended candi
date for the winter term, to whom they
had kindly given her the preference.
Excitement fouith attacked flaxen
haired Nettie's mother, a plea-ant faced
little widow, to whom Tim, who had
riddt-u to l*. and back again at break
neck speed, brought a note from the
minister of U., saying he would sup
with her that evening, "if agreeable,"
as he was coming to Bed Cedar Poud
"ir. virtue of his oflloe," a sentence
underlined like a pleasantry, that so up
set the good widow's brain as to apoil
the count of herone-two-tlirec fourcake.
Last of all, and the grand excitement
of the day, was the ringing, at four
o'clock in the afternoon, of the meet
ing house bell. " Who is dead ?" every
oue asked, as the first few alow strokes
were counted ; but once fairly set going,
the old bell tripped up all ealcula
tions : fifty, eighty, a hundred ; still on;
quioklv, jubilantly—ringing not for the
dead, but for the living ; ringing foi a
wedding!
Such as cam peri ug as there was up the
Mill bridge Mai! There was.no lack of
witnesses to the simple, solemn service,
and of the coming down the aisle, ou
the arm of her proud young husltaud, of
a delicate little bride, with mourning
laid aside for pnrest white, and day
lilies on her bosom.
Nut married iu haste to tejxuit at
leisure were the two loving people who
took the evening traiu nt U. for a
far rejuimercial city, preceded by their
rnxxl fortune in Kha|w of a strong box
Oiled vrith Spanishdoubloonsand Kugliah
banknotes ingeniously bequeathed bv
on eccentric misanthrope, and discovered
in its hiding place by a woman's wit,
kindled by a womau's sympathy.
tareful Mother and Model Uo>.
The two didn't belong to each other;
and this very good boy may have boon
a little too smart and saucy.
Little Mary was prettily dressed, and
standing in front of the house waiting
for her mother to go out to ride. A
tidy boy, dressed in coarse clothes, was
passing, when the little girl said : "Come
hero, boy, and a'ake bands wi' me. I
dot a boy dus' like you named Joey."
The boy laughed, shook hands with her,
and said : " I've got a little girl just like
you, only she hasn't any little cloak with
pussy fur on it!"
Here a lady came out of the door, and
said : " Mary, you must not talk with
l>ad boys on the street. I hope yon
haven't taken anything from her. (to
right slung, and never stop here again,
boy!"
That evening the lady was called
down to speak with a boy in the hall.
He was very neatly dressed, and stood
with his cap in his hand. It was the
enemy of the morning. " I came to
tell you that I am not a had boy." he
said. "Igo to Sunday-school, and help
my mother ail I can. I never tell lies,
nor quarrel, nor say t*d words ; and I
don't like a lady to mil me names, and
uak mo if I've stoleu her little girl's
clothes off her!"
" I'm very glad you're so good," said
the lady, laughing at the boy's earnest
uess. " Here's a quarter of a dollar for
you." "I dou't want that," said Ben,
holding his head up very high. "My
father works in a foundry, and has lots
of money. You got a boy bigg- r than
I, haven't you ?" " Y'es. whv f" '* Does
he know the oominaudnn ntsi" "I'm
afraid not very well." "Can he say the
sermou on the mount, and the twenty
third psalm, and the golden rulof"
"I'm very much afraid he cannot," said
the lady, laughing at the boy's bravery.
" Doesn't he ride on his pony on Sun
day, instead of going to church ?" " I'm
afraid he does, but ho ought uot," said
the lady, blushing a little.
"Mother don't know I came hero,"
said the little rogue, but I thought 1
would just come round and see what
kind of folks yoti were, and—and—l
guess mother would rathe r your boy
wouldn't come round our doors, lx canse
she don't like Mtison to talk to bad boys
in the street. Good evening." And the
boy was gone.
Ingratitude.
While much that is good can be con
fidently expected in Detroit lxyn, there
are, alas I a fow who hare no memory
for deeds of kindness. Such a one was
seated iu the shade of the post-olTloe the
other day, devouring a baaaua, when a
boy acquaintance came along and wanted
a taste.
" Hain't "nufl for only me," was the
reply.
" Come, now, Jack, gin a feller a
small bite. You know I've alius bin
good to you."
" Yon never done uuthiu' for tue zi
knows on," replied the eater.
" I hain't, eh ! Hain't I saved ye
from lickings f Hain't I liod for ye t"
" That was yer dooty," mumbled the
boy with the banana.
" See here, Jack," continued the
other, rising to his feet, " d'ye 'member
the time when you was small and sick,
an J had a sore heel; I was going by tbe
house one day, an' you looked so sad
and poor that I let you wet me all over
with the penstock hose to cheer yon
up. Was that my dooty f Is there any
other boy in Detroit who would do that
fur ye ?"
It was a powerful appeal, hut just as
it wan finished the last of the banana
was crowded into the ungrateful boy's
hroat.
CKMTENIfIAI, t'ORUENI'ON RENTE.
Tli# I thlbltlon i •nilrir —F mrluaU • N.
lliia-HlNl Hultsttna*-.. It utltl*aa for
Mr|rl lnirrfl..Nrw Kaflaod till*
rftira.
Home of the de|tartnteiits flint were in
chaos a mouUi ago, uotnhly Russia,
Turkey and China, have unpacked their
good* and put Ihem m order in the
Main building, m well na in Agricul
tural hall. The good* in tho Maiu
building are now newly all in place, and
only NOUIO minor louche* are needed, in
a few acctiou*, to give completeness to
the whole. Three fifths of the wliol.
display iu tin* l'.ipi attion IN by foreign
exhibitor*, wiilcli shown how deep an
iilterrnt lit till* display of huuiau iu
do* fry and ekill i* felt by the nations
abroad.
China, (hough OU the Opposite side of
the glolwi, ho* a lnrue display of Chum
ware, carved furniture, very elaborate
ami costly, illustrating their mythology,
two canopied lustetillds ronlMxHlVrly be
lug valued at fl.tUk) ami ijiH.iKdl, silk,
enamels, lacquered scteriis, ivory and
ivory work, mlk embroidery, em
broiilcnal octreeu, medicine* for the
trade, tea, cotton from Kixtoeu (s.rte,
wine, rue in various forms, etc.
J spun has a still larger display of
utiiilar giHwls, more> skill ami more em
torpriao I wing cxhtbitewl in the rnaiiu
foi'tiirt 4 of their gimtl*, if ]Hwtitibl, flmn
in those of Chiuu, though there is groat
siuiihuity of tb sign. Considering tiic
fact that the peiticy of China ami Japan,
until witluu a few years, ha* been otic of
exclusion, and uou intcriMurnc with the
oivilitcel world, their magnificent dis
play at this IbX|KiHitiou is very signifi
cant. The Ja|mnttc have a nc|iormtf
buihliug near the Main building, for the
sale of their fancy ware.
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New Vork,
Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, New
llami>*hirc, Wutcouimi, MaaNachiuwtta,
Connecticut, California, Arkansa, l>el
aware, West Virginia, Kansa* ami Colo
ratio, have spetUol buildings for the oc
ooiuiuiKlatiou of their citueus. The
chnracterintic* of the different section*
are nowhere more strikingly observed
than iu the reception accorded hr visit
or* in these Hhtte building*. In thoae
of the Newr Kuglaud ami Mitldle States,
the visitor is treated politely and formal
ly, but with au air that says: " I shtmhl
like au lutrvKiuction from some prudent,
jiersou, accustomed to gotni
society, Iw-fore 1 give you my oontl
tlcuoe." In thtse of the Western and
Southwestern Htatt *, the iutriHluctory
greeting is: "Come iu, and welcome.
We are glad to we youand the visitor
straightwsy feels at home.
Separate iuterwitit, too, have rv-jiurntc
btiihliugs for llie JtNplsy of tho ware-s
jteculiitr to oach. Thvrt* w ou* for the
exhibition an it illuatrntiou of photogra
phy, and one for the Bible society. The
Hhoe and leather manufacturer* have a
large baildiug iu which uot ouly their
good* aint the prooeeiw* of their work
are exhibited, but al-o tli< different
kir tiof uutcbtuery tOMvl iu their buni
mvt.x, with the latest improvements.
The show here IH very large aud mstrtio
tive. Then there is a large building for
wagous aud oarriages, in addition to
tboHe iu the main building ; another for
the brewers, who show all the apparatus
for mashing, eooliug and brewing beer;
ui fact, everything of interest to outsid
ers except the beer itaelf. 1 did net See
any of the product there. The milk
dairy o**ociatiou have a buildiug, and
there are building* for the exhibition of
the various schools of the United State*
and Swodeu.
The kindergarten, close by the
Women's building, and a part of their
exhibition, shows tho system of ohjrct
teaching for children under six or seven
year* of age. It is held at eleven a. M.,
and attracts much attention.
