The Ssthkn. All eo as other gentle men do, and invite htm to the restaurant —that is, if you utuat keep this head long engagement f " But I never did such a tiling in my life before 1" said porplexed Charley. " And I hope eon never will again ?" retorted Mrs. .Arvlen, with some acerbi-1 tv. " That is, eo far aa inviting people vrithont anv sort of forethought goes 1 * The color roee to Charles Anien s cheek. "Clara," eaid he, "if yon had asked a doaeu people here, my only thought would be how beet to welcome tliem. " "You are not a housekeeper," said Clara, coldly, "with a sick cook, and everything in disorder. " Wliaw r said Mr. Anleu, as he went out, closing the door behind him, with more emphasis than was absolutely necessary. " Men are so selfish, so inconsiderate!" she said to herself. "As it I would brave the criticism of Oscar Fen wick, who Las , dined at Parisian restaurants, and kn,.w half a dozen aristocratic families, where they keep mkn-eooka, and butlers, and regular dining-room servants. It's quite out of the question, and so Charles may as well understand first as last. If Brid get hadn't been ill with the intermittent fever, I might, perhaps, have tried to get up a dainty little dinner; but as it is, no one but a man would expect it of me." So Mrs. Arden adjusted her pretty, shining braids of brown hair iu the glass, and nestled down in the corner of the sofa, to forget the wearisome trials and vicissitudes of real life in the pages of the morning papers. It was late in the afternoon when a visitor was announced, with rather start ling abruptness, by the red-anned inaid of-all-work, who was trying to supply the vacant place of the disabled Bridget, according to the beat of her ability. " Please, mem. it's Mrs. Mar ley." Clara started up. half ashamed of being caught in her morning robe so late in the day. " If it was anv one but yon, Mrs. Mar ley," said she, laughing and blushing, " I should apologize for my shortcom ings. As it is, you are just in time to take off your things and stay to dinner with me." I am alone to-night, and your society will be a real charity." "Why, where is your husband?" asked tlie vfiutor, is surprise. " Dining flora her own harassing thoughts, Clara threw OJHIU the window and thrust out hi't head. There was a little crowd at the corner of the street, and she could distinctly hear the jeering voicca of aoran of the little atriHd Arabs crviug out: " It's only a drunken man! Hallo, mister, you'll find your hat in the gutter ! Can't you tell where you live ? Go ami aak tui officer." Clara's head turned eold aa ioe. Could it ho jgrnsible ? Was this poor, stagger ing creature, whose uncertain step af forded amusement to a mob of boy*, her noble liusluuid? Had he so far forgotten himself ami her ? And if so, at whose door lay the fault ? Smirr and nearer came the little crowil. Clara drew 111 her head, ami closed the window. She could not l>ear to have the dreed fill probability con firmed. She stopped her ears; she buried her face in the pillows fif the sofa. •• Why. Clara, little -wife, what's tlie matter ? v It was Charley's voice- not the maud lin accent* of semi-intoxication, but the full, deep tones of the man she felt she could yet honor, a* well a* love and obey. ' She hanked up wtth a little hvatcriCal laugh. '" Oh, Charley, I was frightened t A , druukea man in the street,you know " " Yea, 1 passed him. A policeman lias just walked him off to the atarion-houae. So vou were frightened, eh f Clara's fai>e was radiant as she turueil up the low jet of gas. I" I am so glad you have come, Char ley," said sbe. "I have hail a great many compunctions of conscience tins afternoon, because I didn't make Mr. Fen wick welcome to the best I bail in tlie house, instead of sending you off to a restaurant." " We went to Leinonde's," said Char ley. "Tiaa dinner was stylish eooivgh, but nothing letter than you could have given us st home." "And, Chsrley," Clars, softly, "die next time vou invites friend to iftne sridi you, you may be i-ertam that my welcome will be remly." ! '"That's my owa dear little Clara," said Charley. And the hearty satisfac tion in his face w as a reward for any sac rifice she might lie called npou to make, j " A fellow likes to feel, you know, when he meets an old chum, that he has a home to ask hiut to, and a wife that will meet hint with a smile." " But I ain sorry about Mr. Fen wick." " Never mind. He will be iu town again one of these days, and then we'll show him what a home-made dinner is— eh, Clara ?" And Clara's smile answered him. She had hail her lesson. She was not likely to forget it The Two Bills.-A Fable. Two bills were waiting in the bank for their turn to go out into tlie world. One was a little bill—ouly one dollar; the i other was a big bill—a thousand dollar bilL While lving there side by side they fell a-talking atxmt their useful ness. The-dollar bill murmured out: " Ah. if I were as big a* you, what Exal I would do. I could move in such gh places and people would tie so . I careful of me wherever I should go. Everybody would admire anil want to take me home with theui, but small as I am, what good can I do ? Nobody cares much for me; I am too little to be of any nse." " Ah, ves, that is so !" said the thon • sand dollar bill; and it haughtily gath -1 ered np its well-trimmed edge* Uiat were : lying next to tlie little bill in conscious superiority. "That is so," it repeated. "If yon - were as great as I am—a thousand times bigger than yon are—then vou might ' j hope to do some good in the world." , f And its face smiled into a wrinkle of contempt for the little dollar bill. Just then tlie cashier comes, takes the ' little murmuring bill and kindly gives it to a poor widow. "God bless you !" she cries, as with a smiling face she receives it, "Mv dear , hungry children can now have some • bread." > A thrill of joy ran through the little r bill as it was foldej up in the widow's • hand anil it whispered: " I may do some goxl if I am small." And when