The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 16, 1876, Image 4

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    Wldrtcr Green'* 1-ast Words.
" I'm goin'jo die," say* th* Widder Green.
" I'm golti' to quit this *ir;hly scene.
It ain't no place for mo to stay
In anch a world as 'tis to-lay,
81011 works and ways is too notch for me.
Noli nly ejn't let nobody be;
Tlie Rills are finu . r ! rein lop to Uw*.
An'that's the hull n' wliaf ihi* know.
The nen is cia on l onds an' st.vks,
fiweartn' uu' shooun' an' 1 ickin' kicks.
I'm real 'fraid I'll be itanged myself,
Kf I a'n't laid on my final shelf.
There ain't s or w r but know* to-day
I never was ratio anyway,
!>nt since cn ry folks a!i go free
I'm dreadful afraid they'd hang up me.
There'# arm)her matter that's pesky hard
-1 can't go into a neighbor'# yard
To say • How lie you ?' or borrow a pin.
But what the paper'U have it in ;
• We're pleased to say the Wtdder Green
Took dtiiiier Oil Tuesday with Mr Keette
Or, 'Our worthy friend Mrs. Green ha# gone
Down to IVarkhamstead to see lier sou.'
Groat Jornsaletn ! Can't 1 #Ur
Withotu a raisin' some fehe> #fiu ?
There ain't no privacy—eo osay -
No more than if llns was e Judgment day,
And as for meetiu'—l want to swear
Whenever 1 put my tiead in there-
Why, even Old Hundred'# spiled and done,
hike every tiling else uudnr the sun ,
It used to he so solemn and slow.
Praise to the Lord from men below
Now It got a like a gailcpin' #toer.
Iligb didvile diddle ' there aud hi re.
No respect to the Lord above.
No m w'n ef He wa# a hand and glove
Willi all 'he creatures He ever jrad-*.
And all the j.gw that over was played.
Prsaohin*, wo—bat here I'm dumb.
Bat I'll tefi yon what! I'd like it eorne
Ef gvxvd 1 U Parson Nathau Strong
Got o hie grave would come along
An' give as a atirriu' taste o' fire-
Judgment and justice 1* my desire.
'Hain't all lore an' eickieh sweet
Thai makee tin# world uor t'othar cvtcupiete.
Bat. law : I'd better be dead
When the world'o a turmu' ever my heml;
Sperste talkia' like tan;*! fools,
Ikblee kicked out o" dsrstriet sehooie,
CratJ et est ore a murdenu' round
Honest folk* better te under gieand.
S i fare ye well! th> airthly n- ne
Won't uo mote t-e [i -terevl by W .s.ier Green-"
FARM. tiAKDKX AND HUFBKHOLD.
llpurlllni*.
GKKASK SPOT*. —To remove grvwtse
sjHvte frvtu wv>rwUxlor Wixien goovta, rub
with vlry magnesia and a woolen cloth.
INcguxs IX AI.OUHOU—To one gallon
of Ivest vinegar add one piut of alixho!.
Kub the cucumbers clean with a towel,
and put them in.
STAINED KID (.1 LOVES. —The white
spots on kut gloves, from damp, may
generally be removed by wrapping them
up with small lump* oi gum camphor.
CURING Btonoxfly—These terrible tor
ments can lw easily removed by using a
weak solution of carbolic acid on them
for about one month. They will entire
ly diwj'pear.
LEMON Jnca STAINS Touch the
stains with a little aqua ammonia (spirits
hartshorn), applied by hp aas of a
sjxinge or cloth, well nibbed in, and
they will instantly disappawtr.
To CAN TOMATOES. —ScaId, [>eel, and
cut the tomatoes into a colander, and let
all the liquor that wtil drain off do so.
Stew the tomatoes till well done, and
can. The liquor that drains off may be
I Hilled down and made into catsup.
ROACHES. —Any house can be rid of
roaches by free and continuous use of
powdered borax. In crevices where
borax cannot be put, pour in boiling
water. These two things persevered iu
will exterminate the pestiferous insect.
C EAXBXBHI Di MI Lrso. —One quart of
dour, one t< aspoonful of soda and two
teaspooufuls of cream of tartar sifted to
gether. With sweet milk mil into a
soft dough, using a spoon for the pur
pose. Roll the doup : out very thin in
oblong shapes, and -pread over it one
quart of cranberries, picked and washed
clean. Add half a pound of sugar,
sprinkle. I over evenly. Fold over and
over ; th*n tie in a pudding clcth and
pat into a steamer, where let it cook
over a steady fire for one hour, with
faith, never looking into the pot. Serve
with sweet sauce, or sugar and cream.
OTSTEH AND OKRA Sorr.—Roil fifty
large oyxtrrs with their liquor, a little
water, white pepper, grated nutmeg,
very little salt end a piece of butt-r;
when cooked take the oysters out with a
skimmer arid pass the liquor through a
fine strainer; then put in another sauce
pan two ounce- of butter, a chopped
onion, two ounces of lean ham cat in
small square pieces; fry slowly for five
minutes; add to it two quarts of veal or
beef broth, the liquor from the oysters,
four tablespoonfuls of rice, eight slioed
raw tomatoes without the skin and seeds,
half a green pepper cut fine; boil slowly
for an hour, add the oysters, boil again,
skim well and serve, It is also served
with plain boiled rioe in a separate dish
and none in the soup.
T*IL#I Care f the HHI>.
These include turnips, carrots, beets
aud parsnips, and they will keep equally
well when properly pitted out of doors,
and lose less by shrinkage, than if stored
in a dry cellar. All of these roots may
be harvested at any time in November,
before cold weather sets in. If there is
much of this sort of work to be done it
is better and a great saving of labor to
commence early while the westher is
mild. Topping turnips, beets or carrots
in the garden or field in frosty weather
is anything but pleasant. Within 11
few years those who grow roots in s
large way have bit upon a method that
is cheap and rapid, reducing the ex
pense from about seven cents to lew
than two cents a bushel. The roots are
pulled and placed in rows close to
gether, the roots ail in the same rela
tive position. Then, with an ordinary
caseknife, a man or boy goes along chop
ping off the tops without moving the
roots from their position, doing more
work in a day than four men could
possibly do in the o.d fashioned way of
pulling the root* R?r i throwing them
into heaps, and aiterward topping. In
storing for winter consumption, select a
high and naturaliy dry spot of ground,
level off the surface six feet wide, and
as long as needed for the quantity of
roots to be put away. Haul them to this
place, making the hear six feet wide at
the base, and sloping the sides, and
about four feet in height, when it should
come to a point. In the latitude of
New York to protect such roots from
frost will call for a oovering of thirty
inches of soil in thickness. In putting
on this covering conform to the outlines
of the heap.
It is better to ran these " root pits,"
as the/ are commonly called, east and
west, and with very severe weather in
midwinter it may be found necessary to
cover over the north side of the heap
with long manure. All sorts of roots
will keep better when the soil comes in
direct contact with them ; formerly it
was the general practice to put a cover
ing of Halt hay or straw over the heap
before pntting on the soil.— Scribner's
Monthly.
Fall Plowing.
When the wheat and rye have been
sown and the com husked it is too fre
quently supposed that nothing more re
mains to be done in the Held. But there
is no season in which more useful work
can be done in the field than the fall
The plow should be kept going until
frost puts a stop to the work. There
are many reasons why fall plowing is
beneficial. The effect of the weathering
of clay soil is such that uo implements
can produoe it. The repeated froi-ts
and thaws so break np and mellow the
soil that there is in the spring a fln"r
seed bed than could be obtained with all
the plowing and harrowing that could
be given to it. The work done in the
fall is not only better done, but so mueh
is put out of tbe way in preparation for
spring crops, the plowing for which
is often delayed by nnfavorable weather
so much so as to endanger the success
ot the crop. The coru stubbles should
by all means be plowed now, so that
oats can be sown as early as the mellow
soil is dried by the first warm suns in
the spring. This early *owiDg is some
times the safety of the crop ; and the
yield upon fall plowed sod is always
Wtter than upon the spring plowed.
There are always many insect* buried
out of Night, which would otherwise
harbor in the stubble. This is especi
ally the case with the clinch bug, which
finds a hiding place in the cornstalks
and other ruunisli of the stubbles. In
plowing potato fields now we turn up
the destructive Colorado beetle to the
light from his chosen winter quarters,
aud expose him hi the birds and small
animals which fee I upon him. At this
season, when ohilled with the cold, the
beetle is inactive and easily falls a prey
to its enemies. In a newly plowed field
we have recently s,vn myriads of these
insects brought to the surface, where
tliev will stay and be destroyed. For
every one we get rid of now we prevent,
possibly, the hatching of a thousand
> gtp< in the spring. Cutworms and
white gruW tuay also lie exposed to
enemies which are eagerly on the look
out for them. Although the prevalent
idea that thee* insects are injured by
frosts is not a correct one, yet this
should be no rtaou why they should
not lx> tin mat up by the plow. They
are inactive now, and ouce brought to
the surface do Hot agaiu escape to their
hiding place* beneath, but are eX[H>*Hl
to thoee auimals which sulxu-d upon
them. Thua, if we gain nothing but to
IH forehanded with our work and the
deatrucuim of insects, those advantages
are so serious that we ahould by no
means neglect them.
FATINH HORSE IX HFRI.IX.
% lUrtr Mnu|htr )Uta#-.!lw llir lrnd
ftUrtra arr I tllUrd
lu Berlin,not far from the uew Kings
gate, a| qs-ars above a high fence a l>ad
sign with the macriptiou: "Central
Horse Slaughter HoUso." Two well
executed horses' heads iu wood, painted
brown, are placed at the sides of the
sign, as who ■ Uould u<igh "Step with
in, honored, yet much tormented
equinrs. Leave behind you all fear of
the whips of mankind. ' A massive
[virtu! leads within to a large, roughly
paved ixuirt, on the left side of which,
iu a separate building, is the office of
the veterim-ry surgeon; and on the right
the dwelling of the proprietor and the
slaughter house.
Every horse which is to lie slaughter
ed in 1 v rliu must be brought here alive.
The animal is first examimxl by the
veterinarian, and only upon his express
ed judgment can it le killed. From the
leams above are suspended four
slaughtered horses, which have tas u
oulv disemboweled. None of them
could have boasted of fatut ss; but they
now seem to rejoice among them.selves
that they have a I last ruu away from
civilixeo mankind. There are at preeeut
sixteen horse butchers in llerlui, who at
this time of the year are pretty busy,
for as agricultural labors are nearly end
cd, the unhappy farm horses are got rid
of at cheap rates. And how many
horses are disposed of here I Last year
they killed <iver -4.600. This year the
uumber will tie arrester. They now
slaughter sixteen a day on the average,
but requeutly as many as twenty-tive.
And what is the value of a dead
home ? On an average from twenty to
thirty thalers. The akin fetched from
eight to twelve dollars. The bones are
the perquisite* of the proprietor; and
for them he receiv w from glue manufac
turers and bone burners a remunerative
little sum. The larger viae* ™, such a*
the liver, heart, and milt, are sold as food
for dogs. The small intestines, after
being cleaned and salt d, tire sent to
seaports where they are utilize,) as eu
velopes for all those different kinds of
preserved meats used ou board nhi|>H.