There is another exhibit, which 1 in
tended long ago to notice, which is
thronged from morniug to night. It is
the New Eughuid kitchen, a log struc
ture illustrating the early life and do
mestic economy of the Pilgrim fathers
and mothers two centum a ago. The
collection is chiefly from Blamachuat tta.
Here Is a clock sutijHiai d to be 4to years
old, as it was yery old when it was
tlrst brought to this country—another
one 180 years old and still ticking. All
the old fashioned or culinary tools, moat
of which have gone oat of nac, and are
unknown to the present generation, are
here in great abundance The old firelock
hangs above the open fireplace, as do
strings of dried apples, pumpkins and
ri d pepper*. The crook necked gonnl
performs the ••flloe of the tin dipper,
a pcwU r service supplies the place of
chiua and queen*ware, the distaff, the
spinuiug wheel and the hand loom pro
vide homespun garments for every day
use. The tlint aud tinder box makes
tho houHekee|>er to dispense with
matches. Crust coffee and good rich milk
with maple sugar aud molasses makes one
wonder if we hare not made progress
backward. And the attendants, dressed
in the style of the olden time, with vis
age and accent like the veritable psalm
hinging Yankees of Plymouth Rock. And
nil the snrroundiugH of onmrneutal lit
er mire, or household use. not merely
likeuive, but the thing* themselves,
which were used two hundred years ago,
preserved as mementoes, and here dis
played in apartments such as they for
merly occupied. All these things take
us back to tltc life that once wan, but
never will lie used again iu New Eug
!and. Adjoining this old log kitchen is
the modern kitchen, with the modern im
provements for producing a "aqnare
meal," in full operation, and I uotice
that a good many visitors are in a mood
for enjoying tin- new di*|>eiiNAtion after
they have got through with inspecting
the old. 8. M. 11.
A Large Poultry Yard.
The following account of the largest
jMiultry yard in Now York State in given :
It i.v at (ireene, Chenango county, and i
kept by Mr. A. It. ltobewon. He litut
NIX thouHaud duckx, four thounaud tnr
keys and twelve hundred hens. They
consume daily sixty bushels of corn,
two barrels of meal, two barrels of pota
toes, and a quantity of charcoal. The
meal, potatoes and charcoal are boiled
together and form a pudding, which is
fed warut. ileemploys two men tooook the
feed and feed them. 110 has twelve
building- for hi- fowls, from otiu hun
dred to two hundred feet long, fourt-en
feet wide and seven feet tinder the eave-,
with a door in each end of them. Mr.
Hobeaon twught most of his ducks in
the West, and had them shipped in
crates—threo dozen in a crate. He also
has an egg house, thirty five by llfty
feet, and four stories high. The outside
i- eighteen iuches thick, uud built of
cut stone, laid in mortar, boarded up on
the iusido and Ailed in Itetwecn the out
side and inside wall with sawdust, it
taking three thousand bushels. Mr.
Robeson claim- that he can keep eggs
any length of time in litis building. lie
also keeps the poultry that he is now
dressing until next May or June, which
he sells for eighteen to twenty-five
cents p'r pound, and it minorit be told
from fresh dressed poultry. He gets
ten cents per pound for turkey's feathers,
twelve for lien's and sixty-five for duck's.
He says there is money in poultry, and
he thiukft he can make out of his nix
thousand ducks enough to pay for his
egg house, which cost $7,000. He in
tends to keep a great many more next
season, mul lias agents out all over the
eonntry buying up jioultry and eggs.
How He IVIf.
"I've got it to go through aud I might
jist as well braco up agin it as not," said
Harry Johnson, a murderer, on the
night before ho wan hanged in Puris, 111.,
"but it's an awful thing—awful, l'ou
nor no one elm- can have any idee uv it.
To ait here as I'm sittin' to-night, look
in' ont through these bars, knowin' that
to-morrer will bring the end uv it all to
me, is kinder l>enumbin' to me. I can't
ji.nt realize how it is. it seems to mo all
tho time I wuz going to try norne exper
iment to motrer. To-night I am breath
in', that's wot I call bein'; to-morrer,
while tho world is still agoin' on around
me, tho air free's ever, the jreoplo
langhin' and joyous's ever, the whole
course of natnr' agoin' on, I'm to stop,
like a machine ; when my weight gits to
the end o' the rope I'll stop like a run
down clock. It seems kinder strange to
me, an' I feel like I'd gone over it so
long in mv miud that I'd ortcr know all
alrout it.'
M'MIAKf Or NEWK.
laisreeila* llama rvem llama aa* Abrea*.
The Crraiifent aakad for and received tiia
rralgnatlen of Teelmasler i loners! Jewell, aud
appointed Assistant Tvnor to Uie (t0a1U0n.....
Mr. Trait, eouitulaaluuer of Internal reveutte,
liaa realgnait . . Iho aurregala of New York
lias dismissn<l the |ieUUou lu eel aside the will
of A. T. Slew art The oomuntlee apputulod
fur Ihe i>jr(H>ae fuiutelly laudered the oaudi
itacy for Ilia Presidency to (iuv. 'Tlldou, who
avnpted lu a brief apeeob. putUug e|>eoial
elisee ou the necessity for pohUoa) lefurta....
A lerudc thiuideraleim extended ovei Ilia
Middle aud Now Kugla d Htales, the lightning
• (liking >u iiumeruua piaeae, killing several
(teraene aud doing cuueldeiable itamege to
|iru|w>ity The king uf Italy lias soul a
uungretulatory letter ta this government uu
lla centennial
The mercantile agency uf It (1. l>ou A Uu.,
lu llielr •laleiucHil fur Uie first alt rutin the of
tS76,give the number uf failures fur lhle|>ertud
lu Iho I'uifed SuUns ae 1,600, with liabilities
aliluuutitig to #li)N tli.i'Jl lu the Ural alt
moaltl* of tj the faliaree were 3 UU with
llabilllUe aruuuaUug lu f 76,000,000. lu t enade
llie falluiee fur first *ll raoulhe uf 1*76 were Ah*,
witli 612.001,236 liabilities In the fii*t quarter
uf (he year (lie failures IU Uie Untied ML*to*
weie 2.H06 , lit the set end quarter. 1,721 'The
agrocy rat* " The uiaikt>4 decline in falluie*
fur the |>ast quarter efturds *uine enouuraga
ment to Uie belief, now very generally enter
tained. that wa have seen the wurwl effects uf
U,e present depression, eu far a* casualties uf
this character are couoetinwl It l* tiue that
btuiiiaas LXtubnuoa tu a ary de|troaaad con
dlUuu , llial lha rerulla uf Irado, with rata tx
ocpMuu*, hav* ln.cu exoeedliigly unsatiifac
t ry that values aouuuua to dacllne, and that
uooarteluly and aniuly exist in all quitw*.
Vol, Ui lha face uf all Una, thai a la ouiufurl iu
lh* rcficcuuu that Ute causes which produced
(his conditio* Of things have twen gluioal
ouuiplately ravaraad lu the plaoc uf rackloaa
over-trading, we have UUW leaaeuoi sals*
guldwd by caution and also prudeuca in pur
okaatng,"
A fire iu the l ueniua oil refinery on lha Al!a.
ghotiy r.Ver, near l'utsburgli, daaUuyod three
watehuuaaa, thine Ihuiuand barrel* and light
carloads uf refined oil. buss, #2S,ol>il
Th* House pasted Iho reaoliiUuna dtclar.ng
Uou. bohanck e action lu the Turns nuuo af
fairs "111-advl*e4. unfortunate, aud lucwinpaU
hia with lha dalle* of his (auatUoa.
Theodora l>e*chuer, a Tinealau guuamith, at
Ithaca, N. Y., *hoi and killed Andrew Hmiili, a
carlman, fur alleged improper int-fflacy MIUI
Ida wife.. . A ejects! dtsjatih ataias ilia!
the Sruux <x mtini led temitle atrocilie* ou (lie
bodies of Cuater's Lx.mmai >1 llam-iii-il.a-
Tce out out Custer a heart, and eiectuig 11 u
a pule bold a grand war dance around U
W 0. Handy, a farmer uf Bouiarael coin iv,
Md , aa had by four masked rubles* and hi*
*af> ret bod of ft UQO, rnually in gold uu.