it saw the bright faces of the fatherless childreu it was very glad ■ that it oonld do a little good. Then the little dollar bill began its t journey of usefulness. It went first to i the baker for bread; then to the miller; • then to the fanner; then to tlie laborer; > then to the doctor; then to the minis ' ter; and wherever it went, it gave pleas i ore, adding something to their comfort >! and joy. r At last, after a long, long pilgrimage r | of usefulness among every sort of people, [ it came buck to the bank again crumpled, , defaced, ragged, softened by its daily - nse. Seeing the thousand dollar bill i ! lying there with scarcely a wrinkle or a , finger mark upon it, it exclaimed: " Pray sir, and what has been your ; mission of usefulness?" > The big bill sadly replied: " I have lieen from safe to safe among i the rich where few could see me, and r j they were afraid to let me go out far, lent I should lie lost. Few indeed are J they whom I have made happy by my , mission," i The little dollar bill said: " It is better to be small and go among t multitudes doing good than to be so great as to be imprisoned in the safes of the few." t And it rested satisfied with its lot Moral; The doing of little every-day duties makes one the mont useful and A Fatal Bud About Five Dollar*. Colonel J. B. Vinton, sheriff of Frio eouuty, brought iu word of the killing jof two young men named Virgil Ridge way and Frank Connelly. Ridgeway and Connelly and two hired men were out on a cow hnnt, and hail cnmpi-d near a Mexican's house. Connelly went to Ridgeway and and asked for five dollars, saying that lie wanted to go down to the Mexican's house and gamble. Ridge way gave biia the money, bnt told him i not to stay long. Connelly left, and did I not retnm a* soon as expected, and when , he tlid return, Ridgeway told him that j he hod no further use for his services, and asked him to pay back the five dol j lars. Connelly said, " Maylie you think ' you can make me pay it back." Ridge way said he could make him, and was I going to do so. Connelly then drew his | six-shooter, and Ridgeway picked up a ! Winchester rifle and jumped behind n ! tree, and both fired at abont the same ! time, and both were struck in the bow els. The two boys who were with them ran off, and returned with assistance, af j ter being abseut a considerable tune. 1 Both the woundKl men had crawled off j together to a pond at some little dis tance, where tliev were found covered with mnd, Conneily dead, and Ridgeway , mortally wounded. Neither of the young I men was over eighteen years of age.— i Galveston News. A Roaring anil Hissing Monster. While a gentleman and lady were sailing on the Sound, between By ram 'Shore and Captain's Island Lighthouse, their attention was attracted by a queer hissing noise and a roaring sound, and they soon discovered, not an eighth of a mile distant., a monster of the deep ad vancing rapidly. This monster stood up straight, was apparently as large round as a hogshead, showed an enormous head, and exhibited not less than fifteen or twenty feet of his length. He ad vanced a short distance in this upright manner, when, with a roar and a hiss be sank completely out of Bight, only to reappear in a few moments, uncomfort ably near the boat. The party made haste for the shore, and were soon out of harm's way. The monster is evidently neither whale, porpoise nor shark. Our informants are trustworthy people, and not given to tell fish stories.— Port- Chester Journal. HIVE® FROM THE FLAMES. Aa Nmi la tk I AT* ala Waa *k *lrr la a Nw \ ark Hukll.- Waaarr. Always an early riser. the habit clung to hira after lie liegmi aleejiltig •" h aali itigtou square. A privileged character in the park, he always slept 111 the aume place on a lieneh Hint atood alone by itself, aecluded somewhat in a curve of one of the bv-put I\*,*<> tlud a lion hetiirm l off tlie beaten track il ** almost the aanje a* going through a door into a ehaiulier; and of all the broken or de fiant men that Uirougtxl the park at night, forced, like hiniaelf, from want of work, to aleep out of door*, no man ever disputed bin right to Una bench,whether he came earlv or late, lie wa up uow with the binla, and having yawned ami stretohixl hiniaelf, ahaketi hia trou*er* down over liia lioot*, and smoothed out the wrmkhw from kit coat, he picked up liia hat from the ground ami *et it beside hiut on the Wuch, and took a broken cottih from lna veat jHH-ket and untangled hia hair and comtied out hia imiuaiiac rod-brown moustache from which the dye had almost failed, leaving ouly a fringe of black aloug the lower edges. Aa he put on hta hat lie exchanged aaln- Utiona with two police officers who were croaaiug tlie )iark, and then, having taken an eye-opener at the nearest drinking fountain, he atarted for Broadway and a breakfast. Night came, and with it ram falliug heavily, ly a atrange place he would have thought uothing of sleeping in the rain, but here in New York, wliere he hail frieinla, he could readily find shel ter. Walking down Prince street, lie l>*ssxl under the green lamp that stand* a*, the corner of Wooeter, and turueil into the l*ruKV street j*>lice station. As he leaned across the railing talking with the sergeant, the door opened agaiu, followed by a gray-haired ohl man, on whose face tlie sergisuit and the man from Washington square read: "I am looking for my daughter," as easily as moat lueu could have read the words from a printed page, for loug experience had made them skilled in faces, and the nrecinct is full of liviug graves, and fathers and .bro titer* mine searching often. Guided by the ward deteet-ive they atart-d out again, and the man from the park followed. If the old man bad been Urn alorbed be would have marveled at the sights and sounds arouud bnu, of daunting women ami teeming rum shop*, and block after block of houses with open doom. l'usmug ou, tlu-y stood op posite the house they nought, and pann ing for a moment lefore crossing over, the old man nliuddered