The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 22, 1877, Image 4

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    When the (Iras* Shall CerA 1 Me.
When the grass ehall cover me,
Head to foot, where I em lying ;
When not tnv wind that blows,
Summer bloom* nor winter snows,
Shall awake me to yonr aighing ;
Close above me ae yon puns.
Ton will aay j " How kiud .alie wan.
You will aay t " How true she waa.
When the grata grow* over me.
When the graaa ahall cover me,
Holdon close to earth's warm bosom ;
While I laugh, or weep, or sing
Never more for anything;
You will And in blade and blossom,
Sweet, small, voices, odorous,
Tudor pleader* in my cause.
That ahall apeak me as I was
When the grata growa over me.
When the grass shall cover me'
Ah, beloved, in my sorrow
Very patient, I can wait
Knowing that, or aoou or late,
Thsre will dawn a clearer morrow ,
When yonr heart will moan. " Ala*'
Now I know how true the waa ;
Now I know how dear he waa,
When the grass growa over we.
Playing the Dressmaker.
Mrs. Ross Rttaliugtou sat dignified,
haughty, self-possessed.
Mrs. "Hoss Rualington was indignant,
and took no pains to hide that fact, and
all because her son had rebelled—all lie
cause her one darliug had mvu fit to
consult his owu heart in falling in lore.
Ernest Rualington was cue of those
handsome, tenderly-worshipful follows—
tall, stroug, affectionate-hearted. with a
devoted way that goes so surely to a
woman's heart, that wade his mother
idolix' him as he deserved, that made
little Mamie Morgan fairly thrill with
rapturous low for him, that made even
stately Mias Genevieve Wallace admire
him. and feel in no, ways averse to the
Elan Mrs. Rualington had arranged, that
er handsome aou should present Miss
Genevieve as h swife.
But in this especial iustance Mr. Er
nest Rualington was proving, bejoud the
shallow of a doubt that, while he and
Mamie Morgan and Cupid hail proposed
their future wav id happiness, his mother
was determined to dispose lit them all—
except her boy—wry summarily. And
to this end w'as the" interview tending
when Mrs. Rnslingtou sat in her bine
silken-cushioned chair, with her fair
blonde face aa stem as her well-brvl iu
dignation could make it-
Mr. Rualington stood at one end of
the low man tie-piece, his elbow resting
upon it, his head leaning ligbtbr on his
hand, listening courteously to his moth
er's low-spiiken, yet none the less pas
ties ate words.
'* But you are so entirely mistaken,
mother. If you would only permit me
to bring Mamie to see you. if you would
only give her an opportunity to let you
see' her, I am positive yon would change
Tonr mind. She is a dainty, refined
ingh-bred little lady, with a face so
sweet that it would appeal to you in
stantly. You would love her, mother,
if you* would only lay aside your pride,
your injustice."
Mrs. Rnalington only smiled faintly.
'• I am sorry yon look upon me as
prejudiced, my dear bov. I have always
studied your interests, I think, and now,
when I "recommend you so strongly to
marry Genevieve Wallace, yon surely
must understand I regard it for your
great good. Genevieve is very pretty,
undeniably a lady in birth, manners,
education * and position. She is very
rich, and would make a most suitable
match for you."
"If I loved her—which I do not and
cannot. Mother, it seems to me yon
should not seek to bias my judgment in
this, the most important event of my life.
All my life I have tried to please you,
all my life been governed Yery much by
your-* wishes and advice ; but in this
case, yon mnst permit me to know my
own heart. Yon must remember that
where one has carefully hoarded ail their
wealth of affection, and not frittered it
away on every pretty face, when one has
never loved until they have brought
their judgment and their disciplined
maturity to concur as I do, that such
love is a resistless passion, not to be
trifled with by any one."
Mrs. Roaiington looked at his very
quiet, determined face, and knew he
would stand by what he said, and the
ealization that Mamie Morgan would
be the wife of Ernest Raslington came
to her with such abhorent force that she
rose from her chair, flashing-eyed, frosty
voiced.
"I remember nothing bnt that my
•on intends to disgrace his family and
himself. I shall never mention the mat
ter again, bnt, rest assured, that if yon
marry this obscure, ordinary girl, whose
pretty face is her only commendation—
bush! if you please I—if1 —if you do it, all
further communication with me and
this house, and your income, will be
ended."