The blood is emptied into large tin
troughs, where the albumen is se[>arat<<d
from it and sent to Prague. In that
city a large albumen manufactory has
for years token this material on con
tract
Finally, the flesh—but that goes to
the hor-e butchers; aud we may readily
lodjove that the 4,600 horses become
foTO. "The dogs get th* most of it,"
said our conductor, and then he pointed
out a large, clear liver hanging to a
poet, and remarked that it ta-ted very
much like pig's liv, r. " But what the
hounds do not got," h added, while he
e*med to invoke the flavor of horse
beefsteaks, "only poor people eat. Res
taurants and such."
Yet we 00old not help wondering at
our own inconsistency. These tine
pieces of meat we regard*d with aver
sion, while at our feet a dozen ducks
were smacking their bi'L in the gutter,
and probably the birds would seam ap
pear before lis as savory roasts. There
m the stable stood a fat pony, healthy
and rotund. Was he also to be s'augh
tered ? Ceitainly. He had a bail hoc/,
the curing of which would cost too
much in food and time. And there next
to him stood—an ass ! Happiness and
impudence equally blended in bis oouu
tenance. What was he doing here I He
hail been raffled away at a Mwis garden.
Perhaps a weaver bail won him, and,
finding no room for the little animal un
der .his loom, had soul him to the
slaughterers. " And, excellent con due
tor," we inquired, diffidently, "what
will be done with the ass" flesh I"
" Yes—what is to be said—for restaur
ants and the like it is not —the flesh ol
the ass is—yes, it is very often used for
sausages!"
We thanked our good informant, and
took leave. Iu the nearest restaurant
we partook of refreshment, rejoicing iu
the meantime that the ass still lived.
The Finnish (,'orn Trade.
The Mark Larw Bxprcat, in its re
view of the British corn trade, says:
The laud has become so sodden with re
cent rains that the greatest difficult has
been experienced in the autnmu tillage.
It is now most important that th'< sow
ing of winter wheat be no louger delay
ed. The effects of the wet weather have
been most disastrous in the north, where
the wretched condition of tho outstand
ing crops has been further deteriorated
by heavy floods, which have submerged
considerable tracts of land and done
irreparable damage. It is also much to
be rep retted that the damp atmosphere
and higher temperature have tendered
to generate blight in the potato crop;
and the disease has not been confined to
Scotland, where rain has done tho most
mischief, but several districts in Kng
iaud speak of its recent appearance.
The rapid growth of root crops has ren
dered the prospect of abundant winter
feed more ho{>efal, although such ex
cess of moisture can scarcely tend to
improve the quality. The weighty au
thority of Mr. Ijaws confirms the opin
ion that our probable requirement dur
ing the oereal year will lie 14,000,000
quarters, while the imports since Sep
tember flrst have been at the rate of 8,-
000,000. On these figures tno recent ml
vanoe seems justified ajmrt from politi
cal contingencies which have both quick
ened and stimulated it In the present
diaturlx-d condition of affairs it is al
most impossible to quote local trade
with any degree of accuracy. Sellers
are not disposed to let wheat go except
at au improvement of two and three shil
lings per quartei, but for tho moment
buyers act with considerable caution.
There has been a limited amount of
business in floating cargoes daring tho
week, owi og to the scarcity of arrivals,
and the sales indicate an improvement
of one and two shillings per quarter,
while important transactions have %ken
place in cargoes on passage and for ship
ment at fully this advance.
Kn**dan In Scrvla.
Volunteering to the aid of tho Servi
ans has become a mania in Russia, and
it is dangerous to openly disapprove of
it. As a railway train of volunteers ar
rived lately at Moseow, on its wav, two
gentlemen proceeded to enter it. "What
a mass of nffu!" said one. "A mass of
fools!" said the other. The latter was
at once attacked by the crowd around,
and before the }>olice could extricate* hiia
he was dead. Boys are as enthusiastic
as their elders. They have sham battles
between Russians and Turks, and, as
none are willing to be of the latt* r, it
becomes necessary to draw lots. It is
asserted that many volunteers provide
themselves with poison, in case of fall
ing into Tnrkish hands. Mr. Roman -
owsky, lately business manager of the
opera house at Odessa, is thought to
have done so. He was made prisoner,
qut mysteriously died on hia way to
camp.
EUROPEAN ARM I KM.
Wl.nl the tltral h srN t nld Brit an la
I •( M nr.
Home notes o|vui the armament* of
the several great F.uro|>can powers may
not bo without interest at this moment,
■ROLAND.
England has a regular army of 123,
281 men aud a re serve of atmut
of alt ranks, arms aud degrees >f oftoc
tiveneaa. The niilitm nnmlmra 1311,018,
the yeomanry cavalry, 15.H7S ; the vol
utiteer artillery, 23.768, and the volun
teer riflemen, engineers aud light horse,
125.41 W. Th< re are also 10,000 |>ouni„ii
ers and army resotvu uien iu the first
line aud 22.1MH* in the second.
The navy includes in commission I(>3
sea going steamers and 133 res. rve
steamers and sailing vessels. The iron
clads are sixty one in utiutlier, with 716
guns. Ship building is at present lie
tug conducted with unusual activitv ;
forty two vessels, four of which, the
Ajax, Agamemnon, Nelson and North
aiuptoii, ar>> armored, taring on the
stocks or in hand,
Tt'UXKV.
Turkei 'a araiv, under the wbiiius to
lie completely carried out tti 1878, should
consist of lftO.fkk) regulars, 70,000 men
of the first r. serve, 1 '20,000 first levy,
I'JO.OOO s com! levy, and 320,000 hijmle,
or latuUturiu, or TSO.tkHi men m all.
Captain Vmount's estimate last June
was that the l urks could place in the
field 170,376 regulars, 143,680 reserves
and ?5,0i10 auxiliaries, or say 360,000
infantry and 40,(AH) cavalry, with 648
guns. 1 iic infantry have 2iH),000 Mm
tier-, as many Martini Henry rifles and
iwrcussiou muskets ; the cavalry have
Winchester nrtu ami revolvers, and the
cannon are Krupp's bre*>cli loaders, 'our
and six pounders, with three |H>uuilers
for mouutain use.
The fleet consist* of twenty ironclads
(seven fngites, eight corvettes and five
gunlHiats) and seventy steamers, maimed
by 30.000 sailors and 4.1*00 marines.
The ironclads are of a superior class ami
mount 140 guns.
KCMU.
Russia's army is in process of reorgan
isation, and h>ohs larger on [aiper than
it really i>. The .Vk.-mi, of St. Peters
burg, claims a war strength of 1,463,000
men, including irregulars, or 730,000
r* galore; reserve*, 206.000; garrisons,
120,000; depots, 257,1 AH); C issacks, 70,-
000; local forevs, mmuly Asiatic, 80.WH1.
Captain Vincent's estimate is 752,0u0
couiliaiaut infantry, 172, 000 cavalry,
ami 2,768 guns, including PHI uutrail
lctl-oe.
The navy iu March. 1875, contain* d
twenty nine ironclad-, with 184 guns ami
108 meu-oi war, with 8,634 effic rs and
men. The total number of vessels of
all kinds is nearly 30J, mountrug 1,500
guns.
OTIIKII PLIWKKS.
Austria (incladiug Hungary) has a
small ironclad fleet. Her effective force
is 708,178 infantry, 62,746 cavalry, and
1,616 guns.
Italy has -147,264 infantry, armed
mostly with th lietuingb 11 rule. 15,850
cavalry, ami 1,240 guns. Her navy con
sists of ninety five vessels, with 1,256
guns, nine being ironclads, with 346
guns. Iu condition i doubtful.
t iermany this year has iu her standing
army 418,741 men. including the tram
and 67,845 cavalry an 1 48,627 artillery,
with 2.472 guns. Uu a wwr footing she
has 1,304,841 men; the first class of the
lamlstunn contains 175,800, and the sec
ond class will bring the total -treugth
UP to 1,700,001) lue ... The licet last
November included eleven irouclads,
with 105 guns; sixty two steamers, with
321 guns, and four sailing vessels, with
fifty-two guns—iu all, seventy oeveu
ships, with -178 guns, and mauuud by
something over 3,000 men.
Fra ce i also reorganizing her army.
Its effective force at last n [Hirts was
277,1X)0 infantry, 68,281 cavalry, 66,006
art llery, aud about 20,000 engineers,
etc. —in all, 430,702 men. The navy Wt
Deoemb*' r cooiinteil of sixty-three irou
clads, with 700 guns; 264 screw sh am
ers, sixty two paddle steamers, aud 113
sailing v-s-ols, carrying in all 3,073
guns.
One Hundred Year* Ace
The mouth of October, one hundred
years agi', w&s cue of anxious waiting
and susiH-nse to the American army aud
disappointment to the British. The
ho|, was lost on the part id the latter
that the camjaißH was to close the war ;
and the zeal with which tin- tir-t events
of the i-imggli had infused the Ameri
cans was fast diminishing ; indeed, it is
a source of wonder that the srmi,>s not
only kept up the semblance of
strength. Out h Id tin ir invader i.t bay
during the whole month id October.
After a succession of skirmishes (.b-M-iul
Howe foai.'i, cu tiie tvrei.ty-eignth, the
American army -o strongly postal near
White I'lains that be declined to make
an attack ; and the decisive Imttlc which
was to teruiinite the v.ar was indefinite
ly postponed. The British ooutented
themselves with carrying ;n otitis,it on
Cbattertcn hill, about u mile from the
American camj). The main Ixnly of
Americans- effected their retreat, aud
the loos in killed aud wounded ou the
side of the Amcricau* was n ported at
less than a hundred, that of the British
about twice thst nnmls-r. Waiting
three days for re enforcements, General
Howe found, ou the morning of the first
of November, that Washington had
withdrawn to a still stronger position,
relieved himself of hissick and wounded,
and strengthened his linen with re
trenchment*. His posttiou on rising
ground was unapproachable in front,
and he had so secured the passes that
he could not la- attacked in flank. With
nothing to encourage the Americans on
land, October witnessed a sad check ou
laike Champlain. The fleet which the
Americans hail launched upon the
waters of the lake was totally lost after
prodigies of usele-s valor. In the somh
west the efforts of misjudging loyalists
to arouse the Indians against the colon
ists, while it cans? d immediate suffer
ing, reunited iu ultimate advantage to
the American can*.-. Beside* the ineffi
cient methods under which the militia
were brought in the field, there were
jealousies among leading officers. The
commander-in-chief hail not the authori
ty which his commission implied, and
which a successful command demand, d.
All, Rave to most sanguine or the igno
rant, were inclined to despair, and we
in this jnbilee month in 1876, can only
duly appreciate the preset t standing
of the United States by contrasting it
with the gloomy outlook one hundred
years ago.
The Number of Centennial Visitor*.