at the sounds of revelry. Suddetilv the in turn- and laugh ter ceased, and tuev heard the rattling of the chain ami the abooting of the lolt tliat MPOial the inner door. Then the door dew Imok, the gan jet in tlie near let globe in the vestibule dared in the draft, and there came crowding into the atreet a motley throng, young men and old, and women, aome in ntreet attire, nome in evening drees, and othera whose con tame was like that worn by ballet girln. An tlie lant came out, a little wreath of ■unoke curled ailcntly after her, and police officers pressed back acroaa tlie street the quickly g*tlierer end circling in the air, and while yet it trembled over the pavement a fireman viu springing up from rung to rung to be at the top when it should fall against the building. Quivering uearer and nearer to the woman the lad der drew, carrying Uie fireman with arms outstretched, and it has almost touched the wall when a great blast of fire and amoke belched ont, shrouded the woman and blowing away the ladder to fall crashing in the street; and when the draught drew it ngnin it disclosed the .woman clinging to the window sill. \ shudder ran along the crowd and fixed every eve upon the spectacle, ao that they failed to see a man who had jumped into the patrol wagon, a big, powerful nan, with an immense red-bro#B mous tache from which the dye had almost ioded, leaving only a fringe of black along the lower edge*. Seizing a coil of rope, he sprang into the open space that the heat hod cleared in front of the burning building. Coolly, bnt with marvelous quickie-. he knotted the end of the rope, arid in another instant he had made a running uooae. Then he took up the coil ami spread it out along hiH left arm, so that it would run free, stepped back, measured with his eye the distance to the chimney that rose above the window, and then deftly threw the noose. It went sailing np, circled for a moment over the chimney, and then fell arouud it, and in another instant the crowd saw a big man going hand-over hand np the rope. Emerging from a cloud of smoke, they saw him swing him self alongside the woman. " Pat your arms around my neck, my dear." If she had been blind she would have known that the voice was of a man it was safe to trust, and when she obeyed him he put one strong arm aronnd her waist, and then swung clear again afid slipped down along the rope, appearing and disappearing as he slid swiftly through the fire and smoke; and when, scorched and black, but safe, he struck the ground, he was glorified in a burst ! of applause that drowned the tiumilt of connargation. Of all that were there the hero was the only man that pre served his equanimity. Leading the girl to her father he hud her hand in his. The old man drew her close to him and covered her face on his breast, and threw his arms aronnd her head, as thongh shielding that he might also heal the wounded heart; and extending the other hand to her preserver, 1 e begged biß name. For the first time in the night aclond settled on the big man's face, and he looked at his questioner in credulously. He was chagrined for himself and sorry for the old man, and he said, with a little deprecatory Sourish of a scorched hand: "Wh-at? You ; don't know Bill Cary ? Why, I'm the man what used to do the lasso act in Murray's circus ! — New York Sun. THE DIFFERENCE. —Some suppose that every learned man in an educated man. No such tiling. That man is educated who knows himself, and takes accnrate common-sense views of men and things around him. Some very learned men are the greatest fools in this world ; the reason is, they are not educated men. Learning is only the means, not the end ; its value consists in giving the means of acquiring, the use of which, properly managed, enlightens the mind. AI.YIN A HAMS TIIK KXPRBWMAN. ________ * Thr 1tu.1n... Waocraa ih~i Hair tile. and Ilia Tee twm lalri Altltlannlroa. | Krotu tha Naw York Hun. 1 Kant evening Mr. Willmtu 11. IHn*. mora, Mr. John Ilnar, and n Urge num licr of merchant* mul upnwuau left tliia city for I lon ton In kltaoi) tlto funeral aervtoea of lite Into Alvtu Adams, the founder of the Adnata Express. In IH4O Mr. Adnittn wan not north it dollar. I,nat week Inn express carried in one day 827,000,<**0, the security for which wan simple receipt* In 1840, with the assistance of oue uiau and one Ik>v, he did what little there was to do. To-day the concern of which he nua parent em ploy marly 15.000 person* Sir. Adamn nan oue of the few if whoiu it might lie mud S "He wan oue of the luont re markatde uieu in the country." Like Vauderhilt and Aator, Mr. Adamn started with nothing, and diel leuvmg an eatate valued at many lUllhoun of iloltarn. Aim dig liin ear Ileal associate* nan John Hoey, who for ihirty-neveu \ attend tlie funeral Mr. Hoey wna asked to give mime reminiscences of Mr. Adamn and the early ilayn of the great eiilerprinc he began. In reply, Mr. Hoey mud : " I noutd la* glad at aome other tuue to tell you the facta of tin* romance, but I am hurrying off to Hoatun. When Mr. Aduma iiegan to carry juuveln and letter* between Hoatoii ami New York there nan no railroml. He came to AUyu'n Point, and thence direct to New York. He had a aiugularly plcaaaut face and a frank, manly 1 a ring, that attracted |>eo ple and broil Ou.ifideuce, ao that lie noon got hia share of that kind of patronage." " lhd he travel much himself f" " Ni>; hv tnvclld h nliort tttiio ottly. Tlidii lid liirvil turwwi^iigern; but bin jmr nolinl Iwwriug uuil gt'tunl iinuiur-r illd much to wtu ountomem. It wnn every thing in fmt. After 4 few unuithn hetti dm-ed r young linrtienn uitrker named l>iunuiore to ixuue to New York nnd ojicu an office. He ilid no; uttd at timt he kejit tlie laioka, dehvereil the lettern (for which they got twenty tlve ivtitn em"h) and tlie parcels, utade out the way btlln and eollecteil the freight." " Were Volt with litem tlteu?" "Oh, no; 1 w a cabin Imv on tlie Shcrtdau, n packet between New York and Liverpool. I got m a with a gang