Ha was robbed uf 11,000 tn a similar manner
leu year* ago .. C. A tarns ttievana, vie*-
(irealJenl of the Altuuiv and ()roetibttah (N. Y )
Bridge Co , ha* been arrestod on a charge uf
wub< gating ♦ JdO.Ol'o Worth uf lha buuda uf the
euupany James R. Wilauu, linaaurar uf
tfu iiialr.ct uf Columbia, la a defaulter to llie
am iunt of 67,0U)
Three Liulhera, named Chorlae. Albert and
Adlff Ttualhausen, residing in Newara, N. J ,
were forun-riy em(.!cyeJ tu tlaweou a tannery,
from which they weie discharged by the fuie
man, whom they hav* thiaataaed Willi Tn leuc#
ever since, until he finally sued out a warrant
for their err**'., which was pal in lha hands uf
Tolloeman hdeden *nd Dtckersott to • No
eooiter hod the üßi.-er* >i)unl at the bouse
and made known their errand to lb# brother*
titan aach armed luntaalf with a buge natjr ra
volver, shooting Kladen dead oo lite pot and
wounding D.ekereon ao that be ut
a few boura Tbsy then ran front the bona*
toward tbe Uuucry.on the war eaiioualt about -
tug a Mr. OaUih. Arrived at the tautiery titer
aaked f r tba foreman, and not finding hint
•but aitd kiliad an iuoffoualva workman named
Fischer. At Utle Inne Uta foreman* aott-Ui
law, Ji bti Aibara. want into tba room to And
out abet tbe firing aaa for, wbiti be tu*l*u'dy
aaa ahot down and five balia fired into bim,
front Uta effect* of which ba died. Ihe wuik
ineu bad now raaovared from tbe stupor Into
wbtcb liter were thrown by the horror of lit#
ecena. ai d closed in on tba murderer* with the
long kntraa with wbtcb the* wotk una of the
brotiter* bating tba right hand uesrly severe 1
at tba wrist. Mr threatening with their revol
vrr* Uta dreperad o* utile thr.r way to tbe
street, followed by the end. wb.ab now
ntimltored hundred*. Tba brolbera ran toward
the rirtr. aud finding Ilia crowd | r* 1 them
Jumj-ed Into tba aaler and MtdaaroraJ to
aaoa|>e by eatmmtng. Tbe crowd of enraged
man meanwhtlo arrived at Uta bank of Uta
met and began throwing tutaaileaat the bead*
of tba murderer* lu Uta water, abo were ex
hausted by their long run and toou euuk from
atgbt under Uta water*. The crowd stayed
about until certain the man were drowurd. and
there aaa no naed to indict tba lyacb law ao
frealy threatened
While lb* llrtu*b irondtil Thunderer **
making a trial trip of a uit-aauiei aid* Ut
Mloke* bay, bar forward boiler exploded, kill
ing twenty-five of tbe crew au I injuring aixty
other*, many fatally. Tbe Turk* bunted
the Servian town of ken'erdetnau Hay
woed Grant, convicted of arson, wa* hang at
Hume. O*. Ha confessed to baviug killed
e ur turn, one of whom ma* Gen. llindmau. of
tho Confederate artnv, at Helena, Ark
Tlis chief llrrr Hunil-l*p ha arrived fremSi:-
Uug Ilall * ceiup, and nave that Hitting ltull
will light nun. the Black llill* qaoaliou i net
tled The grand total of the Trias cattle
drive to July Pie 305,'J1W heal. Of Ihie num
ber 5U.63M have been held in northern ieiai,
while the remainder, 254 653 head, have beeu
driven north. Several thousand head which
were wintered in northern Texas last eeaeon
have also been driven north, which proliahlr
will swell the total to between 260,100 and
270,000 head . A heavy raiuetonn swelled
the Crow's Hun creek, near Freedom. I'a. eo
that many houeee on its la k were flooded,
and that of Thomas LlgbthlH was wished
iwsy Mrs. 1-ightblU and her four children
wore carried off by the water and drowned
Ttio atalllnu ram tor 62.000. betwebu Judge
FiiUerton and Smuggler, at Philadelphia, was
won by the latter, the faatoat lime for ataliioee
lu thie country being made There were fuitr
heat*, the second being a dead heat Time.
2.17' v 2.15. 2.17, 2.20 1 hiring a gale
recently thecivered 1 ri tge at Turner * Center,
Me mx hundred feet long, wa* blown tutu the
rivur, and aevorat barn* were unroofed
The faat mail train • are to be withdrawn, a*
the government w.,1 t t pay aufflcient for
tbeai ...Alf. Uu-li, treasurer of the Inter
colonial railway at Halifax, ia a defaulter in
many thousand- .. .Thirty foar of the crew
of tiie ironclad Thunderer have died from the
effcote of the exphwnon .. .In the raited
Hiatee Houee of Iteproeentativce. Mr. William*
(Pom.), of Michigan, Introduced a hill grant
ing a pension of #SO per month I] Mrs. Eltxa
bcth Oasler, widow of the iate Oon. Cnater.
It also passed a hill giving the father and
mother of the deceased officer OHO a month a
pensions. All the families of officers and ad
dicts under Custer were al'O voted pensiotia
on tlie basia of tiie #.'io tier month to Mr*
(luster.
Kx-roetmaster-Oeneral Jewell received ova
tion* all along his trip through Connecticut on
hi* way to Hartford.... The two committees
in chargo of subscriptions for the Old Houth
church, Boston, having asked an rxtenaiou of
the time for the purchase of ths property until
January 1, and the same having been refused
by the society, have abandoned all hope of
saving the building, and the work of demoli
tion will be begun at once.... Vienna, Austria,
has experienced an earthquake ehook suffi
ciently strong to shake buildings and ring the
church belia. No damage la reported
Kansas reports that she will harvest the largeet
prop* ever known tu tho state The exces
sive and continuous wirm weather has cansed
an tee famine in Now York city and the price
has advanced fifty per cent.
In Algeria there is a river of genuine
ink. It is formed by tho union of two
streams, one coming from a region of
ferruginous noil, and theother draining s
peat swamp. The water of tho former
is strongly impregnated with iron, that
of the other with gallic acid. When the
two waters mingle tho acid of the one
unites with the irou of the other, form
ing a trne ink.
Nobody is more like an honest man
than a thorough rogue.
KOKTY-EOUUTII CONHKKKH.
TV* Ma*le** ml UMrl lalevM Tre
wrl Ml.
um
Mr Pr*liugbiiya*it(]Up.).of N*w Jersey, frum
lh* rxinferai.no eHnuillM en (h* Oultamar anil
lMptaoattc ApiireiirtaUuu till, reported that
Um iMuinuiihMi had been unahla tu agree, and
moved that tlio uaw ouufaranr* aakal fur by
lh* lluuaa u t lUpteeonleUvoa ha granted, a J
order ad.
Mi Alliaoii (Hap. ), uf lowa, movad thai Ilia
Hamate pruoeed Iu lita Ooneidetalluii uf Uia
lli vol aud Harbur ApprupriaUun bill
A a mod Iu
Mr Atlleou sal t that Uro tall a* M cam* from
lha Ihmae a|i|irupriatad •&,B?'J,S6i. Aa ra
purled Iu lha Muuate by lha committee uu ap
prupi laiiena the autu had haari Inure aaod to Uio
miaul uf #36 Sit
Mr Wiiidoui railed np the lluuaa tali to pro
fid o for the uouelrucUuu of military poate ou
the Yelluweloue arid Mneenl rtvera and It araa
paaeod
Mr. Matey iliaui ), of Tetaa, praaanted lha
juiut roouluUuue of Uie 1 .oglaiet ute of Tetaa
eaklug for ouch leglelatlon by llungraea ae alii
proleet Iho froutior of lliai Mate agauiel Jit
illuia and Meiloatw And elan an approplia
lion to reimburse the hiate for money as-
Inded In defending the frontier.
The than laid before the Henate the tin
fluiehed buailieea, being the llivar and llarbur
Appropriation hill Ihe (leudlug <pieell.ui being
on the million of Mr Thurman to roootntuii
Uie 1411, with Inati uoUune to report a lull n
duotiig the appropriation to tt.UUU.tKJU
Mr l'ayne ( lioiu.), of Ohio from ih* eon
feionue u luuiilio* < n the .Wilver hill, made
ilaii repurt, and pructw>4ed to eiplaiu it. 'The
Hot lee race lee from lla dteagreeiuanl U> the
ntsl atuciiiUunnt uf the Ml!ate, and agrees
ihaic'.u. which u tueinkeuut Ilia word ' uu*"
and leaeit the aunt* "at any l.tuo ' (the
in railing uf which l* thai the el.vor ouln which
1* 111 the Iroattiry at any lime may ha issued to
Ilia amount uf ten unlliuu*). Tin fieusls also
roctMlea fiulu 11* disagreement to the tlouae
amendment to the tnuend atnendiuent of the
l*t note, and both liuotta agiue to the followiag
aubstitute
t-ac 3 In addition to th* amount of tub*,
diary alher oolu auliHHlicad by laa tu be issued
HI redemption of fractional cuireucy. It ahall
be lawful to manufacture at lh* aeveutl inluta,
and to issue ihiuugh the uaasury aud its
several uftluo*. such coin tu au amount which
(including th* amount of subsidiary silver ouiu
and fractional currency outstanding) shall lu
Uie aggiegale nut exceed at any time fifty mil
lions of dollar*
Br. 4. 1 hat the eihor IruUiOu required for
tbe puipusreof Utu act aba I lte purchased
from huiottiiuw at tbe market rate by tba
aeorelaty of tbe traaeury with any money in
the treasury not other a,ee appropriated, but no
purchase of bullion abail bo made Under tine
act a ban Oto utaraet rale for the aatna shall ba
•uob aa atU not adutr of the c linage and laaua
ae herein lvmdtd with >ut Ice* to thetreaaurr,
and any gen. or aetgntorage arising from ible
coinage Lall ba accounted for and paid into
tna Uiaaury aa pro ruled under mating law*
rotative to tba au bat diary coinage, provided
that the amount uf mont y at any una Unit Ut
roaled tu aacb ailrar bulltuu itxoiustve uf ataob
circu aiu.y oulu)aball not exceed ♦'JOO.OOO.