From tho opening day, May 10, down
to and including Saturday, October 14,
5,722,448 paying visitors attended the
Exposition. Those retains are for IOC,
exhibition days, as follows ;
May (nineteen days) 378,980
June (twenty-six days) 69ft 600
July (twenty-six days) 6.16 518
August (twenty-seven days) 908.6H4
September (twenty-en daysb 2,230.991
October 2d to 14th (twelve days) 971.609
Total paring visitors for 136 days .. ..5,722,446
Tbe non-payitig admissions for the
same time, including exhibitors, at
tendants, workmen, laborers, offi
cers, etc , were 1,362,629
Total admissions 136 days 7 087,077
The number of visitors to the Vienna
exhibition, which was open for lh6
days, wan as follows :
Total paying admissions . .3,192 622
Total non-paying admissions 3,2(7,878
Aggregate admissions of all kinds. 6,740,500
From these figures it will bo soeu tliat
the (laying admissions to the Centennial
Exhibition for 136 days exceeded tho
whole number to tho one at Vienna dur
ing 186 days by 2,229,826. The average
daily unmber of visitors to the Centen
nial iu May was 19,946; in June, 26,-
756; in July, 24,481; in August, 33,655;
in September, 81,961; and in October
(to the fourteenth), 80,967. In its pe
cuniary results the Centennial already
largely exceeds those of any exhibition
yet bold. The greatest retnrn was at
the London exhibitian of 1851, viz :
$2,121,610; tho next at Paris in 1867,
when it wu" $2,103,677. Tho cash re
ceipts for gate money daring tho 136
ri *ys at the Centennial were $2,686,608.-
Tj.
THE A Kmc DISASTER.
Tflif I rawli with I'n rl <>{ ihrlr Irm
I arlird I r In ihp Urrm lr Mr I.ls
Another dismal story >f loss, sutler
111).' Hint death lint her 11 Ihljlll to the nil
tiaU of tlio whale fishery. With th" in
iirwuw of the intrrtwt, the huge, oily
octaoeaua have Ixx-n driven, like our
Western hurt dix<s,from tlieir old haunts,
out of the miter mnl mora convenient
Muter* of the Indian mnl Pacific oceans,
mnl must now lie followed to their re
treat* among 'he ice tier * guarding the
approach to either pole. Hut neither
tliia tin t, nor the development of the
eartli'a unsuspected luver* of liluhlior,
m the lauds of petroleiiiu, have lieeu
able tii extirpate a hranoh of ndvctitur
on* industiy which lian hv-tcd for mo
many ix-nturies. Nature, in the fii-t
place, cannot quite prinliioe an eijtial or
tide; uinl man, in tile nncotid plure, in
*ttuctively clings to whatever brings
great reward once, though he he uiue
tltuea deceived. The excitement of a
whale chair i* not lean than that t fa
stag hunt, apart from the value of the
booty. And an men go down to the
deep, aiui undergo liardahip, ami long
almeiiee from home, and manifold dan
gera, for the ake of the sjiorl and it*
chance*.
The la*t diaasLer which ha* overtaken
a whole whaling fleet in the Arctic aeu
ih noli** tragic than rxpeuaive. Fif
teen veael*, having (reused through
Hehriug'a at rait* in search of walrus and
whale, were giadualty forced liy the
ice tleldn over to the northern shore of
Alaska, which they reached ill the neigh
borhood of I'oiut Harrow (lietwecu lat.
aeveuty one degrees and iw venty two
degree* north) alwmt the !ir*t of Au
gnat. Then commenced a aeriea of
misfortune* which la*ted for more than
atx week*. The field ice, brought down
ujxiu them by we*tern wind* and forced
gradually treat ward by the Asiatic gulf
stream, slowly inclosed them. Due v<
sel ww crushed even In-fore leaching
Point Harrow, the extreme Uiirtheru
headland of the continent, lxiyoud
which the shore trends eastward and
southward. The others, driven tieyoud
the ixuut, were caught as iu u trap. (In
the fourteenth of August a nortn wmd
broke up the ice, w hah s made their ap
|M*arance, ami the imperiled crews, for
getting their dangi nil* |>oaition, gave
themselves up to the chase. l'usMihly
they may have lust their Iwvd chance of
eecajm froiu the coast; but it is easv to
understand how difficult it must have
beeu for them, after venturing so far, to
give up the prey which now offered it
self to tneir hand.*. Oil the twel.ti
third their struggle Ix-guu- a veritable
-druggie for life and death, which was
prolonged until the eighteenth of Sep
temlx-r. Then, out of fourteenth v
sels, only the bark* FLireno and Thr< <
Hr (here came fortn from the jaws of
the ic%>, 1.-aviiig twelve vessels and part
of their arews locked up f->r aw inter
which, HI their condition, HAM hardly
any other meauiug lLau death.
Wo are not informed who the men
were who remained tior how many they
were, Tiny were probably left by then
own choice, in the desperate hoj i f
keeping themselves alive m til 1- xt
summer and saving th< ir proj* rty. The
imagination li-mUte* to follow them to
that dread, unpopulated ooul which
lies just uudi r the 2 Hie of < Xtremeet
Arctic Cold. It 1* I*i*sibl that next
(year may return s nc of them to us to
tell a sad st< ry of suffering; but it i
uu re probable that they never will 1*
seru again alive. Upon New Bedford
once more, as in former day*, fall* the
heaviest share of K-ss and s-nrow; but
tlud staid old town holds fast t.< her
traditions, au-l hei whahrs will still g
forth as of old. lribtme.
Their Fir*l Hank Robbery.
Living iu Kansas City, a respected and
wealthy merchant, is Mr. Qrt-euup Bird,
au old resident of Missouri. la lHiifl
he was a banker at Liberty, Clay county,
tow n not ten mile* from the home of
the James boya. One day while he and
his son William were alone ui the 1-atik,
three strange men entered and asksi
htm to change a ton dollar note. lie
took the bill au.l stepjx-d to a side
table to procure the change, and on rr
turning was met with a revolver pr<
seuted to hi* flico. lie revxltZid at uuo
that he was in the JH.HU r of m n win.
would not hesitate a moment t- t ike hi--
life if necessary. What followed can 1*
told almost in a word. Ihe robin r*
h-ajH-d over the counter, and w' tie Mi.
Hmi si.-d his son were guard.' 1 by one
1 the other* secure-1 one thousand dollar*
from tin* vault, the door of which uuf.r
tuuat iv was st ending open. The bank
i r and Ins sou were then hantrly thm*t
into the vault, and the door dosed. The
robln-rs then fled, mmtiiting theirhoiM-s,
which went iu charge of uh.-< -cub * on
the Btroet. They dashed dotvu the
pruicijnd *tr< et of the town, the jx-ople
lookitig on in wonder, tut knowing what
had Ins-u done. The younger Mr. Bird
succeeded in opening the door of the
vault, and rushing t- the wn. low he
gave Uu- alarm in time for a citizen to
draw a revolver and tlr>- at the retreat
ing robber*. Unlucky shot for him;
the rubtx-r. turning in hi* sad-lie and
taking deadly aim, sent a liall through
the hrsin of the man who bad mused
his mark. Out of Uio town they went
without further molestation.
But the James boys a?id Younger
brothers were unknown as dashing high
waiuicu in those days, and a party im
m--dlately started in juirsnit. They
chased them to the Missouri river ami
there overtook them. A running fight
followed, hut the roblx-rs cucapod, and
from that time f-irwar-l until th- y mur
dered the cashier of the Northfleld bank
followed their daring calling with suc
cess.
The Mexican President's New Cabinet.
The jrrcsident of Mexico has just
made a sweeping change of cabinet,
whicli has startled alike friends and foes.
The new ministry now stands a* follows :
lion Manuel ltomero Hubio, president
. of the cabinet ami foreign relations; war
; and inarm--, Gen. Mariano K'-->IHH1O;
[ interior, lion Juan Jose Haz; publie
works, Don Antonio Tngle. The treas
ury is still ooctijiied by Don Francisco
i Mejia, who fornn-d part of the late min )
| istry. Justice and public instruction re
1 maiu vacant, in charge of I>oti Jose
liiaz Govarrubia*. chief clerk of the
departraent. Taking our cue from orti
cial organs, we are bonnd to affirm that
the newly appointed chief of the cabi
net, I)ou Manuel it > Hnluo, i* mi
able lawyer, a skilled politician, a j*qu
lar jMirhameritary leailer and a cautions
I statesman. The most notable elements
; of hiH character are said to be impassive
j calmness and a stoical indejxendonoe.
Tbo now war minister, Gen. Escobedo,
1 is best known among his conntrymen as
tho •'Conqueror of yuoretaro," when
' Maximilian's empire finally succumbed
1 to the rejinblic, and the Austrian prince I
surrendered to tho Mexican general,
j Don Juan Jose Baz, the minister of the *
interior, is a politician of long experi
ence ami proved courage.. It is said
that when on one occasion Buz came to
the city of Mexico in the early days of
tho French occupation, Marsha Hazaiue
sent for him, and after endeavoring mi
successfully to induce him to join the
empire, exclaimed: "If the emperor;
had a few such men as you, ho would
certainly establish his throne and make
Mexico prosperous." Don Artoiiio
Tagle is a lawyer of high repute at the
Iror, and has ln-en governor of the State
of Hidalgo, deputy and senator—a man
of wealth and reflnetne t, resjiected by
all parties. The minister of finance,
Don Francisco Mejia, has been at the
head of his dejiartmeut for several
years, having beeu called to the oabinet
by Jaun z ami retained by Lerdo on his
accession to the presidency.
An Editor's Manifesto.
A Western paper says: All notices of
marriage where no bridecake is sent
will be set np in small tyj>e, and poked
in an outlandish corner of tho paper.
Where a handsome piece of cake is
rent, the notice will be pnt conspicu
ously in large letters; when gloves or
other bride favors are added, a piece of
illustrative jioetry will lie given in addi
tion. When, however, the editor at
tends at the ceremony in persou, ami
kisses tho bride, it will have especial
uotioe—very large type—and the most
appropriate poetry that oan be begged,
borrowed or stolon.
SUMMARY OF NEWS.
Iwlrrralln# llama Irvw ll* • a sad Straw*.