of boys, and in a nhort time we five matte a corner iu counting pxtmn. NVe counted, mailed, foldixl and niapjveti all the pa (>crn pnntevt in tins aty. Mr. ltennett Uhik a great fancy to nn. Oue of im wan Jerry Hrviuit, the minstrel. While 1 was doing thin 1 made tiie acquaintance of ail expressman named tieecher. He was running a little Connecticut express an t offered me four dollars a week and ateadv work. 1 accepted, and we took an offivv w itli Adamn. At that tuue Ed wards 8. Stuiford wan tu the habit of Cuming in aud aaktng for a job. Finally Dinamore let him help to make out a way bill, and little by little he worked in, till he waa made agent in Philadel phia, and Duumior* and 1 ran the New York end. Adams staying in Boston." " Wan Mr. Adams the chief ?" " Oh, Yea. AuJ he *n* the sole one known, too. He aiiii hi* manner uux.it* every timig." " \Vere you successful t first ?" "Not at all. It VM 146 lefore we began even to aee our way clear. It WM a constant struggle. A tltrcealollar way hill wa* a wonder." At first bills and letter* were the princijtal freight, but jmreels tegun to come in, and after a while trunks, boxee and bundles. Thia necessitated a porter, but for a long tune a boy and aw heel barrow did all tin* collecting and dis tributing. Then they got a home and wagon—a step which was pondered long before it was taken. All the parties m tereeLxl were fond of horwea. Mr. Adams had in early life looked forward to the day when liia ambition would !M< erowued as he took his scat upou the box of a stage, with the riblxvus of a four-horse team ui his fist. Mr. Dins more, as a harness maker, was brought IU contact with horsemeu, and knew about horse*. Iu late yearn Messrs. Adam* and Sanforil have been noted for tlieir a tables, an.l held the reins over tbe best blood in the land. With the pur chase of the horse and wagon came a new lleld of operation*, The New York and Now Haven Railroad, just then rvu plcted, offered them faeilitn** and ex clusive contracts for carrying mouey and sfhall packages ill what was known as a P. I'. truck over its line. For tlii* Adams A Co. contracted to pay, with fear and trembling in their boots, the euornioua suiu of Sl,"Off a month, but almost at tlie very tart it proved a pav ing venture —indeed, the venture which determined them to coutinue in their business. The next step was to carry freight for merchant* at either end of the line, and U> establish agencies along the route a* wall; and in lean than three years the whole custom of the country was changed, almost all the light freight and aorna of tlie heavier lx inspect, but he had no time for that. He was wined all day and dined all night He was carried from point to point in u carriage drawn by four horses and treated like a prince. When he got back he said he didn't know whether he was Alvin Adams or the Great Mogul. At all events, he knew he hadn't done what lie went to do. Ex press charges at the East were moderate; in California they were outrageous. Letters, dagperreotype* and small pack age* from loved one* at home went out at extortionate rates, because of the danger aud tlie risk. Ten to one if the Con signee ever saw the freight which went in the wild rush for the land of gold. Later, system obtained and regular service ruled. During the great finan cial Bcare the California branch of Adam* & Co. went under. Fortunately the business hern in different shape. A stock company was formed with a capital of 81,000,0U0. called the Adams Express Company, and as the business had n sumed colossal proportions, Mr. Adnms, who wss seriously crippled by the Cali fornia failure, was not many years in ex tricating by tlie dividends accruing to his share of the stock. Mr. Dinsmore had graduated from the happy-go-lucky harness maker into the calm and portiv president of the com pany. That position he still holds, ss ne "does a large amount of the stock. Mr. Hoey, who used to count Dews papen and deliver letters, was tnsde superintendent of the great establish ment, married the dramatic favorite, Mrs. Russell, and is to-day a Long Branch millionaire. Mr. Hanford, whose eager pleadings for a job enlisted the sympathy of Dinsmore, has left off bill sticking. He was for a long time agent in Philadelphia, then turned his atten tion to tht American Telegraph Com pany, then the Western Union, married a daughter of the veteran jeweler, Geo. R. Downing, and still lives, a very rich and fortnnate man. SI MMAKY Or NKWB. Hams •• Uorve Iraai llama and ANread. One quarter of tha town of Fraiios, wan ilnatcveti by lira, cauMlUf a loss of over ♦ifJfi.nOO . Tin New Y>rk twiuoeratio Hlatn commit tea mel at Attsiuy ami resolved t hold the 000 vail I loir, for lha nomluatloii of a Hlnle ticket, *1 Albany, mi IMober 3 M auawnr to a judicial aommoua. The iieuleiiulat of llie bailie of llrainhwtue a an cntetiratml at <'haihlnforil, fa., mill appro lutata Oertanoulen, Im-ltutlug aiiilrennen by heua itir lUvant and olbern lire Wlwiulu Keputilii'au State inuiveldloll loot el Madlwli ami iioiumaleit a ticket beaded by William h. Smith, of Milwaukee, for governor. Tho plat fiwut reaffirmed the |iriurlplea nhlrh hair guided Uie ttepubtlcau parly hitherto , hoped thai (he liiagiiaiiliuoun purpoao nhlch anlUiabxl Ihe pieaeiil aituilulntiaUou to rent .io | mcc and ■viiHVtd to the South Would be fully appreciated, rejoiced if tbe Hollllielil pulley of tbo Vlealdeut produced llie hoped-for renulla of order aud (•race, but If ttieae reaiiltn ahall not follow Una eiperimeut, demanding llie adoption of oilier lueanurnn which ahatl aecure b> alt litUenn Ihe fullent elljol Uicllt of their eoUntllllllotial rtgllln, declaring iiuahakeu eunltileoee in Ihe purponea and |alrloimm of frenldn.l Itayen j upponing the fuiitier liealoaal of public lartdn U|ioU rail road r-irpoi allotin , lending Ibat Ihe albnr dollar nhoutd he rentoied Iu ila former place an money, and evpienning nympnlliy with tbe workltlgluetl. Tie Slatotniuveiitiouof Ihe Mannachuaettn fro htl'illtUiltln wan held IU Wuroontrf, and a lit'kel iHuuiuateil with 1(. C. lit man for governor at the bead 'tlie platform atl.'pletl declare# a .btermniatlou to dmtroy the liquor traffic, aud affiruin that tho policy of the Stale toward the li.