After further debata tba report waa adopted
teas, U't ; uaia. 7ft.
Mr Bparka l item ), of Illinois, from Uta
conference oontmiWeo ou Uta Indian Approprt
■Uou bill, reported that tba committee bad
been unable tu agree. The same committee
iMeaara. I'.andall. Sjarka and Uurlburt) aaa
reappointed, the Senate conference being also
Uta aaiuc.
I'uder Uta rail of State* btl.s waie intro
duced and referred a* follows
Mr. Ilopiuita (Item ), of Tennerh aula, ap
t>r tpnating ftIOO.INW for tba o mpieuou uf tba
Washington monument.
Mr TtitUt| (llep of Kaiisaa, authorising
Utu Tiia.dclit to accept the eerncwa of volun
teer* front Kansas Nrbraaka, Minnesota, Wy
oming. Colorado, Dakota and L'lab against Uta
Sioux tnllane
Mr. Wadded (Detn.l, of North Carolina, for
the erection of an equestrian statue to tian.
Custer m Washington
Mr LanJeia (lVu ), of Indiana, for Uta
Immediate Bti Itabun of gold and ailrar bul-
Lioit (by cwruArale of value) to *i.ouunage the
ounaga thereof, and I > mako tba standard sil
ver dollar a full Itgal tender. 1 inferred lu Uta
commit aa of Uia whole.
Mr. 1 lames lup.i, of lib ode Island, in ad
diliou to tba ti l for tbe resumption uf e-cte
pay me it, making atx per cant of the am--tint
uf oubsiandtug legal Under note* to be set
aside ut coin every year unul Uta ligal tandem
are of <<|ual Taint with gold.
The resolution offered by Mr. Ttper i Idem.),
of California. for tbe app dntmeut of a select
committee of three to proceed to California,
after the adjournment or Congraae. to investi
gate (con).tolly with Uta Hat.ale oommillea or
otherwise) the extent and effect of Chinese
immigration, was adopted - yea*. I*o . naya, 14.
Mr McDuugali (liep I, Of New York, lutro
du-ed a bill gisulluff pei aicwts to Ihe heuw of
offl r* and mrti killed in Gen Custer a recant
batll > wiUi the S onx at increased ra e propor
tionate to t bat of fjJ a tnouUi to tba lr ' {>eti
*i. nof a lieutenaiil coli nel T 1 .ut
Mr. Sirmger (.Darn >, of 10.-ois, movail to
suspend Uic rules and adopt a resolution in
slmcUng the o -tnmitiee on lenklng and cur
rency to report a bill to lepeai Uta act for ilia
estmptf.iu i f pec*e payment Negatived—
yea*. 103 . i >, JJ>—not the ue-rosaary two
third* in the aAmaaiive.
Inside a Fighting Turret Ship.
I ouce heard an old sailor who fought
ut a monitor, describe tho aound ot the
allots 1M atmg again-1 the vessel's plates.
You know what it ia to be in a long
raiiwar tunnel, —how intensely dark >t
ut, far darker than a atarieaa night, and
how yellow and feeble the lights look.
Well, it in much the name in the Imweht
of a turret ship, when all the hatchways
are cloned. Oil hunpe swing from the
lieams, but they give no luster, and ench
dame norms like a little bit of yellow
filiating in the air. The men grope
alxmt and knock against each oth r,
some bearing ammunition to the oleva
tor connecting with the tarrota, others
ourryiug coal from the bunkers to the
furnaces underneath the boilers. The
engines groan and rattle, and at times
the captain's Ull rings a sharp order to
slacken or increase die s]mmhl.
Meanwhile, if there has been a lull in
the tiring, the men move about feeling
like a timid boy who is alone in a coun
try lano after dark—not that they are
afraid. The boy looks at every shadow,
thinking there i- a robber or a kidnap
per behind it. The men anxiously await
• ach moment, not knowing what deadly
surprise it mar bring forth.
And as the Viattle goes on, it is not
| long before then* is a ringing sound that
is calculated to All the bravest and
strongest of nerve with a momentary
terror. 11 is as though the inner deck
nud walls were falling in upon them,
and for a little while they ore unable to
realise what has b*ppeucd—uncertain
that they are not op their way to the
bottom. Every ear is stung with the
awful sound, and every nerve is thrilled.
The great mass of iron seems to turn
bin over on one side and moon with pain
la-fore the vessel rights herself again
and steadies herself for fresh exertions.
Than alio returns the compliments paid
her with a vengeance, and her bull dogs
'' in tho turrets bark and spit fire at the
enemy until we pity that uufortuuntc,
and wish she would rutin from tho field.
The tnrrel- arc ranged along the deck.
They ore alsmt ten ft- t iu diameter, fif
teen feet high, nud umcli one is fastened
to a massive upright pillar of iron pass
ing through the center and working in a
socket on the lower deck. The pillar is
connected by a series of cogwheels with
a steam engine, which causes it to turn
the turret iu tht direction the captain
requires.
Two small portholes are cut in the
plates of the turret, ami furnished with
solid iron doors. When tho guns are to
be fired, they are worked on slides to
the porthole-, which remind ns of the
month of a dogs' kennel, and their no
ses are poiuted at the enemy. A second
after they have uttered their liark, they
are dragged iu, anil the doors are oloeetf,
just in time, iwrhaps, to avoid two re
turn shots which crack like thunder on
the plates outside. While the guns arc
Itciiig loaded again, the men are hastened
by tho whistle and the crash of the shot
and shell, which Ktriko the irou walls of
the tnrrct.
Ab rve one of the turrets there is a lit
tle iron clad pilot house, whence the
captAin directs the movements of his
vessel. It has no window, and tho only
outlook is through slits, about an inch
wide, in the plates. The intrepid man,
whose position is the most dangerous of
all, stands there throughout the thick of
the fight, controlling the rudder, tho en
gines, ami the turrets, by a motion of
the hand or the tinkle of a bell.
You may remember what I told you
in a previous article —I am beginning
to look upon you h old friends, by the
way—about Admiral Worden, the hero
of the Monitor. He was watching tho
Merrimack from the slits in his little
lookout box, when a shell struck the
outside and knooked him senseless. All
captains of turret ships aro exposed to
such dangers as this, und ovou greater
ones ; indeed, aa I have said, their posi
tions are the most perilous.—St, -VicA
otwi.
Iu 1860 the country had $214,000,000
in paper currency and about $475,000,-
000 in coin. Now there is hardly $200,-
000,000 in coin to $700,000,000 in paper.
The Indian War.
A eorreajxnilwnt with Own. Crook's
army give* tin* following Md incident*
of the battle at Rosebud crook, the
first light with the Htc.ui : Looking be
hind I aaw a doaeo Hioox surrounding
a group of soldiers who bed straggled
behind the retreat. Hii wore killed at
oun N|Hit. A reorait surrendered tiia
carbiue to a pointed warrior, who flung
it to the ground, aud cleft hi* bead with
one Htroko of the tomahawk. William
W. A Ilea, a brave old aoldier, who had
been twenty year* in the wiuy, fought
witli mag ni fluent oourage, aud war kill
wd. The Hioui rode ao cioaely to their
TictimM that they ahot them in the faoe
with revolver* and the powder blacken
ed the flesh Gaptaiua llurrow'a aud
llurt'a oumoauiua of iufautry by thil
lime were firing well directed Volley*
from a position half way down the weal
aide of the high bluff, and just after my
eeaaiie the Hnake Indiana, gallantly led
by their chief*, Louiaaant and Coegrove,
daehod with thrilling about* into the
hollow, among the Hioui who were in
the rear of the cavalry, aud drove them
Iwck. Captain Henry, weak fiom the
bleeding of hi* wound, had been unable
to keep up with the retreat and haul sunk
on the ground. Louiaaant put himat-lf
astride the body and for five minute*
kept Uie Minus off, wheu aome aoldier*
of hia company i united lawk and reacued
him.