" And yon are sure, perfectly sure, it
was right, Ernest 1 lam so afraid that
I have been (hung wrong in permit
ting myself to stand between you and
your mother. Oh, Ernest, it is the
only nnbappiness that comes to me aa
your wife—this knowledge that I am
the cause of you and her beiug ene
mies." *
Mamie Rualingtou. the year-old wife,
was leaning her lovely head on her hus
band's shoulder, and together they were
looking interestingly down on a little
golden-flossed head nestled among
blankets and lawn, from which it will be
deduced that Ernest Roslington had uot
been intimidated by his mother's
threats, bnt had bravely foresworn
lnmrv and elegance for the sake of
the girl he loved and who loved Ipm,
and married her, conscious that he was
in the right
Mamie Morgan had never been ac
customed to surroundings that were
more than plainly comfortable, so that
to her the pleasant little home her hus
band took ber to, and which he WHS
enabled to make for them in considera
tion of a Bang little snm of money in the
bank, saved from his income, was a very
paradise to her, where she was as happy
as the day waa long, after Ernest had rea"-
soned her into believing it was not her
faalt that his mother refused to coun
tenance them.
He had not been long in obtaining a
good position, and on the salary ho re
ceived he and his young wife lived well,
even elegantly.
Then a little baby-girl had oome to
them, and over the nestling cradle, over
this child, Mamie's conscience con
demned her afresh, and she cried over
baby's flossy golden hair.
" I wish as heartily as yon do, darling,
that my mother would be friends with
us, and she shall know your delicate
oompliment in namiDg baby Helen Ber
wyn, after her own maiden name. Who
knows but that this pet of ours will prove
a peacemaker ?"
True to his word Ernest wrote to his
mother, telling her of the birth of . is
child, her grand-daughter, and renewing
his invitation—in his frank, eager way,
that was yet perfectly free from fawning
—to come to his home and be convinced
that Mamie had made, not marred, his
happiness.
Mrs. Ruslington was conquered by the
letter—by the sweet news that always
touches a true woman's heart.
Almost &U those long months sinoe her
darling had gone from her home to be
the delight of another loving woman's
life, she had been wearying for him, and
daily, hourly, regretting that she had
said such cruel things to him.
Within an hour she was with her son
at his office, the first time she had seen
him since the day he had told her Mamie
Morgan was his wife, and this proud
woman sobbed out her true heart full
ness on her son's breast.
" It was wrong in me, Ernest, I'll ad
mit it. I will endeavor to atone by going
at once to your wife. But, my boy, if I
can't love her as I would like to, vou
musn't blame me. will you ? I'll try for
your own and your baby's sake."
Ernest smiled confidently.
" You won't have to try, mother.
You'll find the dearest little woman in
the world glad to receive you, and wait
ing to love yon as a deur child should.
Go to her at once."
She did go, and was shown into the
parlor by the maid without giving her
■MM# l ' '
usme. merely requesting lU* girl to toll
her mistress a lady desired to 000 her.
There oatue into the room a slight,
graceful, girlish creature with bountiful
violet-blue eyes, ami hair of aoft, lus
trous hrowu, that was criniptsl slightly
from the parting, an.l gntliere.l into 'a
thick Grecian knot at tue back of the
classic little head,
Shu wore a wrapper of gray serge,
with pocket*, collar and buttons of
blown silk.
There was a dainty linen eollar and
a bright blue ribbon lv>w at the nook,
and liueu cults at the small, round
wrists.
There wen l no earring* or jewelry of
any kind, and Mrs. Rusliugtou'a judg
ment gave a thrill of approval—eveu
under a protect from pride—aa this girl
ish lywomanly creature came forward
with an ease and graciouanew that uever
could haw been acquired.
" I am glad you liaw eoina. laiy off
your cloak and hat, please, and we will
go into the nursery. I have all my dress
making done there uow, so that 1 can
keep as: eye to baby, you know."
Mrs. Hiislington liked the voice verv
much, but hardly the peculiarity of ad
dress.
"In the nursery, Mrs, Kualiugton?
I certainly would be glad to see the
liabt."
" You will we plenty of her," Mr*.
Eruest laughed. " before 1 am done
with you. Oh, did you briug the polo
uaise pattern, Mrs.—there! I told my
husband I uever could reniemlmr tlie
dressmaker's name he said he would
send—Mrs.—oh, ve*—Mrs. Abercvom
bie ! You did briug the polonaise put
teni *"
Mrs. Rualington, senior, understood
it all in a daslt.
Her daughter-in-law, whom she bvl
dually condescended to visit, mistook
her for tlie dressmaker.
Mrs. Rualington, juni.ir, waa inlv
astonished to see such a dignified, welf
dresaisl lady come to help her make up
her black silk, and, while Mamie was
absent a moment iu respouse to a little
uestling crv from baby Helen, grand
mamma Helen auddeuly began to enjoy
tlie situation, and when Mamie came
back, said :
"I have forgotten the pattern, Mrs.
Rualington, but 1 think we can make
the skirt first, and leaw the polonaise
until to-morrow."
And Mrs. Helen Rerwvn Rualington,
or Mrs. Ross Ruslingtou, aa her cards
read, actually cut out and basted the
breadths in her despised daughter-in
law's black silk.
Sihe contrived the trimming, and made
uch styltah suggestions that Mamie
congratulated herself on her acquisition.