|Uoi .juenliou cannot bo aetllod by a parly del Id ad between liorllao aud lirohlbllioU i another plank faiurn woman aulfrago .. The llntinh nhlp k'orroat, from lamulou fur New York, collldetl wilh the ltrrUnh ahip Avalanche, from Intudou for New /eatand, off Portland, Uie former cutting the lattel 111 two. The Avalanche eank uuuietllately, while the torrent kept altoat for an hour or two and then fuUudikcd. liver oue hundred peraolie lont lUttr 111 en bv tbe dinaaUr . . The rlite luatctien at the t'reedmuur range attra. ti-1 large crowdn fiui New York and vicinity. The inter-State military watch wan won by a team of twelve turn from tlaltforiiia, who made a cure of W5 , t'ouueclicut coming neat with 271, and New York wiUi 'Jt>7 , the |wun> a hrouxe atatue woilh #aio. The chaui|4ou a match, for a gold medal, valued at 41ut), waa won by Henry r'uttun, who acored 190 out of a |na*lb!u l&li. The pride known aa the Wimbledon tNip— valued at IMO, and presented to tho nltemeu of Aiuortca by the iidoiuru of Ureal llritaiu. for anuual coini>etittoit - waa captured by l>ud ley Selph, of New thteaua, who acurod 137 out : of a |nwaible l&O, at 1,000 yafda .... 'the Penury liania Prulnbtliouiats nuiiiiuatod A. 11. Wlutoii f >r auptriur judge, aud adoped a plal fuifu declaring an abiding faith Ui tho ulUmale nucow. of the Prohibition party. The President arrived at lUchinoud, lud., ' and immediately visited Uie nick chamtvr of , Senator Morton The Maaaai-huaetta leliio cratlo State ouuveutlou waa bebl in W..reenter. YYUliaiu (iaatou and I'harlew P. 1 hompnou were uoadnatcd for governor, aud the former waa sclen ted by a vote of 1,120 to 236. The other ; candidates are Pt>r henb uant-governur, YYil- ( ham H l'luukett ; fur secretary of Stale, YYwatcn Howland . for treasurer and recoil or nrat, I'm nl L SkllUuga fur auditor, John tixgrratd. far attorney-general, t'harlea P. Thempeou. Tire platform adopted reaffirms and announced the National lhiuiucralv- plat form of 1*76, an the authoritative exposition of the principles of the past, and expressed belief that lli# (ample fairly elected a majority uf lire K1 ret oral College in favor of the Democratic j party j congratulates the country U|ani the restoration of public order ajwl domestic (trace tu the South by Uie adoption uf 1 leruucratic prtu riplo* ; favor* tlie reuiuvat of obstacles to an extended rwiprocal trade with foreign coun tries, and the o)a-utng of a hberal rccipnn ity with Canada and Mexico ; in in favor of "the holiest payment of the public debt, aud of a currency on the gold basis opposes thr re riiactmeut of the PruftiUb>ry law. aud belie Ten that "the present lyntem of taxation in Maaaa ehuaetls uut*|ual, unjust and oj-jwrsatve. aud the tluir has come for a thorough reformation of tbe lawn regulating the levy tug of taroe.. .. Should the Judicial dcvuiou, wnilruc.ug M (iuuMu, the Frowli Republican leader, U> llirer uouUu' uunnsounieiil, t>r confirmed by the liinkrr tribunal*, be will be Jijvlisl uf all cml ngbU fr five rear* A WorkingUM-n • ronvriiUoti Uiet at tkilmubas, Ohio, aud nomi nated a Stale ticket, brads! by Stephen John sou. eho waa also tbe choice of the Greenback I arty (or governor. A platform waa adopted demanding a paytneut uf buuda at or before maturity, according to the lava undrr which they were looted , the retnouctiaaUou uf nicer com ; immediate repeal of the resumption act ; iioii-an-tartau school*; wholesome control by the government over all corporate bodiee, and fueled tig of the nwome of the country to liie end that labor may be fullv and iiruUtal.ly employe.l , declare* in favor ufa graduated tn come tax ; that the government lend* should he rteervod for actual settler* . d< prorate* all efforts to redress wrung* by tK'letice, and de nounces the eyah-tti uf paying Store script for labor, and calls fur laws to prvveut this swindle on lahuring men. Their flnanctal plank declare* it the jwrrogative of the government to issue cuut and provide money, boUi metal!*- and pspcr, fur the convenience uf trade, and that Uos |uwer should nut be dt legated to OurpofS tiun* or individual* . demands thai the legal tender currency be fully resturcd'aiid made legal tender and be cunUnu.d without con traction, and Dial the national banking law should he re|*aled The National llankrr r mnvr'.iUuu. in atwlou at New \"rk. di*cuaed the ailvrr question. Six hundred delegates were present, representing WO banks, control ling an aggregate rajHlal of (M 0.000.000, divided as follows ; New Yurk, t'M**i,uuu . llostou. #40.000,000 ; Philadelphia, #30,000.000. other ciliea. fISO.OOO.WW. A reception was given to lYrddeut Hayes, at Fremont, Ohio, by the Twenty-third Ohio regi ment. Aleut twenty thousand [erwiin were pres. nt. among them twlng a nnniiwr of jiremi nuliUraJ signification, but was |*rticipated in by all. irrespective of partr. The IV, aide lit. a* pKwldr lit of the of veteraua.called the meeting to order and m tnslucrd Die variou* *t>rakrr. An election for ofticeni of the aocw-ty took place and the Presi dent waa selected. ' Add—sses were made bv General Sheridan, Senator Stanley M atthew* and others The great two days' match, at < 'reedmoor, between the ritkuM of America and lirrat llntain for the Centennial trophy— won last year by the American U*in wae won again by the American team of eight men. who made a score uf 3,334 (sunt* against 3.213 fur Great Britain- a majority of uinety-twu point*. The abootitig of both team* wa very fair, tha American tani making tlie largest wore ever made on anv nfle range. w of their tndl vidal scores being unusually large. The highest score of tlie Amehcaua was made by Die youngest man in the team —<\ K. Itlydetiimrgh, who scored *29 out of a possible till. The l>e*t individual scire of the British team