About the some time a corporal of Y
IMJlU jmny , of the Third cavalry, mmle a
last charge, with three men, and cap
tured from the enemy the bodies of
their ouuiatlca, thus saving them from
the scalping knife. Tlie Bnokne took
two ncoip* from the Hioui whom they
killed iu the hollow, and swung them,
fresh and bleeding, with gleeful triumph
above their head* as they returned. The
infantry under Captains Burrow* and
Hurt executed their jmrt admirably.
Captain Henry'* battalion of the Thirl
cavalry and Captain Andrews' oomjnuiy
of the Heooud cavalry, with all then
officer*, diaplayed a moet honorable de
gree of fortitude and bravery. They
had a mure arduous duty and suffered
more severely than Any other portion
of the command. Colonel Royall was
circumscribed by orders in every one of
IIM movements, and the disaster attend
ing the retreat would have been much
greater had it not lieeu ao skillfully di
rected by htm. Ou the left of hia line
wa* a lofty orescent shaped paliaade,
toward which, early in the morning, he
depleted skirmisher*. Ilsd the order
to fall bock been a little later this
would have been occupied. It would
then have been impossible for the Hioui
to have circled around to the rear, and a
tire ootxld have been turned upon the
lout high point held by them, which
would hav compelled them to hide be
hind it, while the cavalry could have
ohorged up the hollow and reached
them liefore they could reolixe th ir
predicament. Then the soldiers could
have dismounted and tired such volleys
its would have ended the tight and made
a chow.
Not a Poetical Campaign.
The New York Herald aaya that the
two parties have bten unfortunate in the
selection of candidate* for President and
Viee-President, as their name* won't
rhyme, and thus we shall have no poetry
in the oomjuugn. The Herald aids :
We have received two poems already on
Tildeu and Hendricks, which we publish
ae terrible examples to worn our poet*
forever from wrrathng with such jaw
breakingsubject* for verse. One ifrom
a Republican ; the other is from a
1 icmocrat. Tbey are equally infamon*.
The Republican monster write* :
; The fight they'll ail get killed in,
Tho they dodge about and blend tnck*.
Wail walp old Hannnr Tildon
And likewise Tommy Handrlcka.
The Democratic demon utter* the fol
lowing discordant itLriek :
Our ucket wsuta no glklin',
to the game we'll lake the ten tucks.
Hurrah fur Sammy Txlden
And a flgrr far Tom Hendricks.
At oar rtxjueel Cragin 4 Co., of Phil
adelphia, Pa, have promised to acud
any of our reader*, gratis (ou receipt of
fifteen cent* to pay postage,) a sample
of Dobbins' Electric Hoap to try. Send
at once. •
ITmplas on the faoe, rough akin
shipped band*, uiubtom and all eutanaoo*
iffocuuoa cured, the akin mad* aoft and
■mooch, ) v the nee of JrmrKaTaa Hoar. Thai
made by (iaeveli. Haaard A Co., New York, le
the ouly k.nd that can bo relied on, aa there
art many imitation*, made frum common tar,
which aie worthlaaa. Own.
One of the earliest printers on rroord
is said to hare been the Emperor Tra
jan, who set np a ©olunm in Rome.
I>r. Sage's Catarrh itemed}
is no patent medicine humbug, got np to daps
the ignorant and creluious. nor is it repre
sented is being " composed of rare and pre
cious anbslances brought frem the four corners
of the eaith. carried reven times acrows the
great desert of Habere on the backs of fourteen
.ni< Is. and brought acroee the Atlantic ocean
icn two chips." it is a simple, mild, soothing
remedy,a perfect specific for catarrh and "cold
in the hoed also for offnue,ve breath, ktasor
impairment of the sense of smell, teste or
hearing, watery or weak eves, paia or prassnre
in the head, when caused, as they all not lb
frequently are. by the v.olence of catarrh. •
A crowd of "homemc-u" and others
daily throng the stoiee m country and town for
Siiriiimi'i Co miry Ccmdition I'owdrri. They
ui dei stand that horses cannot lie kept in good
condition withoal tiivm. and with them can be
id a much lose quantity of gram. *
The Vegetine has cured many cases of
scrxiftils of five.tan and twenty years standing.*
ac-mmca's Nu Weed Tome.-la the eUeeeobers
smesrlssrsil fcsrw Ssrtsc th* sammar taooth*. W MA
irev prstoesd *r Us !>♦• t*ka* sssr U deslrs tat
wtiolaaoa* feed, sad ftsgssal pstspnl.i>s vsdses
Iwdllr sssrar. p**t'cl**tl Uwss nftarln* from lbs
••sets at dtMlttsUnc dlssasaa Is srdsr Is Issr s
aslsrsl sell til rot U J*l —. *s stssl nsarl
u> srtifiolsi sssss For this t'srposs Sahsect's Sss
sd Tools Is tsrr sSsclssl A Is* dosss sh mih
u SCPSUIS ssd (ITS frssh <l|* to the assrtttod bodr
Hot drspspst*. Uls lavslsshls. Manx salaesl phjal
stsss bass dosl'led abates* dmpata sea be past
nStill? oarsd b? U>s 4ro* Mo* ers (sosnU? astelsrsd
•ot test paixso Tbs Sss Wssd Tsols Is Us sslurs Is
fetalis dlffsrsnt Ins saob draws It eon tain, eo oorro
j elto minsrsU or sold* la I sot. It assists lbs rs*r.tai
cisrstlsos of sslsro. sad ssppltas bar ds6slowstso Tbs
tools In 1U nature so aaaeb I liwbtss tbs aastrls talcs
that It U slanost IdosUsal wttii thai Raid Tbs aastrls
isles Is tbs natarsl sol rant sbtob. Is s bosltbr eoodlUoa
or tbo bodr. ssosss tbs food to bo dtfootad . and sbss
this jalos ts sot Issreeeed to eslßslsst qsasU-'s-. 1..
(soUoo. with all Its dlstr—law srmpttwss. follows. Tbs
bos d Toole performs lbs dot? of tbs ( *slrtc -nice
sbao tha let tor t> J.fl.tanl Raboack-S hi *l
Toale snld bf all Ilroalsta
The Markets
aaw voaa
ilOattl*— Fr 'us to F'tn Ilnllocta Of 41 10t
Common to Ofe i iriiLs W*# t*,N
Much C0w*...,.. .......••• DO 00 44T0 00
Uaqs—live sssssas sssss •
Presets! I •
*
Lamb* -
00tt0n—Midd!tn,'............. ... liN# ll't
Flour —Cxtrt ttf 114 40 8 f#
HUtr KxUb... 4 10 # 8 80
Wbest- lb-d Wotrra 48 # 1 I'
So. 1 ripria* 1 M • 1 10
Rj Htafe 7' et 00
Barley—Htsts. fl VO 04
Barley Malt f> • I 21
lists—Mlr.ed Western II * T
Corn—Mtmd Western *• •'
Hay. per rwi t(i n M
Htrsw, per cwt. •" g 1 II
Hons... TSW-1C Vl7 ohls— 04 40 (Ml
Pork-Mrs. 00 JO 4010 30
Iwrd " 4 II
riah—Mackerel. 80. 1, new 1$ 00 #74 HO
N.n.3, new 10 00 #llOO
Dry Ooit, p,r cwt...... ..... 4 00 # 4 00
Berrini', .-rated, per >®x 30 A J'l
Petrolsttru—<7md fS#ITS Beßced—l7 Si
Wool—daliforiila rt-eoe 14 # 44
Tela* " 10 # >1
Austrsitsu 44 # It
Better—Wate 00 # 44
Western 1-slry..,. 23 # It
Weatsi it Vvllow 14 # JI
Westcru Ordinary 11 # IB
Cheeee-MUte Kst.tory (T M 10
Bute Hklmnied....s* 08 # 04
Western 03 A (0
ggtrs—Bute..— I 04 J*
aurraLO. #
Flour # 04 #lO CO
Wheat—No. 1 Bprlcg 1 27 # 1 47
Oern—Mixed .... rotg# 81
Oats 8; # H ]
live 73 # 74
Barley - •
rßiunuriU.
Beef Oattle—Extra 01)4# 04)4
Hheep...... 04 # 08 kg
Hogs— Drerwd >OV# 10h i
Plonr— lVnnavlvnuia Fvtra. 8 74 id • 4
Wheat— Rid western TS #
Rye 70 MB 11
Ooru—Yellow !> # 81
Mixed 84 # 'Hi
Oats—Minsl 83 # kl
Petrolearu—Urade .llkdl'k Rofloe.!—Hit
WATKBTOWH, Maul.
Beef Oattle—Poor to Oholoe 4 40 # 7 8)
Sheep 1 80 A 8 40
Lamb* 8 00 #lO 00)4 j
b _ HALF A DOUAi'HALf k DOLUM
{ft* WWFwMrfc. WNtem
) CHiCACO AHICACO OPSvliajK
*LEDGERLEDBER^P*
For the Next Half Year. For the Next Half Year.
S:-SSESESS
Hulphur and mulaaaM, the old faah
loutd intrruai raatody for lb* nob, U obaoiau.