And the while, there was not a look, a
word, a gesture of the young wife's that
escaped the eyes of the deft handed
masquerader. She watched the tender,
womanly way she cared for her little
one ; the sensible, economical mode of
her housekeeping arrangements; the
plain, palatable lunch ; the dignity of
the Young mistress to her one servant;
her intelligent indnstriousness and her
sewing while baby slept; her patience,
her amiability, and her beautiful uncon
scious adoration of her husband that be
trayed itself at everv tarn.
It was not yet three o'clock of that
memorable day before Mrs. Roes Rus
lington had thoroughly made up her
mind thai her son's wife was far superior
to Genevieve Wallace, and that Ernest
had shown his accustomed foresight,
judgment, and taste in choosing between
the two.
" If I only can get her to talk about
me," she thought, as she made side
plaiting, thoroughly enjoying the excite
ment of the occasion.
A while later ahe purposely intro
duce*! the subject
44 Your baby has an uncommon name,
madam. Is it a fancy name ?"
44 Oh, no—it is for my husband's
mother. Isn't it s beautiful name?"
Mamie then stroked the soft little
hand lving doubled up on her bosom
while the child slept
'• Yery pretty. So old Mrs. Rusling
ton's name is Helen, is it? Do you
know I never had much of an opinion of
her? They say she is haughty, unfor
giving, and* obstinate."
44 Oh, no Mrs. Abercrombie. My
mother-in-law is one of the most perfect
ladies yon can imagine. She may te
haughty—rich people are apt to be. and
she—may be—is unforgiving where she
feels she has been ill-used. Any one
would be, would they not ? But ob
stinate—no, I am quite sure not."
44 You are well acquainted with her;
you should know."
Mamie's fair cheek flushed
"lam not acquainted with her, at
aIL 1 hare never seen her, for she was
so disappointed when her son married
me that she refuses to know me. If sire
only would, I am sure 1 would make her
love me, I would give baby into her
arms, and let her see she is Ernest all
over again. I would tell her how I bad
called ha after her, hoping my child
would make aa uoble a woman as reared
my husband. I— "
And just as Mrs. Rualington dashed
down the plaiting her trembling hands
eonld no longer hold, just as she was
going to snatch Mamie to her well-wou
heart, the door opened, and her son,
bandhome, cheery, gay, came in.
"This ia splendid) Mother dear,
this is all my home needed—to see von
here ! Mamie ! how natural and oozy it
all is I Why—what— "
For Mamie had risen from her chair,
bewildered/pale ; and Mrs. " Abercrom
bie" stood, langhing and crying by
turns. *
" I've been here—taking advantage of
a mistake Mamie made, and I've dis
covered what a jewel she is. Ernest.
She shall never again want my love or
care. Children, it's the best day I ever
saw!"
And when Ernest pnt one arm around
his wife and child, and the other aronnd
his mother, with tears in their'eyes, and
smiles on their lips, they all endorsed
her opinion.
A Curious Sound.
Manitobah Lake, which lies northwest
of Fort Garry, and h.s given a title to
the province formed out of the Red
Iliver region, derives its name from a"
small island, from which, in the stillness
of night, issues s "mysterious voice."
Ou no account will the Ojibways ap
proach or laud upon this island, suppos
ing it to be the home of the Manitobah
—' * the Bpeaking God." The cause of
this curious sound is the besting of the
waves on the " shingle," or large peb
bles lining the shores. Along the north
ern coast of ths island there is s long
low cliff of flue grained compact lime
stone, which, under the stroke of the
hammer, clinks like steel. The waves
bi-ating on the shore at the foot of the
cliff cause the fallen fragments to rnb
against each other, and to give out a
sound resembling the chimes of dis
tant church bells. This phenomenon
occurs when the gales blow from the
north, and then, as the winds subside,
low, wailing sounds, like whispering
voices, are heard in the air. Travelers
assert that the effect is very impressive,
and they have been awakened at night
under the impression that they were
listening to church bells.
Timber Statistics.
Within ten years no less than 12,000,-
000 seres of forest have been cut down
or burned over in the United States.
Much of the timber is used for fuel,
twenty-flve cities being on record as con
suming from 6,000 to 10,000 acres each.
Fences use up much timber, and rail
way sleepers require the product of
150,000 acres per annum. The amount
of pine and hemlock timber yet stand
ing in the forests of the timber States
is estimated at 226,000,000,000 feet.
The sum of 8144,000,000 is invested in
the timber industry, employing 200,000
men.
A lover of good ooffee entered a
grocery recently, and holding up a hand
ful of ground ooffee from a big can he
inquired, " Are there any beans in this
coffee ?" " No, sir," promptly replied
the grocer. "How do you know?"
asked the man. " Because I was out of
beaus and had to put peqp in," was
the answer.