waa made by the captain. Sir Henry Halfurd, who scored ti'2. Tbe trophy i a magnificent banner, liand aomelv worked'and embellished, and ia to be competed for annually by the marksmen of the world ... The proprietor of the New York piano manufactory, at the recent burning of which a nntnbur of persona lost t icir lives, waa cen sured by the coroner's jury for not |>rovidiog sufficient means ot extinguishing a fire. Admiral Cooatanbne Panaris, the (Ireek prime minister, is tiwl Y'eJlow fever is on the increase at Fernaudina, Fls ...,Williatn M. Tweed, in his examination Iwifore a com mittee of New York aldermen, concerning the fraudulent ring transactions, stated that in t.ie New York legislature of 1370, over 000,1*10 hal been lMud to tbe senators and represen tatives. as bribes U) w-curs the passage of the city charter. Tweed to* tiled that he |>aid members of both |s>litical parties to vote for bills in which he was interested, and that in the matter of the city charter, he |ieid four senators #40,000 each for working for him in caucus During a struggle lwtwcen two counterfeiter* and a swret service officer, at Tyrme. Pa , one of tbe former, Bislion AVeir, was killed and the other was captured Tlie New York Herald has heard from the African explorer, after a silence of twelve months, and when he had almost been given up for dead. Stanley arrived ou the west coast of Africa, after suffering incredibly in regions I infested bv caunilials and savage tribes, with whom ho was compelled to wage incessant wrr fare. The Ckirmont Savings Bank, of New York, i suspendoff, leaving a deficiency of alwiut tfit.- 000 (leneral Stnrgcs' command came upon thu N< Purees Indiana on the Yellow stone and fought tliciu all day, killing a large uuiuticr and capturing ISO hors.-s. A number iof soldiers were killed ami wounded President Haves ami party cuisisling rf the . President and family. Hecretari. s Kvart*. I Thompson, Mcdrary, Postmaater-f leneral Key, and others - arrived In I/tiiwville. Ky.. on their HouUiera tonr. and were we loomed by the mavor and citiaens. H|>eeches were made bv the President. Secretaries Kvarts, Mct'rary and Tbomtwon, Postmaater-Oeueral Key. Governor •'xmpton, of Honth Carolina, and others. After a visit to tbe Louisiana exposition, the party took dinner at the residence of General 1 I Irish ov. and in the evening a public reception was held at the Gall House, which was largely attended The inter-Htate long range nfie match, at < reedmoor, was won by a team of four men from the Amateur Hide Clnb. of New York. The rocml>ers of the team wwre Messrs. risk in, Weber, Allen and Jewell, all of whom were in the American team in tlie pre ceding match between America and Great ! Britain A scries of fierce attacks and counter-attacks ls-tween tlie Russians and Turks, in the vicinity of Plevna, resulted gen erally in the success of the Ottoman troops, with a fearful loss of life on both sides The owner of Sargent'* Ranch, near ltockin Cab, and a Mr*. Oder and husband, were mur dered by Chinamen, for the sake of plunder, whereupon the cxas|>erated rilweiis compelled i everv Chinaman in the town to leave, and de : molikhed *ll tho building* in the Chinese quarters. The murderer* were arrested snd narrowlv esea|*)d lynching A monument to tlie soldiers ami sailor* of Massachusetts, who fell in tlie late war, was dedicated on Boston Common, with Masonic rites, and pre ; sented to the city. The speech of acceptance was made by Mayor Prince, and tho oration was delivered by Attorney-General Devens. Among those present wore Generals George B, i McOlellan, Joseph Hooker, Ralph Waldo Emer son, and other distinguished military men snd 1 etvilans. During the exercises a large tier I of seats fi led with peoplo gave way, and a number of men and women were more or lea* badly injured The Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows, of the United State*, met at Balti more, snd opened their fifty-third annual Heesion. TIIK KAHTKKN MTATKN. KM! Inlrrrsllns Karl# la Hrlallaa la lk I'at.ulailon ml Nvw Keateed. Nathan Allen, 111 an addreaa before the Social Science Association, gave the fol lowing interesting information concern ing New Kugloitd people and chaugre in population iu the Eastern Hteten : According to the ceiiaua of 1870, 015,- 747 reaideuta of oilier Statea were bora 111 New England. Another markedahange consist* in a migration from country towun and rural diatriota to villagea and citiea, and baa become very extensive tliroughoiit New Kuglaml. i'loeely ouo u noted with a change of reaideuoe ta a change in pursuit*; iu fact, a removal from county to eiy, r from a aiuall place to a linger i •*, almost nceeaaarily itn pltea such a cuallgc I'rlOf to the present century, the preluding buaineaa of N*w Kuglaml iKviple wan agriculture. The report of 1875 given tbeae facta in reapect to the numlicr engaged in vho following purnuita : I.- < loverameut ami profeeeional 311,780 3. Domestic and pcmonal aer vice, .. 484,288 .'I Traile ami lnui|MirtuUuu. 104,885 4.- Agriculture, ftnlieriea, 4antlli'led horror. The town con tained one huutlml aiul wxty-five Clirixtiui fnmih-a. and all of the men, women and children were nithleanly put to the nwortl. A Turkish officer wlio villi tod the town a few dave subse quently state* that there won not a single inhabitant left ; all had fled, and, including Kunniau priaouem, upward of 2,400 people bad lteen killed. In every house be entered small groups of dead were lying shockingly mutilated and in the most revolting ptmitions. Captain M'Colmont, who visited the plnae shortly after the Hitsaian relief, states that it is entirely deserted and a mere heap of ruins ; also, that soldiers were employed for six davs in burying the dead, the number of whom it was hr-Twible to estimate. On hearing of tins inassacre Mukhtar Paalis at once sent down orders to have tlie Kurtis dis- Ilanded and tlisarmeti. and their ring leaders allot. They, however, antici pated the first of tlieee instnictiois by throwing