Ail sii||ius Slut four earn ran off tlis Irsrk si
% awltoli li ft upon llirouuli esistraansaa or -Is
l|jii iisur Hoiiisrvills, N. J , and wtro com
l>lt>tn)y ipi-kril Two man wsrs klllsil su-l
fmirtssii soumlntl t lis Spaii li |c->vnni
iiloiit liaa si roat-f Ur gcin-isla M-nlu,
Arwyrti, I'silno s-.-t Aooals and Mill punlali
tliriu a-- hi-tins (o military law, for aoolal oon
•piracy and attotupUxl liiaurrsotlon. ..Threr
litmdrsil liHtgea of Indiana hnlonging at lit*
lls-l i loud Sjieiior cam pod aouto diatanra fi-iu
(lis hoa>t<|uaru>ra. and worn lu oomiuuuieaUoti
• ilh (lis lioallloa (ion Crook old. to-1 lliolu
(o return to Iho agt-uey. and on I lit i r rtfuaal
ho had ri-asi-u (o IhiIIOVO llioy inlondod Joining
tho opp .nto .'aitip, and nouac-|tlohtJy hy a anr
pn>e m ivi uioul eoiuplololy aiurouudod Ihout
and --ana d Ihtiu In aurisudor wilhaut a ahol
holus flu d Their aiuio and |*>uita *sro lakou
from thooi. ltml Cloud aao d. |maol from ttic
ohlsftalnohlp Which wa* l-.-nloWs-t oil Spoiled
fail, who i friendly to thi while*
lt.nl P.vpalCat ha* been (fsptwcsl and rt t'lool
loM (loi rale* rrcalltd lu Mailtu l>oiotus
Idm oouaohdatod 101-a-'---J fat-1 ry at tiliroy,
Ca! , was do*tru)r4 hy au Int-endiary lire
l.oan, tAkI.UXI Hy llio exploalull if two
hundred |Hiund* of |a>wtdt>r on a torpedo lust
at Calcutta, iu-tia uiue iu- wtro h.'own to
atome ami sevoial utlicua 11-j red The de
fai aiioii* of KHI*, the l'aia hmk (N'oa Vorki
loller, tuill out to ho t(*. 000,
Tho wriuuora tho lirnt day at tbo Punlioo
rat*-* at Italtiiuorb w< 10 aa follow* J'hieo
|Uarter tulle dash, tIM, Mnuhtam, tiu s,
1 '2l J Bute alako*. two lutloa, St.UUU, Vigil,
.1 C-nlial elaaos, SOOO, Oho unls, Hila
• pirhaiiha. 1 tWy. All ago*, two tulle hokta,
ttkk), Add, Tom CMiillreo wtnulug tho furt
heat and holug dutaneod lu (ho *cooud
tlcuiy K.'altr, C'll- rt l. was hung 111 iho lllt
uuis district of I tie Cherokee nation, hy Uio
Choiokoo autlioilt e- for tho Itiuidrr of a
coloro.l man. He had provluuaiy killed two
Un. u. . ..Th* I'uitod Malta Mil try log tchoontr
K<iit-l was driven aahur- from her aut-horago
at Isle au Haut, I'ouobooot hay, Maine, and
became a total wreck Her i-fth-ara and urew
arre saved.... The - fti -tal vote of Indiana
shows that the total tiumt-er of ballots pollod
amounted to i t 31D, of whi h tho I'rluouiate
secured -12,01b. Htpubhcau* 'J and the
tilde)* mirolo 1C US2. The,l*tiu.*-ratic plurali
ty was l> *tb . . .Spain propose* au ellradllli n
treaty aitil thla ouutry . .due hundred and
tweuty-sii conapiratoi*, lucludtug elghlotu
genera'.* have lee.; arreete t -U S)mUli The
ro|-.-rt froui the )*-i>*iou bureau of the govern
ment shows that dtiung the tlsoal year the
total nuuit-er i f |euj i.er* •** '2Jt *2l, t-Olng
a dectraae of 2,604 from the i-kv.OU* )t:
The aiucuut d shureed was 42* 361,61(0
duo h..i..1t.-J ai-d f (IV tlioUaai d ) eoplo at
tended the hilnb.ucu ou Ohio da) rauking
th-rd in p- i.t of uuiubcra The Brm-aWat*
of Weal \ ,rgiti:a seourod Uie aatiie uQiul*r tf
reproseu'.a'.u ce In the
la i year, a.. l Will elect their cat dl-late for
I ..ted state* ei.atur The wioin ta of tho
la-t* at Haiuuioir were as foil w* One mite
.' -r all Sr.es. ti"&, I tie j irallon, 1 tM , in, lo heals
fir thin-year-old*, id), AlnhUsh. 1.479k>
1 id free handicap f r all ages, tto-', liurgoo.
S l"j Tho governorw i f the large Woeten.
Blalc* which have suffoied fn-Ui I e _r a.ahop
prr* nit'l In OOUVenUoti at dutalia, and after
dl.cussihf, the auhjoct liK-roUphly, eilopted a
)>etiUou tot ■ Ugresa to aid the a dl lis rav
aged lien Te.ry d eailu d iho Ldians
st S a d., g Hock ag.- 'i->, t- ii d.d not itiocsnl
111 .rllil a t rut I.Uuh'l , t 118- SI alt IS
b-beved the ravag-a hid them A ruu
tung race at Niwuiaikel. ) , aud ft 4 the Hal
-1::, ha.u handn ap r. UiUdluadea l hi al 1-
laeeti the A->n ui. h.lte I'ay Tu.al am! the
llilileh an una. Hloadaida. Uu running 11 t 9
Hay Final waa sticcoseful Wru It. Wtnt
uey, of Chirag . is ha- krupl. Llahllil.e*
Jt.uOno tunch of it due in Sen York Male
. The C linen tal 1-ife Insurance Co . of
Naw Yurk. I< defunct
Tw i ago! .!ris, witosa, named llrudack
and ii'lia:d r.-sid-ug al. ne ,u Utthe* ('a,
*. C , acOS found murdered An ax aas the
Uistrna out u**J. The knitting nulls al
Ku-c. N Y' , n ro lewtroyed hy fir- Thi
io el* Alert and l>acovary, of Uie K; gl *h
lisvv. which *lartid oti a futar eipe ten n over
a year age-, have arnye! at Veseolta on U.elr
relttm. AilLi-t'.gh n 1 eacoe.dhi- in read.mg
the pulr.U ry bring l ack a tie..* ■ - eeionll&r
rui-Bl'rauda, gaihued uri'or gvea' hardship,
ri.e A e:t passed last "i iter m la -lude
tw i degrees tw* ty-*eren m .tuus where the
sunw* .nr.* el Is for 14'2 days ad the tin ran x
eter sio! fifty ii toe degree* hot w rcohr two
work*, o'i ett - occ-sioii rea-h ng 1"4 ilegroc*
t-ei • ft i;n g pol l. I : n t!>t* jsnul a *,c,tgr
pari* wa* sent not It. ward to elg .tyihrte de
grees. twenty minutoa, hut li-i land wa* dis
covered, and after taking observations the in-
Urpsd |*arty nt lmed, having lost three man
on tha Jonmey Th* Kuax cotumisslou
hav ug -t.i-aen from llie triaty ti.e clause r •
lat.ng t > tear vat to Imltaii Territory, the In
dian chiefs all signed u wittingly By a
rat In-e-t arv.dcnt near KrarUmi, Mr., two men
were fala! y and a nutnt-er aril maty tnjared
A freight ira.u on toe Jersey Midland
r a 1 J-ii'i<vt i.'.e track J iat l*-f >ri- reaching
th< hgh bridge a llawtl rue, and Uis engine
suiting th* end of the tnu lure, kno.-ked
it fr wn its tuourti.gs aud It fell, the train fol-
So*ing into tie ihasm. Tho engineer ai.d
llre-niau were tided a d two other employeee
fatally inj-uid Tha hurricane which
caused such cx:*!i*i*o loase-s U rough- ut the
West tin i~* extended over the states of Cen
tral America, and great distress prevails in
c uvqueue". Managua, in Nicaragua, was
first inundated and then visited hy the fury of
the wind, which demolished four hundred
house*, kilting a large number of people.
Three huudred Innsee were destroyed in
lUewfield. Tho goven,ment i* extending aid
to 111# suffering populace. The coffee crop
■trffers to the rxtetit of 03,000.000. and tho
losses at Managua are put at ♦2,0(0,000 In
a free-to all race on Fleetwood track. New
Y'ork, Judge Fuller!ou took one heat in '2 22.
Ilrrat F.astern ttie st-coud In 2.20). and ltarus
the three next in 221 J. 2 2.1 and '2 20 .. John
Hills a id John Kill em. who murdered Fanner
Chiseled in Atlantic county, N. J., last Au
gist, for the purpose of rohhiug his house,
www hanged for the or-mo at Mar'a Handing.
Too rope about Ftillem'a neck sltpjHvd, and he
died in terrible agony, meanwliilo uttering
roo-t hortiblo sounds of gasping for breath,
and clutching wildly with his raanarlsd hands
A number of spi clators fainted at the scene
Hills died easily.
Thrco Methodist. tuinist>rs circuit riders.
wer shot lu Ark.. ** hy Illicit distni is who
it i* thought, s | posed tliem to ho revenue
- ftioore going to mko arrests . . lliinngthe
recent heavy gale rt fiil lo island au American
vessel rnpp-x-ivl to belong in Easlport, Me.,
was driven ashore and wi nt to pieces. Her
Crew was drowns,) . five of the bodies be
ing recovered. The veen-i was laden with
ham led herring.... The I'ope having de
sired to divide the archbishopric of Hyoi p into
. two dioceses without the asent of the French
government, the latter I a* issued a dreree
1 forbidding uoh a division Tlioms* l.aui
gaii, of Brooklyn. N Y . was suff. ekted, while
drunk, hy rolling over iu l>od and Jamming
ins faco in a pillow, from which position he
was unable to extricate himself .... Two
co ored wom n of I/oiiisvilie, Ky , having a
quairel, decidcl to fight a duel with knives,
and accordingly met at night without wit
nesses in front of a Baptist church, where
they fought fiercely for half au hour, al the
rxpirhtiou of which time tliey were rrresled,
one of theui being terribly gashed aud ber
right i ye cut onl.
After terilfic fighting on Monday tbo Turks
drove the Servians from HJuiiis and t x-k |*>s.
session of the height*, thus cutting the Mer
vivn srmy.in two. Tho Hervians, dissatisfied
with tlieir commander in chief, could not he
brought to fight with spirit, uotwitliatandii.g
tbo frantic endeavors of then iiusaiaa ulTloers.
Allen 0. Hams, convicted of poisoning
his father in May Isst, at which lime several
Others of the fami v <iiw>l has been sentenced
to be hanged at Ka-ton, l'.v William Haw
thorne, a citizen i f I lager-stow ii, Md , aged
seventy-two years. kidod by hie so:.-In
law, Thomas Htovc s A recent census of
Buffalo puts the )*>pul t o.i at 143 fi'.M an n
crease of ten thonsand during tin-pas', year.
IJ.F a collision near Goutdsboro, on the
Delawaie, Hackawanna and Westeru railway,
a passenger train wa* wrockod—fire p even
gore being killed and thirteen won ided
Investigation shows s deficiency of f.300,000
iu the treasury acoount- of the city of Phila
delphia Burglars v auuil admittance to
tho Jewelry efore uf Hltdu Brue , In New York
city, by false keye, <>u a Hutulay night, and,
forcing the safe, carried off 9211,000 worth of
slix-k, traving nothUig hut plated were.
X llOj) F TH ANKNHn INIJ.
I'rei IswiMilae hr the President The fitflb
If *1 Navrmltrr Appaluled.
//.V 'A' /Vr milt nt of tht I'nitrif .S'fnfc* ;
A PIU X'lei M ATI OR.