A chap who opened a sample raom
over a theatre appropriately painted over
his door the word Dram-attic.
j THE SHIP OWNER* OKIIKR.
Wcndtna fer Tvrw Alonheva and Urdus OH*
llunSrril -Taa frta.r AHIIMHI* TBSIM*
r**r**ln l ike Mhlp.
An Ameriean consular officer, now in
Washington on leave of absence, relates
( a very funny occurrence which came
' under his observation during his official
i residence in Liverpool. A successful
j and wealthy slniiowner, having devoted
more time to the business of money
making than to the cultivation of any of
i the neeeaaary embellishment* of the iu
telleet, waa considered by hia business
. associates a little "off" iu his orthog
raphy. He sent an order to Itotubay,
and, among things, wrote for two mon
keys, which he wanted to present to
some friends; but departing from the
usual mode of *)>ellitig the word two, he
put it too. Perhaps the handwriting
was not very legible, as is often the case
with others than illiterate ahipowuera.
At any rate the master of the slop read
it 100, as did also the agents in Itomlmy.
There was much astomshnieut at so
strange an onler, hut the master was
hound to otiey it. Accordingly tlie wt
vices of a number of native* were
aecured, the eouutry round alsnit wan
matured, and in a few days a huudred
monkeys of all colors and previous con
dition* were secured. There were little
black monkey*. with eyes like Iteads,
bigger monkeys with whiskers, ami
ItaiKHUts win we grave expression of
conntenaueo presented a ridiculous con
trast to their undignified antic*. The
whole crowd chattered, acrwautad ami
fought in the cage which had lieeii pro
vided for theui iu the ship iu spite of all
efforts Ui keep them quiet. In a few
days the homeward voyage was ooui
uieneed ami with it the "trouble* of the
crew.
As stam as the motion of the ship was
felt, the moukev* redoubled their uoise,
making a regular paudeuiuuiuiu of tlie
ship. Relays of theui shook the liars
of the cage without a moment's hesita
tion for twenty-three hours out of each
twenty-four until tlie cage waa literally
shaken to pieces, ami the astoiiisli<xl
sailors beheld a cloud of monkeys sud
denly issuing from tlie hold, scrambling,
fighting and tumbling over each other, as
if their lives depended upon getting into
the rigging iu tlie shorbst possible time.
From that moment poor Jack had not a
moment's jieace. The monkeys, with nus
chievouancaa uuparalleltxl, would steal
everything they could lay tlioir hands
on. If clothes were hung up to dry,
they would carry them up to the highest
{shut attainable and pick them to piece*,
t was necessary to set a guard over
very thing that was washcvl or dried.
When the cabin-boy swept the deck he
hal to look up the broom, for if he hid it
ever so securely his liaok would lie scarce
ly turned In-fore an old sjie.half as big us
a" man, would have it, going through the
motion of sweeping the deck with an air
of indescribable gravity. So great was
the annoyance, that it w* with tli*
greatest difficulty that the officers could
prevent the men shooting their torment
era, and wheu the ship touched at Aden
half *f the crew deserted, preferring to
take their chances at this inhospitable
place than to eudurs the jiersecutioua of
the moukev*.
Finally the ship reached home. She
hail been signalled at Laud's End, and
the owner was at the dock when she ar
rived. Shipowners generally pride them
selves on the trim appearance of their
ships, and our friend was weak in this
respect, if in no others. What then was
his astonishment to see his ship's rigging
crowded with knots or bunches, with here
and there a festoon where several mon
keys had suspended themselves from a
spar in a string, holding each other by
the tail 1 Everybody about the docks
viewed with wonder the approaching
spectacle. The ship moved closely to
her berth, and presently her yardaruis
neared those of several other r-*sela ly
ing at the dock. In an in taut the mon
keys leaped from one to the other, and
begau a tour among the forest of masts
that fringed the harbor of Liverpool. All
the boys and idlers around the d<*-k were
eng ged, and a grand hunt ensued, up
ami down the rigging from ship to ship,
all over the harbor. They were finally
captured.
The owner was furious, but was, after
a while, mollified by on explanation over
a bottle of wine, aud the difficulty satis
factorily adjusted. The monkeys were
gradually sold off. realizing a profit of
about ten pounds (fifty dollars* alvive all
costs. But the master of the shin de
clared that he never wanted to sail an
other voyage with a cargo of live mon
keys. — Hartford ( Ckmn.) Timet.
Interesting Pacts.
Coal was first dug as fuel in 12119.
Cartilage was founded by the Phoeni
cians in 886 B. C.
Utica and Cadiz were built by the
Phoenicians in 1150 B. C.
The Bank of England suspended its
payments in cash in 1797. "
Adrea, which 2,000 years ago was upou
the sea, is now twenty miles from it.
The plow was inveiited by Dagun, the
brother of Cronus, in 2930 B. C.