down their arms and deeerting m ma*e on the approach of Tergu kiiasofTs column. Safe in their moun tain fAstuoNaes, these miscreants will defy the commander-in-chiefs oilers, ami unless Europe sternly demands their execution, and deputes officials to see the sentences carried into effect they will escape. Twelve women are jxwtm is tresses in Schuylkill county, Pa. Prrnvlsn Stamp *a. Almkallr Taplra. It has lem a deaiderattuii mtli the medical jTufi'sstoii to jiri>|ait> a preparation of iron less otiject ionable than OUT of those now in nsn. which often jvodnce unfavorable efferta ujioa the ST stein, esfieOally when |Ver I.UtH newa|iapern, divided Into all different lint a. A d vert laemeiita rselvtnl for oue or more Itata. for catalogue* oonUrnil.g uarnea uf iiapera, and fur othta tiifortnalioe and far *gi lunlen. addreas 1 train A Punter, 41 Park Hut (TtiiM-k huildtßg), New York. I • , PHK W ~ The Celebrated " Uiicmnw " Wood Tag Plug Toaaaou. Tn Ploxna Tunaouo Cowtn, New York, Huetote. and Chicago Thr Market*, in voaa. Itaef oattta—Nahva * • *k 1 naaa an J Tbarofcaa.. 111,4 k Mil'* Cowa. 40 IM VCi 00 Moga—live 4}kd IJN ft • trth Uk# oti| lamba .. * i Wjttau— .. Iltl# Hlf Pleur -Waaterti-iiooU ta Ohotea. . 40 ta 4 ta Mate—UuoU to Cbotea..... T ta gttl trbnal—Ke.l W enter a 1 M ta 1 4A No. 1 Milwaukee 1 M • 1 u Kr* Mm* ft ta Tt Barley State • ta ** Hariey Matt W ta *• (lata-Miami Waetere M ta • Oortt—Mltad Western ** ta Jf Hi), per c.t . to Mm, per cwt. *> ta • Hepe T4 .--0J taot ... ft a 10 • 14 Port-Mans 11*0 gM* * Ui4-tkt) Mam •• ta "Ok Plan—Mackerel, No. 1, new * ta* W Mo. . new I*oo U 00 Dry Ood, iwr enrt 4 00 g I W Berrtef, Bested, per hex.. tt ft Ptareteeea—Oradi. ooytaO(N BeOned ...14 W oel-Oaltfornla Ptoee* 4U 42 Teiaa " M • N anstraUaa - i * *0 Bntur—mam i* ta * Wnntnrß—Chrnc .... 1 ' ta V 0 Xwurk -Owd la him.. k* ta * Waalam-nrklaa 10 ta M Ctiraea mate Paaaory OThta I*M niata MkUtuewl (*<<* Weatern 00 ta 10 tga—ta*r and Peso#; ivanla. 10 ta Ihi •orril* Floor 7 T4 • * Wheat-No I Mliwackea. 1 If 4* 1 00 Uorn-Mitod 41 ta UM itata n ta *0 I Kyw M* On Hariey ... . *J ta * Barley Ma 11...... 1 00 ta 1 W raiuNuiu. M OaMle—Extra Of • O*M rtbeay..... * * Hogs—Draeaeti kd 00g Floor Peou.y var.la Extra t* ta tol Wtiaat—Hod Wealnrc... 1 41 ta 1 tt NT- * I 47 Oonr—TaStow w ta l Mixed 1 ta l (Jew—Mixed M ta *' PHrolaam Croda OflttaMfc Kaflnad ...11< Wool—Colorado 21 m 60 Taxaa 24 id *5 California -,T tf 22 potroa. Beef Cattle 0 ta h Sheep Mhta lf *•...- * ta 00 Pour- Wta.vt.aln and MtonaaoU IM ta • * Oom—Mired to 01M data— " As g| ** Wool—Able and Pronaylvanla XX.. i ta *0 Oaitfurnk Fail 40 ta 41 HUaatoi naaa. BeefflaMta Oflhta OTM Khar | .. • • 00* lank, 01 * 10 Ho,. Offtta M virUTon, Has* Baaf OaMle—Poor la Ch0ice........ • M < C) ffiieoe 1 (T 7 ft law, ha fOO t> th* III!) naatury ht Dr WiHua treses. VIIIMI m Kmc J>-•' nß| TB~BC(I U MW be eared lh.-i.nndr of Urn mm nenoos snrre sad wound* ihal batted Ux skill at U BO eminent phfri*i> a* bit daj and eas regwted t.j all who knee bus as A ixiblu tw(ut MM • t—l Kw Sols by Dewg mU iMßallf lUnt by mail en maM of wba Pr.pa.Bd by kKTII W. POH I.K A WIHH. kH llorrtwii f IIMIM. torn. M VOl It OW N PAINTINO WITH ROMEROY'S INDESTRUCTIBLE PAIHT i Par. l.naaod MM ihm A Hoar crx.stjt MUT ta ■mM I Raid mi d and ready for nan. I II efleetoally mM. boot, frost. rata aad no ll elans leaks aafl arrests Hrroi. It profort. t™ po t. ad ***** nafcn ll KIIM .' ehtnglse or Ua ;IS gallon a aqua*, far ehlngtns. V gatleo hw ua It will MI impair raia oator mm For it'iabnf ll la parr, rhrap. liraMr and fceadsaaee. I Rinfa mm* t fa/ailt dtp shea it It pat on.l N n Parmor*. M anuf act orere.' "ban labia aad ltd a oaliaaal InaUtatKma. Railroad IJnV aad tt.i tk.,l. ila. Bill And it )aat aha Lh., asset for bsildmga. root. Kami teases. rata, iron work. ale . ale .#rtal* dla ma fa it, .fttftßCfat *A etemesle. TbaN T IMala lamattc Aeylum a* t'liaa. Maaart Jill Paoktiam. font MaaafYa, I'Uoa. katoa) Wheeler A Km. ~ " ! aad man> (her. Oar Paiat iHmrn aad Prehi MO** larcalr aaad by arm. of the ft rete* toftd State. Kdoaa ttoaal. I bar. labia aad Maaatactariac Inautattoaa m th laonlir _ _ . _ . • Itil gallon Oaaa. tool at •**>/-'• tiroes Kent Patat, al s !.?."• a callon. Drab Pamt at gI.BU a gallon ftj lat katati mbaat hi pa! la Rod. al IM rta aad Iral>. k 1.311 a calloß with litaal /btmoal la lAa . fVwi# ] Applj a* oaf farlaDaa aa Oelaashia. Cornelia aad THEO. POMEROY & SON, Ollrr 75 Columbia MtrrsK, I TIl'A, N. T. Sand for I'irvular POl'S EXTRACT. I POND'S EXTRACT. The People's Remedy. The Universal Pain Extractor. Note.- Aak for Pond's Extract. Take no Other. "Hear, for I will speak of excel lent t kings." POND S E.XTKACT The great Vegelakle Pats Destroyer, "s* been In uw> otd thirty yeorw. sad for clrsnltnnss sod prompt curwUve Mrtur. cannot horicsllrd riIII.DUUN. No lnmil> ran afford tohe wtUb 00l Pond's Extract. Aecldeala, Hrnlars. Casti.las% Polo. Morwlsa. ore rsttevtdl sk riortinsuuiiiy by oilrn-l .ppiiciUoa rrompur trllevsa pains of Boroa. Braids, Kxeorla- I lon.. Poaflaga, Hd Mores, Bolln. Kelson, t 'orna, etc. Arrotu i- tt* icitaTlcn. rodursa awoU- Ingt, stem Nsedlog, rwnovoa dlKoloralioa and tAD > liw l y'tt thetr best Meod, It assoogsothe pat OS to which they aro Oeewllarly sublet— OotsMy fallae** sod pressure In the head, nask vertlgt>. etc. U promptlv ameliorate* and prrwub nently heals all kind" of Islaaimuloas ami II r" to "iVfl o" fOforPl I, KB flwd fo this lbs Wg Immediate rullrf aad ajtunate oure. Wo coae. OOB rvcr chronic or obstinate can long resist iu regw- VAlt l( '(lK V KIN'B, It Is the only sore core. lII.KK.DINtI from any csose. ior IhU Ills aagoeU lir li Hn Mvrd hundrrdi of lltot when nil ot-hrr IYUMHIIf* to rrot Hording from nor, sod IllioNNMklißßi nn> nil Ik® rcUcved nuU often tvriiHitientiv rtired. PIIYHICIAKH f nil KhooU wbo or® acoonlntoi! wiih Ponel'o Rlirtrt fmtmmttmiHJn ffcolr nrmcticv We Uuii hiUiriof cumendUon from Imadn d. of VhysfAnSi tnaay of wh;. order It for use In their