That una oih.r olmosioas aku diaaaiaa are
oured in half tba time. wltbonc dteorddrrlng
Urn aiomaati. br Out** e Hriraoa Hoar, lb*
K'aal anarual anU aoorbouo, Depot. Cntlaii
looNo 7 Kii'h eranaa, New York.
Tha tint* prixluoed by HiJl'a liMUnUoeooa
Hair Dya ara like Ituwe of nature. *
The mlaxiug power of Jofuuon't Amy
<lynr lAntn-mi i. truly wonderful. Caati ara
klirvhdy liiimeruaa where banl aod rUffennd
llaaba i ava tamii limbarad and atraiffbtaoed by
ii. Alan uad for ibla puruoee, Iba part
abould le a..bad eu<! rubbed iboruughly Ap
ply lb- llotutet.t ould. ai d rub It in wtUi Iba
Laml *
hca advar.ianaut of Jaioaa' Miters. *
1)11 p.' aaal peM tern, v Ua|>ta lor IIV Mat
all pi<l Jrae. U*.W, Kama. Ream. Oa. NY
/• VKMY AaaUabto IW AttTIOUU tar Ammmtm
t> Mir 1 ) bf J ii iJimau aOu . Ilk iihlr*. Oaaa
lix OA T*tv*.rK or AMI IOUM FOR A **♦.
rraa. BOSPOg MoVKI.TY (Xj . M AKfuLS
aOOK AGENTS WANTED
,;:.:.MMSIEESH
ruouaaaua u .na.i im m
a*Mwi HI a II to Mb lute (atooaa aaa
u u4 ma.awltAklMrrJ ll
KTS s£ ttczPjfJSzL's,
■i|-iMil>b|ili#l .-lOUOaIAu
aara aa.rl <• o#aa.a., w4 l(uU an aol 11 ** IU to
Ml a to M lA'.Mad .aw to fara a.mii. m w
► M aroA <*• / mil tete mm
*f-obrr.T a*rf MO. u.. H>M>
tea wiu. I. ITK A Uimi fra. AMiaa.
A II WOBTMI AILNIX OO . HATETUTA. (TO..
25 :rjL£2
$5 tO S2O Vi^nw>aVKo > TtooJai. m?
F*h*Lro4amr* aaaUteT* y.T r j!~m* .'B&U,Va. ;
AiYA'Avt/inc. iTm-sr?
TKAte-ADMiu Wasted la uue Maaip lal plaa m,
tomd -KtoMte (man (Imi App ral am— tm toa
Into larwu Rat,al. he Tea O- . te 1 Ban a, hi , ■ V
mm W ATI 111 a. A M tMWtea Mmmmm
Mb "C teal.* aad tt.'JU /• •tm ima. Mtolaa lhaa
Tw utod iMiwi mi i.naiuu.iucr>
lilt)- A MONTH aad
vl aa rl lor ta.lr.aira. tea aaUha aaelad
AiMtaat. dostrua Maner. (X . ■ mu..
Q 0 K A A Nbbfh.-AffMla teateUd. M hwiaMl
boOU !TJd'L u^k to ift^^u=3Mr
Otoiwaui iMbuMo Go . 37 NtoSiClCrTtoh
nriRTCh Wrll.bl, Mra.l Mil aam
yv AMI 111" an late, war, tuiite ihnpar nil
Iff AXllkjr Imal pat amr tot arad L K BKUW*
IW.IIH* to.in tea. Ciate.aail. U
T. E A MLr UiJL°JLt ?J*.\
JLM MKN aad I.A til En Addmm m aiamp. JL
"ll teat M A N TKI.. A .. OkEAXAB 0
1 nmimn *" YA ..I ll- umeeaa li to Bmaaaad
AGENTS
****** * Unaewa A taa.Jlmf ■SC'tM
la.r a A -MONTH lima aaa tod nap
b Ihil "hwra Haauma houorall. aad Am
A&eilU * Ua * Parucolara Ml frwa Addmaa
WOBTU A OU . M Ltau. Ma.
THE MARKOE HOUSE.
fUIi.AOKI.PIiI A.
tW OaoUbtUM. Kami and Kauatlaat Tahla
U M. BAtlDußit. FteortelKTOa.
X r l TMOPK'AI. IIAIM DRY*. If m waai
-• laatirtoaa. raduai bauUbal htor 11 LattffcrMw
elwaaia, pr laamai twelA <Cffw.-Uma.Uial HaeMaail
othw iraaudliM teatto MI b, matt !<# ffl lia Ad
draaa. t.vturua.luAOo ,M Mawd Ata ,I Y Oa,
Mwssst'ssissra Ts^r
ami an a. ho. total aaa an, lawdavie and aata lha kraa
and affacuen to aa, pwaam (ha, nhoimauiaianii,. AUU
a 1 ram Ba avail AOr. HaaiAlh. IBM II Tua to..Poila
PSNMtaVI.VANIA miTARI AI AIUHY.
t'brwrr. Fraa.. Ha pww ladatov Iff.
1 naroaah luauuciioa ta mail and Minu# lUflaaanai.
lha (.laailoa aad Ptiliafc Kranrba. r-'f ' InalMl
app', 1. il u TfUUj HYATT, Pern .F M A
<loi S2E ' >"tea-a. I '.yiaa.aaa tawtAat fliaw.
I VAX... j aw- aaa.mw. a mt f-toaif
te#, Hiavd. M.. CaaW. aad Una
pa.lV* I,A wapaaaiOAA. a. wataaaa AaMbaaadv
l.m 11. 1 rnlOiN ta-iSk Tu.<. MdiA lan 1 Inl il IMb
Y'Ul'tt in LIA aaaai la cdl aalora. to alto, ov work,
pa d tm "'ia t>bi*b. Iroto a IT torn rape m
lia 111 "as wile Uto Bawa J awteaC |f.M> a ymmi
fwapto al .rat work and papa' laltoa 10 aaaoto. ton. 11l
to. L T LUTHER. Mill Vfttopa. Erto oamMP. Pte.
'l* la* 1 C -Fbe ahtooeto to tba amrld-laßpatoito,
1 riai* prlima— I ill w llntopnat b A marina -
alalia aruc.a piaaaa. raw)hod, Trada eonil.mil>
loataaUd- *<aau aulai eaacywhara -bato ndaov
naau douh .aaa. Ufa eand tor toaalv to ROB'I
YTELX*. 43 V.W, n x N Y Po. -tlua I .'HI .
A NOVELTY. IT"
< .rain wwntonlaa a una iM bald to Uto ll.nl (Al
daelee.i.eewl puat paid far BA wate, A pack*. A ranw.
g I No xaarnrd jalaw haa itawa* Aaanta vwetod
oattll t tie llard Prta'to. Look Boa D. Aantaad Maw
PRINTER S ROLLERS
Mnda from Iba Palatol *' Kar.lataw" ( a.aaalllaa.
toll raatai. act ag. ntod b, lb. aaalhar . prma. ffU aaati
Pto pound la uead to prmuna tola papa:
J. K. ( OLEAfI.. MlnN-I. Y.
ft ACI .t .TED FOR THE GREAT
Centehhial HISTORY
ll aaula lad. lima aa, oUmr book raw pa Ii tub all
Uoa Aawnl aold G1 oopU. to ma da, Kaad tor ea<
etualarm, to Aawnu Xanoaai Pmuiiaa Com
real. Fhliadatpbhte fa
F'AMII.Y UITTKK*. iKDioaar,.,, la rolieaad
wtm <m doaa llral-kraia. OuteSTiPaTtOte. Hteno
nit. Jainuacß aad HiuurtUll rwwl I, a eteorl
uw Kuv.iu UaiiiviUTl aitnuillk. LiCIl
and 1-1 van Uotruim road to a law data Osrea
Pttna. Kami rem*, iraofru.l'u-iaii. ft. 11-* aad all
ha 1* tlittiau o, .vaiVßaatta Blood Tho, toil ml
tolomtoalte. bat ail. carw ataanaal IMr-l lor toroa,
drtok Tr, iboa.' M h .> AMI h. M D , Pror-rtoea.
Bte-kl'h N T For onla b, I'.otrlton Pnee gIAM
A BOOK for the MILLION.
MEDICAL ADVICE iTdSt-tsSSST^S
Wuik. kap-ar, Up-amltabd. Am, St XT UAA mm rtwavja
" Btoto Dropromry So U X Rh aL. (L Loan. Ma
Everett House,
jSC9 Nctoh aid# I'ulno Njuara. Nov Tork OM,
'TSbTm Itoolaal and Moto Unihl l.voalkoa to iba
'lWl'l 1 kaflaaUntannai.
I at-nm KKRA Kk A M KAVKK.
Clarendon Hotel,
Fourth A'aaaa. eoraar Eato 1 bib Hi row Re* Teat
UU, Eel". Pffww O H KERN EH.