Thp Ganges rises from April to Aug
ust, thirty-two feet, and then create a
flood 100 nules wide.
Richard Person, celebrated for his
memory, learning and eccentricity, was
bom in 1759, and died in 1808.
Springs are formed by the interven
tion of clay and sand strata, the former
holding water and the latter permitting
ts free passage.
In 476 Rome was taken by Odoacer,
who was made King of Italy, which pnt
an end to the Roman Empire, 1,229
years after the bnilaing of Rome.
In 1822 and 1823 Chili was visited bv
a continuous series of earthquakes, which
raised the whole coast from three to four
feet above the former level.
Jnmnotree, in the wildest part of the
elevated Himalayas, has a temple visited
by distant devotees, sacred to tlie goddess
Jumna. Bemderpouch, near it, 25,000
feet high.
The Amazon, the Oronoco, the Missis
sippi, the Nile, the Danube, the Zaire,
and the Gang( s rivers all have islands at
their mouths, and the sea is muddy for
a great distance.
The Hindoos believe in the unity of
God, and in subordinate deities repre
sents! by the element, stars and planets.
They teach a fifth element, which effects,
attracts attentions, repulsions, etc., and
call the sun adetyw, attract* ir.
Spanish wives do not take their hus
band's name. Spaniards nncon tarn mated
with Moorish blood are called "honor
able," however poor, but no rank secures
them from the stigma of malasangre if
they have any moorish mixture. In
Spain the passions are the causes of
crime, and of 5,400 crimes in a year
about 3,000 are murders.
In 1776 every colony bad a staple com
modity peculiar to itself an - Canada,
fur : Massachusetts, flab ; Connecticut,
lnmber ; New York, wbeat; Pennsylva
nia, wheat; Virginia, tobacco; Mary
land, tobaooo; North Carolina, pitch
and tar ; South Carolina, rice and indi
go ; Georgia, rice and silk.
The great bell which was rung upon
the Declaration of Independence, wan
one that had been brought from Eng
land in 1752 and having l>een almost
immediately cracked, was recast in 1763.
Atrocities of the Eastern War.
• A war correspondent writes : I was
told that during the battle of Karaha*-
san, while Nedjib Pacha, the general
commanding the main attack on the vil
lage, was standing beneath a tree, look
ing at the progress of the fight, a Turk
ish soldier passed by carrying, skewered
on his bayonet, the head of a Russian.
As he passed the general he laid the
head triumphantly at his feet. Nedjib
is an exceedingly humane and enlight
ened man and tamed away with an angry
exclamation of disgust, whereupon the
soldier promptly ran his bayonet
through the head again, shonldered his
ghastly trophy and marched on. A simi
lar incident occurred at the battle of
Kuzeljevo at which Mehemet Ali com
manded in person. The general was
standing with his staff looking on at
the development of the attack on the
Russian position, whenw Turkish troop
er galloped furiously past holding out,
at arm's length, a dripping head which
he grasped by the bair. The man was
mad with the fury of battle, and actually
shook the dripping head—so they say
—in the face of the oommander-in-chief,
who immediately ordered him under ar
rest.
NEWS SUMMARY.
Daateiu and Middle Btatoa
Ths first busbies* session of the fourth an
uiial congress uf the Protestant T,pi*oo|>*l
church in ihc I'nlt.d Sialr. ae liehl lu Sew
York Ihc oiwuuug sddrcss l>eiug delivered by
I lis hop Udell, of Ohio.
Three student* of Itutgers College New Bruns
wick, N. J , were arrested and locked up over
night for teartug up and selling Ore to plank
walks Ixdoughig to the college.
A Urge insss meeting wss held by tk<> sink
lug cigar makers of New York male and fe
male and It was resolved b< hold out until the
employers acocoded to tlit-ir dclilsmls.
The marriage uf I'reaideut Find, of Harvard
('ollege, and Miss (luce IlopklUsoo, bsik plaxi
at Cambridge, Maaa.
At a uieoliug of the txiard of dlroctoi s of the
IS-niiiylvauia railroad, held iu Philadelphia, it
was resolved not to |iay any ipiarterlv divi
dend at |>to*eu ( in order to make up /or the
biases of the l'Ulsburg riots.
T. F. Lynch and wife were Injure.) so se
ven ly by the etplosiou of a kerosene lamp st
then residcuce UI M' llkesbsrre, IV, Uit Mis
Lynch died ou the following day.
By a collision l>etw.>eu an etprees and a
freight tram tui the Tltlladelpiila and Trie rail
road. ueai Btdgoeay, I'a . both engiueers and
one fireman were instantly killed, a nreiuau
w fatally injured aud several |#*s*eiiger*
troeived Injuries of a more or less serious
nature.
After an abaeucc at Kurops cf u months
ill-Ms.or Oakey Hall reiurne.l lo New York aa
etb'Utly and luyatcrioualy a. he had gone away.