own practice. In addllloo to the foregoing Uisy ordrr Its use for Mwelllug. of an I in. l. lluin.V. Bore Throat, tolaswrd nil mhnner of aalß SwakA .1 ■S&lfrJiJIZVgXfUte re^iffljKu p atfXiisaift.JiajSg J;: I It has no efluil tot Sprslnii, lUrtjvfi or ttoddlo and'tlie to™ n prompt '£ OAI'TION mßbJts Evtraet has been Imitated Joe gpßoteO *riici )* the wordi ®fsl trnd Mown In lkittic. It U pwpjjoajf ™ ooly person* living wh'i crcr knew how to ori-wir® It pr"ierly. KeraM oil SfVttohßmA ThU U Hie ooly article wed by I'hyslclans. and tn the hospitals of this oounU7 80 to 88 S —,.,gj>t9Bß \m7msjffi smeco. I 263 Bf/OAOWA Y. NV. \ Washburn & Mocn WanTg Co. WMOIITM, MAIL | J T pihit mim RICIK. ' I I A iTELI. Thara fUda Ha t-ttoar Fmilh m *— at M a* w tHKUr Dm ram. MM, Aaoajra, akoekt, Mr warpa UnArtil W Ira. wiad at Baa 4 A amplata baMar to At am* urnJj Mac* latpawliia far auw or banal. TWO THOVBAKD TOMB BfitD AMD POT BP PUBJWO Tit LAAT YEAR tm aala at too laadu* bardwu* Motaa. with BuauAara aa4 Mania. I s ' * •••• (Htamal fntonhlt* THE HOOD OLD STAND-BY. HEHCAI MOSTAIG LUDEEIT. roil MAN ANO SSAST. Tuti Aloafa aaraa Alwm IMb Aiwaga bawd? Hot aaaor rat tatted. r""t totlllaat Aaot mad It, Tba wbato wefM al l Uto (tartoaa aid Kaatoaa-tha Batt awd Uhaapm Lmtmtm carat aha aittlaa alaa artU WILD NT All M KDIIHXB TENDHIR a GLO V E -7I TT INO g CORSETS, B ■> fi-mm al tbta &5l CjßßEßfeaiAd^|ii | 4NMB| At** MMi SN swmnk wf taa..di as-rtffl H ■ h/yvr BURiuimc B3 I X.vy> H , / at ctNTiaaui (Hi u!f Ct Iha 6 IML M In ■a JL. li if.-4 bearara of rmitßOtoM. W OtMMIM ■■ IS a a 'tliM r ) T " ""*°mna E IPI Ik Pi fii y T r *T •" *KA C* aaUM lE*] W en amy Mm aM* [J A Special Offer TO THE READERS OF THIS PAPER. AOanuiMtariaa MagnaMTlmr Keeper.. rtfa.i sn iam>rM> tattn • aim . M alaa a tainrtai Caat patt. atati ator k wta. "■.i tau. mat araaaw, ul attaamO'.Ji iWaaMp-Um.awmtod toAmto catmt Maa. aatlarbata la twa run Ntoa yaacaatoid aPi to Clven (Ml) to a*ary |MatW Out gapa tt t Prtoe om. Oo w rwtt Carraa tt Btft tt. COUPON. Ot am tf tow (aapaa aad ■ aaa to war ,iicn.ia. Kidney ikuuplaiat and VEGETINE asisral debUitool the ayatem f CUC I lC , M hearrit, recommend it to all auffarinr from the above ooraplaiata. Yours rmpeclful'y, VEGETINE m,f, nU R JiIL. VEGETINE PRRPARKD BY H. B. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. Vegatine is Sold by All Druggists. % 12 &^^/TSS.7S^£ir a // H*oCTHrtiKiwd|e."itrui REVOLVER Frw t4f, J imlOa.NlWtMilLwiiMilb M pf|NM Hade by B Amp* tadaa.TTwHb W MM 4 f T Nmwßfltclee. touaplaafrm. wOwUl AddtwaaC. to, I way, fbi'to" gmmxz££s~z RNAMWINIIMI 14U F ** M 13 i.to-m - W, *ra as W'irrta mrarj, Wpw Tprfc. BOSTON WEEKLY TBIISQUPT. TW baa totallr pin mrto n>H a1 * ■ IBBM SH; Hp- ataM a *. 11l pat afSTSiiwi uarr ukatw. THE STARR PEN K-KJrtsKsa °iC3irisix tI.OO tIJOO Osgood's Heliotype Engravings. Tks itnlnS AaataahalStrataitaU. Prica Otaa Itmllmv mmA. toad /br tatotofat. JAMES K. OSGOOD A CO. BOSTON. MASS. #I.OO SIJOO Ta Dfiiran am OUan Waaitap Par* Cat At. Tte Frai r* Ci. 21°;^:^' awadaatha?at taaa.totn m fM aramw niWiit btoHat. litolt tmul pat toatot, Baatoapfltoa Tba wtlh aaah. B iiwlP .r 4 Utotat ar f > OMat C V*C HlNTmtor aaa Waahy-Tba Bato SS&3Svs: _ tegc&ieraSssSrg KttoiOtowmMwiadrUlttMwlpWinw ■ jij Mil rfilßljiM D 8 BMBBWS ■>—■■■ ll flf teMpNNMIIiMI f*S dnfMNfelMMi iIM crv-w: BOOK aohntb : THE COMINB BOOK! Vkabw aat twit al Itoa " WKUTOTOf " " Hawkeye Humorist V Bk *w Sotts to raaAy. awi to imi abiltolßgli tiah to< rta| ll it pattoMUr i>taawttta AaiauM tato aamaa LADIEB CHEAPEST AND BEST! Chicago Weekly Post! raw CtoittattttA.> ?J2 ?!"•' —-lIT f ihtfil lara* to AfvsfeL A 11~—m. THE POST. Chicago. A SOVEREIGN BALM Claa to taam to that aaaat awd taltoMa taaßiataa, Alien's Lung Balsam, to tba aaa aT which baaJUr awdhappomt ata iwhwat la tboaa aNtctaa atoh tar Ut| ar fhtwal tm aaa. awab aa i 'mMfh. ( .44* Aat-bma B**j totok aanamd. aaad to W I K.Ctoiha. I*.iMian. Ilk .3a.it.wi wnapakl I DUNHAM PLIKM. Dunham A Sons. Hanufirtumri, t>nrnM, 11 a> IMb fcm, Jkmijkr Ilimtrmud Otosaiw aad rna Li*. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE mILLUSTRATED HISTORY THE GREAT RIOTS I It aimsaiaa a full ai'. i1 el tha mo jf toasnrlla I PxMmSTMbM*. W! Kta (Vu. TW I mAm 1|WI 'lm inmpa nd the —N TWiblt mmm- I the work asad w atom to m to AAanto Addwa. itttom, Prtuutn IV- . ft. uAmiptML. P b.-BBITT'S TOILET SOAP" n qui *■"■ "* ' L,f*rjW IPygS ,L r *tk toMH tim rntwr imtr iaifi.iwu. Chafe ilw MB>ml in j.r n* "i amfe MM * it* aMp***>- wf fesaiJttfMKatA toafU km. -*■ A oka f ac men. ami km to any *4 PHOT BEDf OHC'S LTTTtR SHMMB turOWWnr o- THR ARTICLE OVER ALL OTHERS. TOR SOAP NMUNG.SOIT FREE BY MAR. ON APPLICATION TO HJi AWTHOWY Kid ortnr IT wrwvnwK v s ab M ■ IH^* s 5 ®> Hkl £S9I "• SflfSilipH ilN I lavatida.ln Mcfcnwa. .Mr iwtwi of lb* hod, armpwh.sw h the aen of tba diaowtor. When the atomach fall* to perform ito fuoctioan. tba Hw. bovwla. nerrea. tonaedan. mtotofM , ata., An all BH>r>- or Isaa affected Tbene dehnu seats raqatia a medicine. aoaibtniw Uw properties ota stomachic. an alterative. a pumadtra. a U. awl aedntive. to them back to their (Into; sate all these elements. to thair pnt and most ffctiv forms, m united m Tarrant's Efferrrawnt Seltwr AprHnat, tha |ml Haline Reumdy ** ladlytolAaß mad tta to comiteot ooonnqo< QM. MM fcy nfl dnmriUs SANDAL-WOOD i positive remedy foa oil diseases at Iba Kidneys, Bladder and Urinary Orffvana; alas Bead ta Drsp. •leal CnwplalaUa. It nam produce* sMcaaaa. la oartala and apaady to IbtAUca It la last aspersed Ins aU otbar remedies. Sutj oepsules vara in six or s%t t data. No otbsr medicine can do this. Hrwarr mf Imitation*. for, Ovrint to its grant asm aaa.mmr basa alarsd; some are?teoat daay ar oaa. eaasiag Pas, ate. DI'NDAH DICK 0t t'o.> tfeeefna B*ft Omp >a Em, raa'oMa# Oil if ftdAbad, —ld mi mil drvf Saw dak fw thnmhr, ar aaad fir AM vb aad tf [ yaaator dtoaat. Jto Tar*. _ • W T It P Wo WW UfBIN WRITING TO AOTEKTUUM Tf please say that TOO saw tha atSTaruaa. aaeat la this pa pel