A Great Offer -H3
if lUu new and aeread-baad PI Ihiia aad
IlKll AYa mf Irat-riaaa maker.. • rfwtoa, Uk-
Tkliv, a, l.aari atkfk (baa rtrr 1 rlarr
effrrrd. Naw 11-3 ucl.vr riawaaa 'ar gfflff.
Board akd tehip.ru. Trraae, ffMI ruk aad
glv> m.aialy ..HI p.... New A lara.ar
telap Ure.aa, i * booh rlkariaavi iiaal. a,-
raairff. ' glh'A s*& r*ah, aad gd wanibl,
aalll p lid lll.air.irai I alal.ff.ca mailed.
AidbNTte Yk iNTteH. IIUKAIr M ATttkte
Ate ll N te, AMI Hr.adlara, ( Nro Yark.
STONINGTON IM
BhTWEACN
NEW TORK. BOSTON. AND ALL
NEW ENGLAND POINTS
The nl, rattoble Urn ran oto* A'oldlaa toa daanwa
aad Baa Mokawat ol PtontJadith. Not. trip alail to
warn 1a Eoaat dadal Maaaanaa load lamed
hound l-aavo N v.rk from Ptrr ffff. Nank
Hi' rr. F.ai mf Jar air.r 1 ■ Italia laxeap* Has
dn>a'. ai i I*. M. nrrlfin, ,n AMI at U
,'rl.cb aril maralad. laaartabt, oa limn Lear*
Heat. 1 from toe Boeioo A Proaldeuee R. K Depot.
Park Squid a <d Cvdambaa A nam. t H P. M., <vr It
la* oa Viard the St. am ara to Uam far rapper aad m
So* Vk al (I real aaatatoff. allied at *ll otoar Itoea
Ticket* 10 all putol, ato torn Idm for mla at all principal
Tivkai iMi.va. llllaaar- cheeked lkrooh Aak Yor
Tuk'.a rtv >1 nl-rt-vn f*m.
L w FILKINB. Uaa I*am Av
l. E Eiaiwi.lWi
SULPHUR SOAP,
Tbk Morr KFFEI-TIVE EXTERNAL
REMEDY EYEH OFFERED TO
THE PUBLIC
GLENN'S SULPHUR SOAP CHITS with
woodrcua rapidity all Local Diatyum
and Irritation of the Skin, remedies
and prevents Rheumatism and Gout,
removes Dandruff, Prevents the Hail
from Falling Out and Turning Gray,
and is the best possible protection
sgsinst diseases communicated by con
iscL
COMPLEXIONAL DEFECTS SIT PER
MANENTLY REMOVED by its use, and it
exerts s most BEAUTIFTINO INFLU
ENCE upon the face, neck, arms, and,
indeed, upon the entire cuticle, which
it endows with REMARKABLE PURITY,
FAIRNESS and SOFTNESS.
This INEXPENSIVE and CONVENIENT
SPECIFIC RENDERS UNNECESSARY Tin.
OUTLAY ATTENDINO Sulphur Baths.
It thoroughly disinfects contami
natc 1 clothing and linen.
PHYSJOIASB ADVISE ITS USE.
PRICES, 25 AND 50 ( unts PER CAKE.
PER BOX, (8 CAKI GOc. and fI.SO.
N. B. Bjr purchasing the large eak al 90 acuta
you gt triple the quantity.
" Hill's Hair and Whisk? • Sye,'
Black or Brown, 50e-
G. N. CRITTIVTON, Frop'r, 1 Sixth AT. S.T.
taaaame Oaßiglara fffamllaa to bato ratm. aha te™
ETSEfeffSS
Fiatoil.oi. toollaiH Oalifa. Dataware Oa.. P< ana
FOUTZ'S
.HORSE AND OATTLI POWDCRS,
vFjy iff** flaBF
aara ar preomt PtellH
RUPTURE
DR. a. A. RHtBIAII rmtatofolto u-tetAmtba
IH<JaJTL I^*o7
.a* miliarsaa • uram#> mi.-.4, fraud ataetty WW
u wlina to fumlah Ma atrfl toue .wtMtrrtoi Uta
11 -* —I —**- ifjanr tka eabctaaai*.
HVaafao 12$ 7LI
Turk H<>Aa. wwb tfheeaaM of eaaaa featara and after
earn, mal lad oa recto p! of idfato.
Tkrrr ara aarlm to baadaaba aba aIRU M
Wfsd bf Titrj
Tarrant's Seltaer Aperient.
TteXMHI ..mtoHteMl Uiu Ua warallH m
II .UI.U4 liniaa.i laaatf apoo !*• aa l"A. awa
M aniaa to aa.te> and town aa odaadar.. Ttea aaa rf
Mt* afHTtoat aUt aarrr aCatfaraltr. ato abaa■ !■";
aaauMf.Hto ndnaßMa nan Tba RteiaM la nam 1
aad Ida kaad aaaaaa to arte
•our ny AIX Dat-ooum _
Q THE SKIN,
WITH ITS NIILIONI OF PORH.
l alllaa' nlui riatetra. awl
KaalM aad haaaiaara an faaaa fMar'b jraWaM
naDiMl MHar at Ite naalao. te< Bterlr iaraaa
CoilinfT' Voltaic Plattari
la.tat at aMrar ated atoa Wain, aaw laiir aM.tel d
1 wailtoi aad iwaida.d la a Aadn,iad roroaa rtowat
latal! A aanaa auto f iaaa. a AwA uwa ak
Mate. I. ptaaM • toa iliiaa Waaa d. ateaiar m
waaad atwa OH ■Smil aart. arbtet aa ha daaa aa
,uan mc omtaiiiaaUr aa aka ID. a.dM M-aa
uUaiar toat te.b) aw. MI ai 1a Utoteaad.tha aaiwai
ianwii aad w— -- af MM aata taa MM la
O-aHWo to jwaii. CTa te
•aaraate paaa-Ua to la. 111 aaaaaatoa *aa to IA aaoto
laa aad aiatotal aaran* piadaaad. fa- aa raaadMUad
aa to ate*A abate* iwiaadwlalf Ite aww ii'lidiltei
rata, wan aiaaai. ' ~ aad daaar "daaa.
Uaa teaa. iba inaw. Im. knfawa. aalaaa. Ma ate.
'iiiieurl Aer tne rt est4l eneeeiee A eMNfae
Collins' Voltaic Plaster,
arbtoa. baa.li. biaadar. baan. aad awte. a ai|aal to
aaaraw at matow ad awaa at *naaa4iAw It
i.aia.M i# tMidbi tiM twbid neS eoteHMHe. etees Ule MRS
• ear to Uto eaaawwd aad rewiraed awXe aad wbe.
aaa la aa nrautal aaa a™ i.iaa Utoi aaaa aaad la Iba
Wn ilia an aai atei I iraliaattaa ad
m on., atonal.. tedtoaa. aad M.iauu. add to aaaa
ha •■Mill. Aaaa to r lab tea. allia ar Sa
una aawalar adaaltoa., uaa Rto tor. br nfiftod
Uk# aa'rua laiaar. bM.daotad aaaawbaa teayata
btodbyaUOratodtea Ihtoa. * rwtea Mat bßtold
aa I..innate teTTtea'i tor aaa. Sl .ttM w
lr.ll I I laaiM. aarad to aarraato*.
yeniiaTrTVriM. r SaMn.SMda
The Wcnae s it Modern Chemistr)-
laajrLu b (Eocnte.
I%un a. terra and Frll mm tbar Dal'.
llrr.l altar I alas a I ra Uaac* al
Dr. Radway's
Sarsaparillian
Resolvent,
THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER.
I. Li-ad atdrOa. dtea>Mtoaw at a>tai. laaaan.
aUsi lad, . luiw.a. aa4 In 1 Inaat al daaa aad aaw
"Twftetoib toerawaa, .to-ctea Itotowaa tolteb tor
tood.aa tao-aantr a.aetouaaa ar a.tr.t ial fad
jp-M— —I •* i-i--r—t .1 ■— aaabaa liaad awl
tewMaTateteißtefite urtaa abaaa fttoto tea to
bid ud Ciaad, tMitete to a atoar anany " mmtmt
toiv; aalM I ton n Iraalr trnaß Ite bbtete Ite'te* 'b •
mitir. adteaat {atea ar acaAdUto. Irute or w> aaduea ■
no twii w or yt dxr. n?rf en.
duateaMaa ml o*aatv aad furaaiaaaß to
lawXraiaxr a -abaatoa dltobatoto ul.aH<ad Iteal aa, .
nib amuif to I 1 m anted raa liHiaaatoiwaartti
•tbdoited la ten atevda. aad faaateaaal bar
w**a> taabiard to la. anaraleaaaaa
A YMiaateaaaaalbaabbato lira aad hatote
lAl .HI APINTO.. OL Ura aaia Xate la A aAtot
L-r .li. to. I brain. 1 ooter. . . .