From ytwtr U year w havo tMHvn ao
r'ust.'lutxl to pwitix- in our rlnily ptirntutn
ami M't njiut t u tituo to offur mil th inks
to Aliuipfitjr (lixl for the *|MX-iitl Hirers
lug* IH- has Vtrui-hniiftHl hr lis, with otir
Irrnyi rn for n noiituiuatiivv thprrwif. W
tavc ut this 11 ui*-. M|trexl n-nsoii to Im
thankful for Hia coutimuxl jirotmrtiou,
utul for tlio inunv unit - rial hlosuiiign Hi*
Ixiuuty has In ntoMf.l. Iu mlthltoti to
thrwM- favors accoritr-vl to uu as tutlivhlu
■ls, wt- have i-sprvinl ixmtxsiou to oxprmf*
our hmirty thanks to Almighty (hxl that
hy Hi* jirovuhuice ami gnithuuw our
govorunit lit, r staHlishcil a w-utury ago,
has lax-u r-uahlrxt to fulfill thn purjntsc.
of its founders in oflorttig au asylum to
tho poop hi of nvr-ry rai**, stx-uriiiß civil
ami religious htmrty to all wilhiu it*
borders, aud tur ting out tax every indi
vidual alike, justice nud rxjlllty txefore
the law. It is, moreover, tvsjmcutlly our
duty to offer our humble prayers to tbo
Father of all a. riles for a ooiitiuuaurm
of His divine favor to un as a uattou aud
an individuals.
By reason of all theae consideration*,
1, Olynat-ii H. Grant, I'resident of the
United HtaUs, do recommend to the
jM-oj'le of the United Htatv s Ui devote
the tinrtieth day of November next U>
tho 4-Eprreiaioua of their thanks and
jirayers to Almighty God, and laying
aside their daily avixgifious aud all seen
lar ixvcujiatious to assemble iu their re
spective places of worship and olxeerve
such a day as a day of thanksgiving and
rest.
lu witness whereof 1 have hereunto
set my hand aud caused the seal of Un
united .States to bo aftixe.l.
Dons at the city of Washington this
twenty-sixth day of October, in the year
of our Lord 0:10 thousand eight hundred
aud seventy six, and of the iudepend
euoe of Uio United Htates of Ameritwt,
the one hundred and first,
[bl I N GHANT.
HAMILTON FISH, Secretary of Slate.
The Future Price of Wheat.
The Isiudon JSxaminer, iu a lengthy
article en the future prico of wln-at, says
the harvest of IH7& was deficient, not
only iu Kt.glund, but very generally
ao in couutnoa from which Lug laud re
ceives its supply. In Luglaud the
acr<-*go nuder wheat in lHTfi was much
smaller than 111 JH76 and previous years,
and in the accounts from France, ltua
sia, aud other vLmt gr<o*i .g countrn 4,
tL - r< (sirts 'hour a jmrcahtagc less thiui
u.. aVii -age crop of from two U> seventy
js-r cent. In north lln-ma the loss is
fully seventy j-er oenl., and in central
llussia and Uussiau Poland it is only an
average. The most mil,.factory featart
iu the list tn the fart thai the Austro-
Iltihgarntu empire is ernliled with near
ly au average harvest, ai d the iu x-t im
portent part* of Bussia with " better
than a good average;" but Uiere is t-vi
dctltly UO excessive surplus with whicli
to make gtxsi Uie i-roba -le inability of
other districts to aeud much to KngLnd.
Turning to America, from which we
have leocivixi the must lmpoitAUt sup
phe* in roc ut years, the Kxanuntr
ssys, the account are also rather unfa
v.-ra'de. the yield iu the Weeieru Bttee
slid Uanoila lx-iug i-s|xciallY ts-lww last
year'a. Thai America has a smaller
surplus seem* also confirmed by the
slight failing off of ahi|imeiits as com
pared with hast year. l\r contra there
is ogam a gtsxl harvest iu California,
and the great imjMjrtenoe of the Cab
forms cr-'p, u!tcr the exjierietic- of the
last two years, need D"' ' . .Uxl tint.
In evil.. Inr-ion, the E*ntntner belicv-s
that then will lw- a slight aud continued
rise iu the price of wheat, and brlu-ni
that such 11 ri -■ would tx-favorable to
British • X) wt*.
The Indian Famine.
The prospect* for the cr ps in the
Bombay j r.widetcT, British liidte, be
come daily more glo my. A C-oicntta
ill-1 atch slate* that the district* of
K andrish. Nwwuck. Ahmodnggar,
Pi -i.ah. Sholajxire, Kalalgi and Dhar
mar, containing a pojiulatiou of ne.trly
i,0ui),(l00, are throoteiitxl with wvi r
ilisir-ss. I'he lixwl yovrertiment eti
mat,-* that over '2Ufl,(fiO jxersona must lw
n-lievnl in thn-o district* alone. It is
staled that the mow-non cn>t> have en
tirelr failtxl, and the absenc of rain
jirrvrxita the wwiug of the tublxv- and
* inter crops. The oollector of I'. ouah
rej urt* that not a single blade of gross
is visible for mile*. The tanks and
riven are drying and cattle are dying
from starvation. Th-- collector at Bhola
jxire gives a still wor retxirt. Belief
works have luvu ojx-tnvl by the govern
ment, aud is employing jxxiple iu exca
vating tanks and making roods. The
alarming telegram* from Lurojx- had the
ffoct of further dejirtvwung government
Rtxnirities, which have been unusually
low for six months past. Tcva shan*,
howi ver. art- rining, owing to favorable
accounts from tho Assam and Cochor
garilen. This is a remarkably good
year for tr-a, and the quantity exjxorUNl
will greatly exceed any form-r year.
The Calcutta wheat trade bo* hiwl a
wonderful rise lately. In 1870 the
quantity eEporUwl was 2,000 tons; in
1873, 10,000 tons, and iu 1874, 8,000;
last year 50,000, and this year alr-a<ly
120,000 tons have Ixx-n exportixl from
Calcutta alone. Thi* wheat ia grown
chiefly in the Punjab.
A BraTC Engineer.
As an excursion train of eighteen
heavily loaded cars on Uie Vermont
division of the Portland andOgdensburg
railroad had commenced the descent of
a ln-avy grade, between St. Johnsbury
and the Ovinnccticut river, tho euginre-r
de.seried three cattle ujvou the track
jn*t in advance of him. To drive
or fright4*n them from the track, or to
seasonably stop the train, wa* impossi
ble. Instantly he decided uj>on his
conrs>. He 4-nt tbo fln-mxn to dis
couiK-ct his euginr A id tender from the
traiu, whisthNl "down brakes," and
* ilh full steam ou jduuged forward
done, and with the fearful impetus thus
pained threw the cattle from the track
Ho then quietly allowed the train to
overtake him again, connect!*! it aud
continued on, his passenger* knowing
nothing of the fearful danger they had
escaped by his bravery, his quick wit,
and his fidelity to duty.
Fight Miles Square of Fire.
In Halino ooutity, Nebraska, on the
seventeenth of Octolwr, a | -airic fire
burn fx! a section <f light niih- quire
nearly clean, d- stroymg onthouMvs,
stables, a ntimlx-r of d*vi llir.g honsi s,
ngrii'iiltnral imjilemeuts. '• v, un 1 grain
in stack and corn in fiebi. O.i Swan
cri-ek the wifoof Petor G- - on, r Swede,
was burned to death. (die saw the
prairie lira approaching and ran for
broken ground, but hU>p]>- d to let the
h->gs out of the |>c)i. She fell rxlianstcd
just before reaching the- plowixl ground.
Her liea-1 touched |tlow< d ground when
foiin-l. The laxly was burned to a crisp.
A woman aud her two children, name*
not giveu, were btirn<d to ileath on
Spring cro<-k. The fire was sbipjxxl by
Turkey onx'k, or it might havo Wen
much more extrusive.
At our reqr.eet Crag" ' ' of Ptdl
adelphia. Pa., have pi .i irxxl to Herd
any o( our rcoiierß, gratis 01- receipt of
fifteen cents to jiay poetaxc,) a sample
of JDobbin*' Electric S -ap to try. Send
at once. *
The CArt-di/in leader (N. Y.), in
h peaking of Merchui.t's Gargling Oil,
aays: "Mr. Hodge is a gentleman of
lilx-ral tastes ami excellent judgment,
and the Gargling Oil Company, nnder
his thoroughly judicious direction, has
become one of the strongest and oonnd
ost concerns that grace the commercial
anunls of our State. Other modici' al
NptN'inltio'', in addition to the Gargling
Oil, are Wgiuuiug to claim the com
pany's attention, and of their great huo
000* we have rvs little doabt aa we bava
of th*ir intriDa : o merit." •
A (.hastly itallway Murder.
A ilrwMlfttl murder in a railway arm
jiartmeut ia re|K>rted from Itruamvla.
Hucii a|'|*kllihg crime* wouM not trepo*
ailde HI the American railway mrs.
Imoiianl Amiiiani, a Belgian, who was
arrested iu July last on Ixntrd an nut
ward Irotitu! steamer from Livi rjxsd, no
i-uaed of rolrla-ry atnl the murder of M.
Miirant, a Hanker, and lit* liouaekee|xvr,
at ('irrr, Hear Brussels, wa* delivered to
• Belgian nffieer at Dover. Arriving at
Oalend the offloer and lit* jrrinoner, the
latter manacled, took i ajreoial oomjrart
mailt in the Brumeia train. Ou the ar
rival of tiie train at Bruaavda troth were
missing. Tho compartment they oocu
pled was deluged With llhaxl, ttlld liorc
inarks of a terrific struggle. The trod>
of the officer was found benide the track
with the skull and face Haltered. All
hi* valuable* were iniasiug. It ia eon
jecturnd that Anihlam watched au oj>
jMirtuuity to attack the offioer with his
wrist iron*, and l-st him io death; after
which he unlooketl the manacles and ea
ivajx-d. tie ha* not yet Ireeti reoajilured.
The chief *1 ~/jf of Amerioau liberty is
the impartiality wilh which it guarah
te* to every jitihltc man at least one
chauoe to deny that he i* a burglar or if
horse thief.
Uluapjx'J liaud*, lane, pim|lea, nng
woriuß, sailrhsiuu, and uih*r outaneuus affeo-
Uons tnind, and r- ugh skin ma<U soft and
smooth hy using Jcaieaa laa Hoar Its care
ful to t*l oiny thai mad* hy l)*swell, ltaaard
A Co., New Y'uik, a* ther* are many '*"!<Vi-t
made with ooumoh lar. ail of which are worth
taaa.
toukuiii[)ti*n ( ured.
Au old phyaictau. ratiind from active pra* ;
tic*, having had placed lu hi# hand* by *n
Ta*t India in lesion a/v the formula of * simple
vegetable letuedr, for th* rpeady aud par- j
oiauent cure of oon*uinp>lion, WouchiUa, ,
catarrh, a*Uiiua. aud all Uiroat aul lung affac
ttoua, aieo a poaillve and radical cut* for '
narvuus debility and all i arvou* ootnplalnU. ;
after having thoroughly lasted IU wonderful
our alive powers lu thousands Of nasns feel. :
it hut duty to make it kuowu to his auff*n> g
fellows A- iu >te<l hy this tuotiv*. and a coo
screuooua desire to relieve human ruffenug,
he wilt Mud (free of charge j to all who desire !