Tits goveruttr of New York issued a procla
mation, ttvlng Thursday. Nuvsulei 'Jy to tx>-
observed a* a day of Thanksgiving, lit '.he
proclamation he save : " due year now .Its-nig
to a close has I-eon marked by uunv blessing,
calling for cs(vcclal thankfulness. Tile seasons
have la-cU mild aud fruitful. The harvest*
have tx.it alugularly houutlful. tieiicfal gvxxl
health has pr# v allcxl. We have law it eicmpt
from the scourge of war. In the face of seve re
trials the public peace and the supremacy of
the law have been dimly maintained by the
courage and g-x-d ixiuduct of our Clt.reua.
1 recommend, therefore, that the people of the
State, laving aside their accustomed avoca
lions, engage in appropriate religious srrvlosa.
ami that in the happy family reunions and
several enjoyineuts incident to iheutvaslon, the
pour and unfortunate ho lemeiuhertwl with
generous htx-ralily."
One of Iho heaviest storms of the year swept
over New Y'ork city and iho surrounding coun
try, doing considerable damage to dwelhngs
and slupt tug.
The wife of Stephen May, of Mechauaicville,
N. V., stole out of h.r house in the night,
taking with br four of hrrchiidreu, aged uiue,
six, four and our aud ose-half jest., threw
them into a deep creek hack of the dwelling
and plunged in heraelf. The eldest child luau
•gvd to rea.-h the shore sud gave the alarm.
Ihe mother and one Child were resetted, hut
the other two children wrre drvwn..l.
A sluvk of earthquake was felt in tavtiions of
New York Stale, New Euglaud ami Canada
In manv place, a loud, rumbling noise was
heard, followed by a heavy jar , buddings were
shaken ; furniture was upset, windows were
broken.and considerable ai. it. men( was created
among tlie people.
But*era J OWI.OOO aud 3,(100.000 few! of lum
ber were oou*uuied by au loose tiarv rtro near
Phllhpaburg, !** luu, 8 to,two ; insurance,
(96,090.
The Sow York liberal Club made on lonova-
Uou OU rslsbhohrd far tin ami practices hv elect
ing s woman- Mr. Elisabeth Thompson Us
president. Horse* Onl *u at aus Utue
pre-ldciit of llm club, aud it is Ibo first orgaui
asUati of it* kiiul tu America to etsct a lad; a*
presiding officer.
Jesse Pumeruy. the bo* murderer, er-riiug
nut a hfe term lu the Charleetovru Mix
State prison, ea detected Ui au attempt to
escape.
Western and Southern States.
X special tram took I'reoidrul Have* aud
member*of the cabinet to K chmoud, la. uu
au excurslou to the Slate fir. They aete rl
corned m a •pcech bv Judge Meredith acting
tuavor. to ehich the I'rrsideut re*j.litdr 1, and
addresses erre aim dvliicitxl by M< **r*.
Kvarle, Sherman. Thompson and Usveoa. A
procession followed, consisting <>f alt the title
aud colored orgs uuatiahs of the city, the fire
department, the city authorillr* and guests,
and huudmla UI Carriage*, and lh.>tl*altd> on
foot. The pageant eaa eitiuaxd by &O.UtHi
peo|4*. lu the evening the President held a
popular Msreotiou in the par .or* of the Ex
change hotel.
A passenger tram in I'tah, consisting of sev
eral cars. *aa thiowu frum the tm-k and turned
completely over by a gnat of wind, aud a num
ber of persona sere injured more or teas dan
gerously.
The public school building at Chariton. lowa,
was burned. Loss, #i5,(JtW , insurance, ylu,-
000.
A meeting of the American Association of
Hhort-hom BrvesL-r. was held Ui
Kv., and delegates from all parts of the coun
try were present.
Presideut Hayrs and party visit.d the Yir
g uta State fair at Itichmund, aud were wel
comed by tiovcruor Ketujier. lu the cveuiug
the l'rr*idet held a State laoeptlun at the
guvmtor's reaidtmcn.
Vluted States Senator Oliver I*. McWlcm. of
Indian , died at ludlauapuh*. of paralysis,
after a bug*ring llluesa. 11s was (oru in
Wayne couuiy, li.diaua, August t, I and
belonged to au old Eng.Ub family, hi- grand
father having come t> this country a'out a
century ago. At the age of hfleen he was
apprenticed to s batter. u> which position be
remained four years He then entered it, ami
I'uiveraity at Oxford, Ohio. * ln-re he hecouib
Doled as a debater. At tseuty-two be left
col.ree and U-g*n to study law tu the 'dice of
the lion. John S Newnian at Onlervitle, liul.