A T r n.S.I -' it tr i aaab or atoaratod Inf. ar
I all 11 ib- arlrl ftoiir riwl baaadl to ataate irallaa
totbai-wvi'iicftoaMidi. ammllaataaaaal Mnaadtb
ItetoiKli to ba aria raiwiaara to aM wtob tol
pton. and loaiX* Of aUMUrd lb. aaUtoJaga,
m. e<C<c. ci —ttv of ouM e4 ehliM, mm* of
'nTair
"* inisum
tab a. aaa atoa to rtoai abi baahajdu abator: tolb.
bi.te tenpraiaa la nwrl ad l"i*'l.f'l'a *jtdr
airtei. aad all atoa. rod tmpmsm teaaaater. nadtoi
law .c iaeaia.bardiaaipa.au.. ha natond aaa* aad
STri- iiod -d. I—d and Mhtif daa.lM.
MM. m ;•*•""■- aaraa. cUrutoc alia draaaaaa pteml'
*^*ttTtoa.abater U* rfa'am baa Aaaa aababi*• ad
MaroanOtorkteim. fwiaia kaidltoato (lha r tea at
pw eoaauiarel la lb- adrarttead Haraapanllaa. ar ■ u ito 1
edlaaowaearaaatta H-d to IVfaaa. tel. 11 raw all
•d aad teteW drpoattad ta Ite lwa J Ma W*.
Maun cartaa to lb. teak rtebrto. apuafruraatmrar.
oaunaaa abi'a aa-Uaa. aatewaa aama. ale . U> .
XISXIPAMII I-liTai wa-jaa aaar bar d
pan. aad riunterw Iba rtraato lb* dteaaaa trato Iba
|Ttbeaaabe ara lafclaa l.Saaa to. dlrtoto tor ttaaara
to rbl dda. tte-rvlulnar r-r borpbiw s dl .•, baaaai r
•lew uu brill, rura. " t-adbtolar. and Sad OMr omm
aral \ZZut Unpr-rlaa. Ibtor Oaab arad aayht laantoliu
rirtl II t. a Mia au late Iba car- b
mmo7t> tba- daaaato Mia batotol auharjrr'
KSaor^™rta - iba urn to I b. dMr- te wte htertfa
.1 t.M arrtoad aad drt*n I■ IA bteed. Hald apraa 4
oad f atlaaa a. uadnwiaa Uir wwainallML Ay
to iba aIKUrAKII I-Uk wataa lb.
- faal Ma " "r b- r pna aul par ballrr aad la
C miim 1 ,j tmsjtL, srtrte-r-jfh *wl Beek,
Tba (tail pra-i .•tibia wad, la la dleraaee Ibn
IbiraiMi daatb aa to IWaayMog to Ite.Uto apd
rularrul' aa Ptl .an S.-ra ola. brpbUild Dteaaaa .
W xflac IWMrmrrall w. aad l kte*'ai l iteblihi, .
rv-itoto St. nara to TAelrt Ibreiatoaaeraw ralbte a>-
SSdaD-M MMM Iraalakaated .booartet aa. '
aWb u>-1 teaf .1 ..paralkw to ateaa toaaa laairaaraafr
dbanirtort atei a la l* M ddrr aod to all oaatoto f- •
Soa.mvir.ia al Iba I'.Udd -r uad K'duaia. la Cuter. 1
Maa to Irtora. rbaa aad l-nra dbaarate
la ramorai. t> vSrv. bard lempa aad rjpbltold Vn 1
toon ra raw .•"•! a T - Itoul. oUate alto la W>n! I
4 Uja lanr- I I |H'. dte -to* a- unWlto. tote"
I* aa nulla! .>p.na II M la ttraterbatelM'
'■ s-buaroalatoi baa M. .to I aai
ora, v ail riai, htor id ao w wte la lortan
abair f 111 a * r fato' nab aaoa Iba aaaal'tai 1 ■
acd admit I ... at lb- atek. It "la aa.--h c-tte br
•n lfc !'• H te rt HIM. riant an fr I
nfrteoaii' trd In wim<b-rtu<. al a a-iparaaten
oaaar.. It mal ma Via btoted-aa t arm b> aad r*
Mlm or- aaa-- tbia ftes.l riatadT teaada abate la n
™R b t..V' "tJT u* ■' akin dhi IMA that rrary te rurrar'
keeetr>Mi*>W sum if* Amw wtil h *' CJMSMA. o
leer K•!*>■* ta it# • ecimfelßd eoHt a I*"
™Tfcnte*adßjrw*.T alib dhtmte dteMw ateral l mirrba.
0 i>or aaaa aatoan lite uaa dnlao haMIM rll l * te
par laai,. Rpte i- ball dorm tutettea. atl to® 4
Ua teobi W druaabia
RADWAY'S
READY RELIEF
WILL AFFORD INSTANT F-AM
INFLAMM ATION OF TOR KTDNKTS.
INFLAMMATION OF TIIK BLAWWOL
INFLAMMATION OF tub BOWVIA,
CXLNTIRSTIOM OF THK LONGS.
SORK THRQAT in KFUTLT BRSATHINQ,
FAIXITATiOX OF THK HKAKT,
HYSTKRICS. mot*P IIIFUVHKRIA.
CATARbH. IXFLUKNIA.
1 KKAPACHR, TOOTHAOHR. MFMPS.
NKORALIiIA. RHEI'MATISM.
COLD l iIILLS. AGI'K CHILLS.
Ttm application of th. RFADY RFI.IKF l t'-a
' pan or put. at tiara tba palu or dltbcult/ aolaU a. I
afford ram and comfort.
Traitiv. . . - ''itra'.'-f'-or--" 1 hi f-a
mmmoU, en a OAlAMl'o. hFAPte-v bulk MO
A. 11. HF.AUTBi KN. SICK iißAb.uiiK. LIA'
KIIKA, lIYSKNTI ItV. OOUO. M IND IN Th.
lioWKIA. and alt LN TIiRNAt PAINR
Trav.lara abould olnj-o corr, a bold, of RAF
WAY 'S K KI.IKF wild tbria. A fill dmuli *tl
will prrrrni alcknau or palna Irora cbaa(a of vauir.
IT LS BKTTRR THAN FRENCH BRANDT O'
BITTERS AS A STIMCLAA'T.
Prior AO I ruta. Held by Draeta*e.
DR. RADWAY'S
REGDIATING PILL!
Prrtorll, UitaJcoa. aleronll, coated artth a wart mi-.
FfT.' W l o"'P' lrtl f." ML aaud aliaactbaa. UAI--
VV A . te PI lil-S. Ii" lire cnr.of all duairuan of ll.a
Stomach, l.ivor, Bowoia, Rhlarjra, Bladder. Nereour
Dlaitetra. Ilrr lacha.O.uatlpaUon.CoatlTaoeaa, ludlfr-
Uoo, UjnjKieii, Hii 'insura. Biiioui IWr, lafl-.m*r. v
tlon of U ; Soeld, iMre. end nl DereußomealE of tl>e
Internal > Lhxti >VarrantMi to tflmt e poeitiw oue.
Purely VrneUble, oootetiaug DO mercury, mioerei , or
iV'.-t- - Lcine drat •.
I y Obeeire the followtng tjTDptoaiE froai
Dm irdera of the UKontivi Ortnui:
Conntipeii fti, lawrard Pllea, Fullaew of tbe Blood Id
the Heed, A )diijr ri the htooMoh, Nsttaam, UetftMVß,
I>m<unt ef Food, Fullneee or WeiiVil lu the Slomacr.
Sour l-rtiv' tiuvm. Slaking or Fluttering n; to# Fit -f
the Stomju'h, Swijptntng of the liond. Hurried end J",
hcuit Breelhicuc, Flutierlng at tue Heert, Choklon r
Suffooatina Heoaatioaa erheo la a LjrlnM Foeturaj)- n
ueee of Vudoa. Doll or Wehe re the hi*Dt. Fe*- r
and Dell I'tola in the Head. Deficiency of PerEpirathr ,
Yf liownsee of the Skin and Kjn*. V*in In the Sid
Ch*et, Lixiibe, and Sudden FtoahaaJl Uaat, BuraL< I j
the Flesh.
A low doaeaof R AD WAY -H PII.T.M will fra.l' *
aratam from all the ahom samed dlanrdera. I-rice Y I
1 en la per Boa. BOLD BY DRUGGISTS.
Head " FALSS AND TEU2. 5 '
Bead one leltor-rtamp to RADWAY 6c CO., No.
32 Wnrrrn teirr-rt. New York. Informal! 1
worth Lboueands will be eeot yon.
t T N 2_
WMBIIKN WltDfMl TO ADV KKTIteICK"
PjeoM may iai jwr nwiaa adratlb'
tocat ID '-hi. rfr, .