11, Una recipe, with fail direction* for prwpar- !
ing aud eucoaaafully using rx.nl by return |
mail hy addresaing with stamp, naming r>--
psper, Br. W. C. Stevens, 126 i'uwsrs Bloc*, j
Ilochesler, N Y.
From a lfruggiat aud Fxprras Agent.
Htwtsacao, Cmou Co . Pa, Bee, 23, 1874.
Me>re. HcUi W. Fowls A Hone, Boston :
Henrxxncn For the benefit of Lhoee efttietod '
with dyapejma ai d weaXi.ee* of the digestive
organs, 1 would state that 1 hxve been engaged
in the drug husineae upward of twt-nly y ear*
daring which time I have so d uu inadiCioe !
that Use teneved so inai.y a* lbs Puruviati
Hyrup. aul having myself Leeu ffl cu.-d for a
long Urns with tudtgeeuoti, 1 wa* perfeotJv
cuied hy taking one large b ililo.
JutiTXi* Vt'uUL
Hold hy all drugg-ste
Tha Ghaku Cr.vriui. Utmth, New
Y->aa. haa reduced j-i.cee to suit the time*.
The traveler can MOW *top at a flral-rlase bolwl
for 42.60 to 03 per day. Una ta the largest
hotei tn the city, and Mr. Postra t-aa taken the
proper step to keep it fed. We recommend
the irattin.g puUm to give the Grand Central
a Uisl.
The faintly provided with (iuux't
Hl'Ullt X run ~cd have uo fear, tf it ,* need
freely, of earniieum. anxld head, ringworm,
itch or any other of those annoying and dis
figuring eruptions, which chtkdr-e are ao apt
to contract at aebool. Bepot, Cnumtuux
No 7 Htxth avenue. New York.
l'erfe t hia. k* and apieudid browns are
created by Uih * Hair Bye.
The iM-aitou for rough* aud ex-Ids u
rajilly approacblug. xr d every one should he
pirpxird to check the first eymptouia, as a
cough contracted between bow ami Christina*
frequently last* a 1 win or. Thar* ta uo better
remedy Uian JuW-n t .tacxfyiar Lmimrnl.
For ail theeaar* of the throat and lung* it
should he used in torn a. ly aud externally.
Th' fact that the proprietors of bvan
ford ■ Itadical t ure for let-rsh ••# •*!,.. tied
t-> refer to so weli knorti aud it ,--; M e gen
tlemen a* Henry Walls, tq , of Wells, far go
A Co. a ax, reaa, must weigh heavtiy in
favor. •
Mlllluli* of Ix.tl re uf Bt'H-WETT'fi CVv
cvuiM have been sold during the last twenty
y ears and the public have r< ndere 1 the verdict
thai II is the teat hair dreeautg la the world
Lung fevor, cummrm colli*, catarrhal
fever end l.aexl diachaig* of e btowuiab color
in bur*re, may l>c cheeked et once, by Literal I
aee of NWrvian'st'acmry tk -.Aium Bwrom
FoitTPJCBfi port Aid.—AßuU wanted
Adlnas BuJiou Minuig G0.,174 Ihoadaay ,N Y.
IN V A 1.1 11 r.N*ll>a IM KEtsgn.
Rr resxsvi lae l r s I sale. T<*Se Mt*i ri> I low to
utxxie ihesi w ru* ileal. 1. RIXUIItM * Oil. AH|V
lar CHlsm. I'lU.lr Iwai Title*. W*ehl*ctae. D 0.
The
WWW TOM.
t eef uetue—rnu.*le kitra I u..rwti 'hm lfk
One;rncii le t*e Txin* .I\ v tag
MUab Ceww a • Oo
Huge-Live M th
Drreted ... '4 V 0 OS
'thvi 0
Un tw . f*V 4 Of
Oiuaew MH-t'lai US* 110
Fleer—Extra t to e " on
Rtatc Wn i a i|g
flat- X*tWM3 lull N
Ke. 1 Kj-rtcs 1 ] e 1 21
Bye—nut* . as * i
Barley—Rial* ... f* wt v"
Barley Malt.. 1) 4 I R
.Ml* Mitel •*'<-.-• ~. I!l| 1 Tl|
Ocrn— AtH R•# II 2 II
day. pr cm ao A ■
Rlrae, psr cvrt.............. . to A no
Hcpe ft a- II p. 7 7t* 1? # In
r i-mmi jr ro a:t J
to-M rN
l"*fi— Maekeral, Ke. 1, n*e....... U X #l7 0
" Be A new 7 no A S 0
Dr* Ocd. p>r cw1............ t 0' e t ft
Hcrrtng. Healed. |>wr bet it 2
petrel.n; —Oreds. .... I# Alt hsfirel. M
We- vllfernix ffesre 10 A *
1 'UI " I A
Austra'Us " U A tl
r w vt.. 11 • a
V.lst . Dairy XI ft ft
wssiora Tallow * A fl
wseism Ordlaary 'lO V
Ul- ■ —Rtal* Factory it It
met* Hktmmad t n
Was'am M 0 12
mate t * 19
■crtita.
Fleer (If A oft
Wheal Ko. 1 B;-v:tUi 1 80 1 re
tVre-Wizsd UHe 1
iMta ft At*
lit * 07 * 711
!*.;ry 0; A US
r*riarM.rw:i.
tow Cattle— Extra v * Mb
V w oak
llotn—lTlwed . r*x A <*v
Flour— I sunxjlvani* Extra ...... 171 o*(i
Whcxt—Wretwrn B*S IK All'
K*. ...... mmm a A tf
00m—Y5i10w...^....... ...... ... T 0 M
*1U(...x....x.....m (' A *7
oU—Mixed *0 0 ft
Patrol earn—Oradt l(H0)f% K.Boed 14
£*> PFII 11*1 I eerer* Otesevine* Attn*
~ JAWKS 1 IMRIh H t S7. Vleelsed. N.l
* month Oetflt worth 01 free a aawota.
O*'"' Kicsl.l MT( On . 1(1 Mteh Av.Ohleaen
\IIKNTK wanted, e* .vlarr nr cMxnwitaston New hw*
ems AMsaJ R Maaaev ( t>> . a-. U-dw Ms
A UTIIM A The onlj *ers rwmsdr tiWliwrkiir
Aoinfflft. uxwiTwmuwT.• ixJ*i7'
Piaraxn-v a . ••**# aarxiearr. imww a met
tea w„M (miUM(-*ex wr ( Oa.r*ea. ra
#.)g Alf % V tr- Xesef* Saispl* free 3f Mt
— > i'u.i -# I. ♦I.aTv'IIUH. I 1 l-t \ i
ADTNTI fllt'K tllMfl Obivmn. ► KKfT.
li.\j laiv 1 a .1 II Ml N VIVN * MRU Ptallad* .•*.
DCI/ni l/C D" 7 *hw ofi*(,7a(le
ULIULICn w astaaa ilraWoaas.t'til aes.lil.
mi I j ' . i iay fmt*|wil tn- all Ohmn.n * ftovslu
"111-' tn, on.-f-wn ♦ sit A On .US .N.w.a *l. ,N V
*> iv Wwl Iniirue sn 11<> main t Iwnls ,Sn
•* • ,.l,Bln |ii K M tx-dta ..1-vltanapN.lu.ld
CvK t/V <77 * '• *-" Kami In* PKRIt.
3< <>lo 9// p O VI. KVKV. AoenMp. Mshw
i > til TUT Flt K. . llsei < Uaues Vnl Wm.
•r ~i .I Ones • tII.t.YNS k l*> , * Ollafeo Blaoe.N Y
It, lift I slrU N* wills., Trlrlo, l.nmr.,
f tllfO t'npnlar l-n •* ,■ In Xsod •tame tor l Xla
I *-:* tnu (l' . li-a 17111, f-nntnAnn, NnwYnt*.
km vI- caieKa.m wend*. Oirenlateef Rk> -.1 C 'a
pi Jt -JOall s.Mm-i. ll,*,lV..llir,ele .f \x_J(/
1 .law,i a N l- BOTSa. 7" rXwb's.Pa T "
| QWW 8s ~t na-it* to *• or* S*m|>le< aod
Ift / / Agsno, of a. pnl.r 34 ng* A'manso
•w • PRATT* BROS ku.| oro'. M.w.
If n\TI?U " '-*•• With 8 -ocU aod K.j Ohsck
ill II II H I 'hitSt- - *l*|, *n* a.-v.t sample* FHKK.
iUUltiai S V, s anear.M: Waah.S- .lio.tou.MaM.
SOOSKYiV UXX.WZIku™
HlMlal V A ( >i.. 32 K.at 14- real. New Vork.
BAB ■ ra I r\. '' I 1.1-" '°r P'oitfila* and Kunn n
■V InlIJ Mn '-lu*rj Address PokM fVO
ww lira >.lNli MILL CO., Xuu, K. Y.
u A.MKI) XssnUoaniaalljm.kr 01O|.R daj rellln*
Vv our nsw a.llele. AoPl) sa-ly fir i ho.ee leinu.rj
The Lion fe.er and A*ne 0.-.. 149 Broadway. Ne* Yor*.
Aaa A fI'INTII. botal and travallng evpenawa
ItKl] l-a'd for aalrastr*. No pwddl tut Addnaa
TV* MoKlToa Magur'a(H) .(luvelanatl. Ohio.
r fYiTA A lienlb. —A.eats waxitnd. i!4t heal anl -
aillole. In iu* world One aaapl* ll* •
WIIUW tile 2 < 1 ItKtfNMtfN.lfsimli.Mic
Ays VI ATI IIKn. A (Irsat Seeaa I'in. .->umj,x
■K a H*ai-A and fMtfJO /r.r Io imi>. tinier tbao
TW Uold. Addieea A. OOULTOM A 00.. tlhleeso.
|Yq OPTFIT Ut Kh TH AIJKNTN, mm and
CO w.men Artli-ls ina.es SB a ureal ebann for bo-b
asaea Sell, a! a,*bt Io every youi u la. y aod |-ci
St'iaKTiric Nov n i v <'o . II Avlot p New Yo.k
AAA M Mali- hy one Agent la tf day*. 1.7 new
\HXttri!i'li-.. Raiu|>lrs free. Addreia,
VwwT t. a. iJMM.iiiv.d,!,.,,.,,
▲tiJCNTM.— Twenty Hall M nan led Ohram-* far
01. Waamploe, poet paid, *Oa Birei shed Uhie
mos, all at sea, at low prtew. Cslaaocn* tie*. Oom.
■itiTil Obbomo no., Et Ivattaa Btre*t. Raw Terk.
MERIDEN CUTLERY COMPANY
Rocoived the HICHEST CENTENNIAL PRIZE.
MANUFACTURE ALL KINDS Of TA CII C fM ITI CDV
| Kxlu . r*k.m Oithm IIQNT "_** I nDkE WV I libll I ■
j Atwera caller Trade M. k" MKHIDN* OCrLtttoT W> " ~ lb# btadra Warraetoi Pad -► b all Itoata,.