He waa admitted to prsctn-e tu ls<7, and tn
l!t6J was oiectcd circuit judge as a Dvtnucril
Mr. Morton resigned hi- jsisitiou st the
eipirstusi of a year, and devoted li.m-elf
exclusively to law practice until l-jfl, vvtieii he
ran for governor ou the ItepuUiran ticket, but
wis defeated. Iu 1360 bo a< rlcded lieutenant
governor of the Nate. The governor. Hon.
Henry B. Lane, VM soon after elected Uuitnd
Mat< * -etiatur, and Mr. YI >rtou acee.-ll
to the gubernatorial chair. I'pon the expira
tion of his term for goo-raor he was re-elected
to tbe < Ifioe. and in ltv67 he took hiv seat In the
t'uitid Slate- Senate. Iu 1870 J'reudi ut <iraut
tendered to Senator Morton the tul-ioti to
England, which he declined to seccpt after
mature consideration In 1876 be was a promi
nent ltepubbcsn candidate for the iTeenletiUa
nomination
Stthta I*. Overton, whit*, and Kotb Tar lor,
colund. WITO kau{d at Washington. Y C.,
f<>r the murder, two roar* go, of William
Grimea, a storekeeper, robbery being the motive
of the crime.
A grand exhibition of America* dairy pro
duce will Iwt held in Chicago ou I'ecetniier
18, 19 and 'JO. tinder the management of the
Northtae.trm Our? Aaaoctation and the Na
tional hatter. Cbeeae and Egg Aeacciation.
Tntea amounting t>> 52.000 will be given, and
all dairymen are invited to cumjiete.
Mr. Van Voorhled, a young woman with
three children and about to Iwcotne a mother
again, after living unhappily with her huahand
on the outakirt* of the lovu of Wilton, Wia.,
waa deaerted by him and left deepoudciit One
night abort ly after her aliandonment her dwell
ing waa discovered to he ou Are, and when the
neighbor* entered the tmilding thev found the
woman and her two vnungeet chlldn-n lvittg
dead on the Net. ahile the c>rpae of the boy,
agi d ten veara, lay l>ehind the lied room door.
The four bodiea wVre charred by the Are. hut
appearance* indicated that the woman had
poiaoued heraelf and clilhlren Ara-, and that
they wirt dead twforethe flame* reached them.
Frim Washington.
John Walah. of I'hiladelphia—chairman of
the Centennial tmard of fiuance and a promi
nent hnaineaa man—ha* hern nomuiah 1 htr the
IVeaident a* United State, miniaterto England.
There were HIO bill* tntroduce<t in the Honee
on the Arat " Bill Dar" of the neaaiou, and it
took twenty-nine page* of the Conyrrmmional
Becord to print their hare title*. Sixteen of
them were for remonetizing the old ailver dol
lar, and were introduced hy Meaar*. Cox. of
New York ; Banning. Ewiug and Jonn., of
Ohio 5 BrtgW, of Tenneaaee ; Hunter aad
Baker, of Indiana; Sparke, llarnaon, Knapn
and Fort, of Illinoi* ; Bland, of Miaouri; CoJ
beraon, of Texan; Cummings and Oliver, of
lowa, and I'lielpe, of Kanaa*. Itilla for tli. re
peal or modification of the reanmptioa act were
introduced by M> aara. Kelley. of I'enuavlvania:
Southard aiirl Ewing, of Ohio; Durham, of
Kentucky : Atkina and Bright of Tenneaaee ;
Fowler, of Indiana; Sparka, llarnaon. Kuapp
and Cannon, of lllinoia ; Franklin, of Miaaoun,
and Cnllieraon, of Texaa. IJilla authorizing th.
reiaauo of the gm-nliacka already retired under
tlin proviiion* of the remimption act were
RillmiiUMl be Meaar* Hunter, of Indiana, and
Cillberaon, of lexaa. Ihlla authorizing the
pavment of dntir* in greenback* were preai-nted
hy' Meaara. Walker, of Virginia; lhddle, of
Tenneaaee, and Sparka, Springer and Ilartz'.U,
of Illinoi*.
Hon. Clark*on N. Totter ha* reaigned the
Houae chairmanahip of tho I'aciAc railroad*
oommittce.
Tho pnhl'e debt aa reduced 54.3M.5M in
October. The reduction for the fonr month*
of the Arcalyeir, beginning July 1, t* SiatHO?,-
Mt2. ma inor, e 111 tliJ reduction of the debt of
♦2.260,000 over the 00 rreeponding four month*
of laat year.
The Tre*ident ordered the flag* on all public
bmldinga to ta- placed at half met out of
reaped to the memory of the late Senator
Morton. '
Ibe ram of #2,5768/ 01 nae been appro
priated hy the Houae committee on appro
priations for the armv.
Foreign News.
Exhibition Hall and other bnildinga in St.
John, N. 8., were deatroyed by Are. Loan,
$30,000 ; BO in-urance.