I U (UM|. aad bp lb. UKKIIIKAI A IfI.KM T 1(1.. I>IMN>>W Riml|Nt TMM.
jf* • llai |U luavklna II Allaß.ltpM.Ht
NO w PMI ptn iw !■ hiHiPi r—
" " PtAt SAO A Wt> WtlbiSl 1*l. WW
MONET K^£?On^fMl'ltrarmp**N' y"" '*
'f ftYFM'
ill/ T JUELU mAM.tu. Hot* att |>ii
mam waned ham I; THE Khiub I'up. Uo., Rtttrt. ft J.
i n nnmn "r— >wi u m pwm ptwi
nItVN I X I® toe world ud aaatid aul.l (Miaul
iIU 111 l 1 U '•*•* wale®. Imm ml mm 4. artia at
! .MM iJ J Hkilltt A OO . 7114 Rmtdtti. N *
S6O A WEEK
j thai Pill kfii lam mitl) t awalb mi IMPM tu at at 4 a
i lar •mm 4 Paiua. 113tirweawiea Hlraal. Hap Vati
i $lO s2s' " • ' "' •' 'SB
Six—222l *'•• • • i
WA V TPn a..ftl Itbaau.. i uUI u4 Inul
AniCilf , M uvaat RPI b ( <lau| A
lira stuaa* for hwpmml eraser? mmm, AAH I—l
I rtl.B laPaalflpl AAa.lt .l larlaaall.iMlla.
I f W kL r I TlP*bad Malartito harm Map rtm
ljl IV ll\ . Haul 111 tpr llltl fit* I'tlt lapaa
NATIONAL TTP* uo.
4 Pa 3rd M . PbttA . Ps.
Am ftinnn i'*ti >* wpmi. m..t. taaPat
I I tmnmmmmamn m*t* Nr k aril
yiv ViUUU trap atpiatalap iitriAat
AMlaaßAltkkllkl llttlo. 17 WailbC.N V
PIHIOII I.KII Uaaatrki, Wat al
Uai pp. .ulreraahf ppkaupladpaa IP be iba Hatl
I Sara* paar paldnlad Tat PPM bl all dealers Urrwlss
f> atall UP tat MM at Ml easts I krealam I rap Pub
<ubad Ira t A WBII.HT. IHPPIBPPII. Opw
ABII IBM iiai*ll ut k.i• ai buME
i B ljp|| IIH Ma inkllpll Ttaw snort
" ■ ■ * 1 arau atuparalp Ipputuiw
1 aipia lltpinlba pppp lit I 1 Maaab. nuiuti. Mu.l
• TUP Waa Watt. ladtapanM Id* la fA M Italia
ah at alpb. Hulaalrt vatttoun taa head lot
"WwF II al impure Oalplupaa kadtTu lIM . I üba
/x\ ntppAtid Maanala Wurkp,l3l Broad we*, to *
go south
■atb lot la Para n.'aat Addraea IrAINHH A
1 ISi.LINI, Ma U AaUf lloaaa. Ma* Vara <4#
UK.k.it. ►rr■ii -i . tl l i niipii iAY
atari' lakl. raaw tpraf, IU real*.
I Maaap la llptb, wltto llla.itail.aa, lilt
r.:wif,rwx */?•" - 4,4
BMX*LaOYMBKrT.
AN * Clk.vA at erdlaam latatilpaaaa mm* mm a aU
!P| b wupai lot Tba lAuairetod Wee*!, Alport
apaa la pat map—up Ik i uaip net alalia* latf, pa la all
aaaeaaalui bnaliiMi, IndaaUp pad aaargi bead far per
Ha a lata I Map. I'l are* A la., Ilkpop EL. fl.
T A TJ UfT B d tbt.r aaaa aaakd tkia MS pad
£At vp^auXWk)*" l " ' ll>Pl(i|kr
ww t la aut.r an rs „l rap! Inert)
| to in* Isrrnr-rr la ipMr an terunuea NrsneeMp.rwaai.pm.
ktafaap lanirauambm. J Wuorai KUt.kt
TL 1 Aw -Tba all .Paul la uaa aalt
I IJt\ . a friaa- Iptßaat l'aai(iai.f la Anwrlup
alt ana pruc.r (tlinaaa awartali-Tiala uaoUppalla la
araiatap Apt-ita apa bad aaatyakan baM ladn uanpapp
—Haat aaaaa it a pai d tar ( lraDlar la
MINT WEU.-1, A 3 Vaaat lit. N * I* O Hot 1 **l.
IHBBSi
KMk.lir A HMI.IIT. una. 11. I
I'lltl/E? buW klk'k NKKbERV ATI VI •
All' I i Ik. artli kaaa aaaat ik< foot maA A
aaatpla park apt, aaoapb la pat |. ball a l.arral >a I. aap.
la ant addraaa la, Eft uaa it Addraaa li L MUWkXN
A I*) . UkMWi. 131 Milk MM R alPa. Haa
j " Tup Aaaa iPa aort parlaat it • Mar cat a* ppta p
IMP alt a tap pa - Itit.t Holla kab.
M)UIMIT4IO/rPR faraMkltrapp.
& Mi 'tMpti't aaysi
TV-t-*-"*- ft nrLkaa tui > *p7^ 4 SftSrrii6SßC"3
La* r * • MHikHIM MM. M- l nMM MMM NmlneN <>■
• *• lU*Ui * MMM to to. -Ham AtUmm *L ftTLML
• few* fmmlrn MM >"k I UUOlll *S MUMMMM.
A BOOK for Ihe MILLION.
MEDICAL ADVICE XSESX2ZSE2.
tpiartb i. tjrtira U( UU ui llabii. a r.Ut™T rRICA aa rtaeal
tniu'i A-Ad^r.
IP! MTT Na UN SkiL. El LPMp. Ma
0 AGENTS WANTED FOR THE fIREAT
I'ENTENNIAL HISTORY
It alt f tat at Haa mar (Altar book Oaa Appal pM
41 I'll it ka aaa dat baud tar oar rtu lartpa tr
Apaaia Naraoaat rrauPHtpu Of Ptiliadalpdla. Ta
HO, FOR IOWA!!
rarmprb ranura tad ku4 MEB tt Hweciee
A apptaa I rota I ,*UO INMI pra- al Er baai kaada u
lava al K H'PM. pi ~i pad Era pat aura haad a
poaial aard tor oat iaaP pad paaudtlal. at aall mm UP
la*t N H L*a4 Ik, " ft* Kaadofpb St. * 'blaapo. at
ijadar Naptrta. laaa Jon H Oaldkocp. lrafdOaNt'f
If jroa want to do yamr ft. .
r£4lr f* UMi w.i-c:-p
at iriniiiK |rrs
mn iauu run .. u xutv si..
DU. MANN 1 t KID* HIT UlbtlßL Maa
Oaraaa. Wuiit baralilap. ( aautittl Ua a. par
iSob lapt, pnouat cullinj aarda or aaj tatpbaai ipn a
Uaa.ra pa baar*> ponßaaoaai It bad. pad ta aut tmij
opt l-aiu ktptatlrt bulrarunara an Ural tdlarardad Nr
<kp|t far paribUM aaad M iba cam Thtr-f alt faara'
atprataaa ■ Kmm(A :O torapoapa, al I*4 1 fkili pi..
Philaoalpsla Taaadal pad Wadtraada; No 133 Waal
4IP hi Nas Ton. hpada I Ml* Waabiacipp Ht
Hoatoo Tbaradat pod Nrtdar. Paud tarn CtrepUr
*//{,
*/*y /J //
* mmm _
£ls SHOT GUN
A daabkabarrai **a. bar ar float aadtoa koala, at:
taalad f aaolat talM link, pad a B*bd ikrula, op IK
at 1.1 aim Flaal. I'oaab pad Wpddattar. far |||
Opa ht aaat U. O D alib (ntdhpt to tiajalaa kah>,
(tutor bill Naad titmr far atramiar la r PuOKIX 1
M.kN .' HalßaaU. l>
Potter's American Monthly,
50.000
Si'ar rilm **" I 1,1 >*• Ol Fair, ' Klblr
mmhmmtmmrm kar>t<a>'4la. paarto. ! got- li aau*
a Ana Uaoa.rtaa.S*J,. glaap la Iba rata, a wad
1 077 ls tPHelai' roraaWal all .Naaa ataada.
111// Al Kb paaia a mahtt ktatplTpwu
lUII. Arabia J E Rortll 11,1 Pblla. fa
OTTTim Every Household Should Keef
n H I at hand to a tantadj U> oat* rttkral cad
" "111 top Iba darkor (Ida. lloprbt. pad (k*
aaODUoa praatli is ateaai atarj laaitlj Al l.bN'-
1 f *ll WAI.HA.W a ill oara tba oauto pad ooorb.
AN *U7i ?K*TVk ANT IT H 4N no Fur *1
II la batrtoiitMa la lb* taaat drllrtir rakkd
I raalalaa p Optaa la aok Irrp.
IHiatiHaar moaami'maf tuh bottla It It aold by al
drntftoi sod mto*t Ihe dos'm
'"jte, Tn# Hrwi Truss witnoa
STapp!KirSi^^'ajJ^
trail laat karl"a^d < pTr lai.
V/ prlrr fm r all flat 4m mat rati Prlaa, Maria,
Ilka MI. ,4. tor bat* wdta. Ml (tool bf toail. past
paid as i ■ ratpl al prtoa N R - TV. TVotr mail nr,
■sm% iNrmrw iU mmm •/ s> in fm wM4 imwi
m* iMrenisn frito. POMBXOT TUVWt
IN KKAOV-THK
CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION
Dl to H'ni l) AMI 11.1.1 MTKATKU.
Atr aphlt pan plotaf* aI Hi tlrlot). rmnd bpltdtaor
atlPdailul nbuntt. corioaltoM. araat Amjm. mmm Pra
laaril lllatiraird. Utorotrll* ptpmipr. bad *ar
opppp Mast ad , rtatJt 4.MW A scat a wan tad
Saod Fat fall pattlcpkara. Tula trtii ba tba . c haa at p.
I Oil rran In oth tsooar laal Aral tba ooli raUabk
hUdrrar Hl BHARv) HMOS, fpba, 733 Paaaoa
' Mirai. rhliadtlpbla. t a.. <" hptiarfi 11. Mara
r A TTTin V Ur pot datilrad ttj praottarabookr
V A U 1 lUit f polar la ba " r Mop ." pad tall la.
; a bat a 111 baspaa Is Atogwak pad W t|Hokr.
EUPEON!
1> you have Rheumatism. NeuialcU,
Htt.dache, a Bum or a Bruioe. prooutt
n bottlo of Dupcou It will give instant
relief, as thousands can testify Foi
sale by all DrufglitA H. A HURLBCI
A CO. 75 and 77 Randolph Stront,
Chlotgo. Agouti for the Proprietors
IffeSfsltioS^.
3000 Cngrwwlfigt. 1840 Quarto.
FOUR PAGES COLORED PLATEB.
One fsmGy of rhtkfrwn biTtnc WfRRTKR'I U*s
mi!Mr i\ Aiiii UMin< 11 fotot*. And anotbwr not harin# IL
Ih* ftrsf will |kr<v.mM much !• mnt lnfolUnt men and
tnmen Ask four IstorhMr oe mlniMStcT If ll I* nol •o.then
btiT th*> K> k. nd nv. und ui*# 1U uw, fro#lf.
rubhsttodtiydaAsr. MICKiil ,%M,o|rin#fl4d.llaM
Til IF.
1.0>09A81.K MEHTIONS AHK U.VE . IO
BOINTONES FURNACES
(Osst or Pu lron>.
KP rlltj adap'aa ",r ha"ir
U 1 I.INOS. CHVR* ifKS BPHOOL4, ETC.
MOST l-OWKRFTI. A 111 DURABI.K KbKNAUK
KOLIk OVKH *O.l HO IV U.M.
80Y.N.0 'to" tN7b" HAI.TI HOME Fl UK
-I*l.Al b II N.t i FM.
Kilrcma y povarfullp haatlnr. A traetlTr, btUllait,
ilaiab'a. an ,oomlol
MOY.bTO >' "Tile "tOppn-llrnie; t or.
Tilt pi at aitraoUvw Übrary Morn arar mada.
land tor elrualara Ktrlmau • rlrtu tpr haatlar .Oar-
* | I
HALE'N
BONET OF HOREHOUND AND TAB
FOR THE CURE OF
Oosght, OeWk, Ikiarstk, BosmsMk, Diict*.
Bfsalklsf, ss4 al! AfactlosJ of Uo Tkrosl,
Broseklal TsWs, sal Lssgs, lsoHtsy
to Coskseptlos.
Thi inCtlliUe rcmrly it compotcd of ll
HoNtV of the plant if urehotrnd, in clierox I
union with TA BAIAI, etrotted from U >
Lir* PuNcin of the forest tree Am i
BAIAAMKA, or Balm of Otloui.
The Honey of Horrhoond boOTHIS AN"
bCAfTKAS sU irrilAOont and lniUmmstkiet, sn I
fbeTsr-balm cuuNrt AND HKAIA the thro, t
ud air postage* learling to the lung*. Fl* *
additional ingredient* keep the organs cool,
inotai, and in healthful action. Let no pp.
judicr keep you from trying thi* great medt
cine of s urnouk doctor aho ha* saved thou
kaivl* of It vea ly it m hi* large private pracDcr.
N.B.—The Tar-llalm hs* no NAD 7AST* ut
kaeU.
PKICKf 50 orTt AND $1 m SOTTUL
(jff.,l br Wt taf* *"-
"Pike's TiHitiiiiclie Irt|m" Cure
in 1 Minute.
Sold by ail 1 buggtats.
C. N. CRITTENTON, Prop., N.Y.
FUCK MUNTIIH mm Trial far U CKMTM.
Waolfl aaad tba Oaal - Hard Tlat u* Kapar tba
CRICKET ON THE HEARTH
Faar Moaiba as trial tar aolr 9b mil A pmnn*
tSswa IHoINIW to**r (dm at Mmpmr't Wa.k4.-K
|*MP4 *> Urntoi*. NPQIPi . Uoafal knaaka-b *.
ApMMMaaaaat. aaa.. aLc tba Iraat. aliaapMl bad aakto
nnpatir MM aatAtobaS Uaa 4adat par mar. an®
n* mmm of Utti praup,. ar 7k mat* rtlk.il pr
rrK ta u^*ra!iS:
ST Far* Haa Haa Tar*
mtW WILLCOX * UIBHN \
AUTOMATIC
*<£*}** WV 1/ Abumibtk
7 radr Mark la War \R3w at rooty marpiaa.
SII.KXT SEWING MACHINE.
Saad Postal Oar 4 for niastrstad Price Lkat, be.
Willcox A GiblM H. M. Co..
(Oar. Band ftL) SM Brand***, haw YoeS.
t Y , F^L
jfL
"*•( w
Thrruift Seltxer Aperient
ear* C" aafca tba aefctw from a an" ll* 4 af SI
Wmp.ll It tok asmfaaiht enrattoarila
ram of pmpi af tba dtoamra tbr: to* to btor la. It
aaat pal a Ma (tat* sat cka a baito. bob . bat
tt mar wm*4<rabt> aar4 U ilauKU It a'U
4m mm mmm W harm aad sue 4to mark fal Tit to.
und Mto t? :i woo't BOA rout cms
SOLD NT AU DBCOOISTS-
Highest Honora
AT THE
CENTENNIAL!
MASON & HiMLOi
Cabinet Organs
Assigned the
"FIRST RANK
SEVEBAL IpSITES"
Of such Instrumer.ts!
MEIIALS or EUUAL HRJUT bam barn aaatdad
aU artlakm 4aama4 trmbr af ra anlttoa. a> tbal to all
ba mmm far mam mabam m air • tor tPal tbm bara
nmti.a - ktotoa amdato " Uto Urn JCOQI*
RNPURTB. UIfLY, tbal samsstlaf utkal - at* m*sa*4
up acta Iba till* alas to aa aslraal
-THN MSbON A MAMLIB OKU AN OO Tl arbltxi
ml Rrad Oman* — Hbimaalam* ab tmm Umtramaat* *1
Urn FIKtoT SANK IN TUB (4BT KKA I. KK
ut ItolTKri or llbtoTKl WShTH OF TU
HAM) vta-i Ham nth.— aad aqaal dmnbaUaa .-I
Waa.aaas*'** aaiamnnn. imaaaaca and atomtas aaalHt
r, i mum oawbaam la artton af bam aal baUaaa.
•Ob lluwasbarm af jatmrnahlp. raaUaM alia
tomatoetu el eeUato." (Slaeed be all tba Ja4*m )
The HA SOS * tIAHUS OHO ASS art
thus drriarrd to RASH FIRST, nof in one or
fm rttprclt only, but in ALL (W IH POR
TA .V' T QUALITIES of s*mA Itutjramiwu ;
and Wry art ikt OS L T urytnu ,unstd Shu
rank.
Ttoto tottumb mm not aoaipactad. far iba Maaoa A
Ham It* Oablaal Onui bar* aaifarmlr bm arantoi
tba blftinl bamra* la i - m A*nta. Ibae
bartaa baao aoaraaii Ml araaftVim m baadrrdr ot mam
lianibum tbrj **•* amtOrf HH.MKST MONIMuI
•af Ktral Madaka-PAtU-.ISC. VIKKN A. ICT. RAN
TIAOO. UT. PHILADBLFMIA. Kl^aad bam tba*
baa i aaarSad hisbwt boaun at *r*rj WmfV Kira
Uaa a* vbwb ttor, bar* baaa aabtrttlad. tataa tba **l
f ta.rim* m*am mulmt, tmr* ami ot'taamd am aaaid
al mmm mminlilma *Hb baa* bntvpaaa mabam. or la
aa? Kamnan* Worusto kqaiuka 1
laatol aa baria* a Maaoa A lUmi* Onoaa; da aat
tab# aa? akbae. Dritaw odaa tmnanf mfmto
rafui Mill" tba* am paid ka-'car irmmimlina* tar
"n*V STY 1-SF. ntob KXTKXDbIk TOPS, mmala
aaat. aad .tpar imp rara.ua'a.aabintoad at tba tb>
TKNNIAL. atokaal aaa mi I to .nil rarmtp. Friar
rar? toaaat nml Hal anb baal malarial aad aarkma.
•blfk. IHp aaa aold tor aaa ar inrlallmante. or laatod
aatoi mat papa. Baaty areas wamnud la (tae aaUr •
""MAMTN a HAMLIN ORIiAN OO - IA4 Tmmor'
Hlraal, Hnalwe . tl Catoo (Qaaia, Na* Yorit. NO a®4
Hi Adam* swmt. Catoaab
WOOD'S
[IMPROVED
HAIR RESTORATIVF
What It Does!
It motor**, qvtoktp. Giu Hair ka ll* stoaar Natural
twikor. It haa lb* aflact of Haalortna tba Hair to ptma*
tural? Raid liaada it Rrmiiim Dae drug {tumor* aft
all Krapunaa frara __ _ m mm. tbaSealp 1' pt—
ratal* lrrltaUna.Bß ■ R|| Itebtti* aad Roal?
Pi in am of tbr R R B BRB Skmlt Kaatar- r
tS23U||UaLra5S5
rlaortotbaaravth RR R RRb of tba Hair >1
aooampltobmmoroßß M 111 drtorad adaor* In
a aboil ttaa* than fl fl fl Bfl * n f KastrrimtlTn
"XJSZ
aaad ar a llumlnr apon tba natural ba*r<a opt Ibl
hair la ab untraaltbj onndl tkua; Iba* ratutmlito tt, for th
Old and Toaiw, aa amcla af unanoaiad aioaUaora. No
praparalkoo,>tfar*d to tba oul'li, pr.dtxa* rui-h aoudar
rul raaulto. Try II! Tr? it 1! Oral 1 for " Wood"* la*
pnrr#d !" aa U contain* no tcjurtoru qinllttm
ll m ortolßaUp tntrodooad 6 joam aaro bp Plot O.
Wood, bat Up moaot chaos* of Incradtaata in tbto ar
Uol* to maktots s darnand for K to all parte of tba UUtad
Strata*. Canada* aad tomlsa ooaolrkr*.
ANNOUNCEMENT
TO
CONSUMERS!
Tba rrrrai radloal hnjinirrm.nl Introduced hi thlr .--
tool* ha* tadaoad oa to tak* tba acanc? and adrarttoa t;a
rtrtom to tba world Iu tftcu uaßralr<rmtiraarewba*
ha* baao ton* aoujrbt tot and wanted for man? ?*am. tv
Ins mot* decided m m m m*l >- d **rtofact„r?
than ha* erar ba- fl fl B BBS for* been atta. .
ad. No Drasstot RRRRRRi® the w.r i
know* H* compo. RR f R RR Mlton. and can®, I
make it. therefore RR R RBF when rtro call f r
tt, -Wood 1 , Im- RR R RRk pp'Ved" do n I
ial an? unrwtod- fl I Ll 111 pbrd dealer OM.
rtnee rou that he 1111 RR hue Bmtturaii' i
or RMDwer ull I■ ■■ fNxl. or scuu'.
thin* aftniiUr. U 111 M 111 UM Is none
tt: Insist upon hmvtn* " Wood** IxnproMKi," and
bo ntbßr, for yoar maow! It will not bo AOOR
dealer* erenrabere will bare tt. If poo ■h--uld
Aad it, poo can mnd 91.00 to na bp mail lot *
9 i- for all brdUe*, and wa will MM tt to
to xSdco., cikiJH
Sole Atcr-nta *>r thrlhlMl Stales tMß!|tfißß
tdaa. who OTUJ All all orders
Oir Trrarle nt Msnalktiartri'Ffl
J. B. Knmar.l. Proprietor.
tWNokd to New York ba J. *.
Boer on. Weak* A Potter:
towap Aoo..abd by Whnbn*lDn*ini^J
IS Y N U
WII ICY YVH ITINtJ TO ADW
pienae any that pa* MwfH
ma at la fßln aaber* ■