General Orant had an tnfarvicw wlfb Preai
dent MacMahou in Pari*, and a banquet In hia
boner waa given by the United State* miniater.
A viait waa paid hy General Grant to the ex
hibition building in Pari*, and to the works
where the atatue of Liberty, intended for New
York harbor, i being conatmcted.
Field Marshal Wrange!, a distinguished Prus
sian general, died in Berlin, aged ninety-three
veara. He wa* known a*the " Grandfather of
the army," and had been a soldier over eighty
year*.
The capture of Dubnlk by the Rosiuans was
attended by a ln* en their aide of 8,000 men,
lnolnding every brigade and regimental oom
mander.
Tlie Farmers' Warehousing F.lnvahc in flalle
tllle, Old., Containing M.Otkl bushels of grain,
was destroyed hv (ire, and the engineer, Itichard
liewshury, was Lurned io death.
(OMcKKss-.-KXTIIt NtsMOY
Newwie.
Mr. Hargciit presented a |M<ntiu of printers
and tsx.k hinders 111 the gAvanUMttt pneliUK
office, asking that their wages is restored to
| to the rates existing prior to March 4. 1 it"7.
Ou motion of Sir. Kdmund* It was ordered
that the select committees on the law relating
lo ascertaining aud declaring the <e*uil of the
dr.ii.,u of I'r. sideiit and Vice TresldcUt t#e
OUtn posed of lillie senator* instead of aeteu.
Mr. Ituruside introduced a bill to remove all
rcsliictiona ou the etillsliuuut of colored cili
Sena in anv arut of the military service of the
l ulled Si ales
The following gentleman were appointed a
committee on Mr Fdmund* resolution to as
certain and declare the result of elections for
t'ricsideul and Vice-President Messrs. Ed
munds. ('tinkling, lluwe, McMillan, Teller,
Dsvts, llavard, Thurtnan and Morgan
Mr. Mclhinaht auuotiuced the death of hi*
colleague, Mr Mutton, and moved that a com
Ullltee of slv Selistots le ap|*>llllcd to attend
liie funeral at ludlaus|sdts. which was agree!
to. Messrs. Md >oo*ll, I'avis. Burustda
list aid. (.'sliierun, and lioolh woro appointed
such committee.
Iteesr el Urpresents!lves.
Mr. I'.wiug, from the committee on hanking
and currency, rc|>ortcd the following bill
" That the third nvtluu of the act nulitieil
"Alt act It# pro. Ide for the resumption u f s|#ecle
iwymruU, approved January 14 1*75,' la# aad
the same la h.-rrbv re|4#alet(." ( The sect loa to
be re|s alcd (-Tuvlilm, aiuUg other tilings, for
the 1-ateUipUon Ui coin of C'nited Ml ate. legal
tender note* ou aud after January t, !S7U ]
Mr FWt, repieseiitiiig the mlmwityof the oMß
uattec, asked leave to (resent ait amendment
iu the nature of a substitute repealing all that
part of the resumption act which authorise*
the secretary of Iho treasure U> sell b'Ulled
Slstes bonds and cancel treasury notes. The
tall * recouuuitted without a division, and
Mr. Twing moved U# rounder the vote recom
mcudmg tlie bill. Mr. t'ouger moved to lay
lite motion lu reconsider ou the table, and on
this the veaa aud navs were ordered and re
sulted Ui yeas, 116, navs, 13. The result uf
the vole la to leave tlie control of the bill
Ui the hands of the Invoking and currency com
mittee, or of Mr. Kwmg, who rnpttried it,
and who can at auy lime call up his motion to
re.-oti.ider aud thua have action ou the hill. It
will be in ht* |>owcr to cut off ail amendments
even thst proposed by Mr. Fort of lihuols -
by moving lit# previous nuestiuu.
I'pon motion of Mr. Hanua, uf Indiana, the
following committee was appoiuted te repre
sent Uie House at the obse-jute* of He us tor
Morton Messrs. Hanua, tobb, Wilson, Bur
chard, Davidson. Banks, and Townsrud
I'hr oMiiiiJeriliou of lite bill for tiie r j<oal
of(k*BMMftfM Ml "as resumed, M lb*
morning hour expired without any action hav
ing Im-U taken and It Weill over.'
Mr, t'lark iiiti.duccd a UU for th* retuoiie-
Uaalluii of stiver, and the reootnagn of the
standard silver dollar. Koferred to com nil Utsi
on tanking and currency.
Mr. Ituckiiar introduced a bill to authorise
the free coinage of the standard ailvel dollar,
and I" re*tore He legal tender character, lte
ferred to commit tee utt coinage. weight* and
measure*.
*' THE tiOLIIES riLF."
The Kelts wl a*eralail a** the Maala far
Itlchra. aa Describe* b* T*lwa*r at lb#
HiMkll* Tahrraarlr.
Tlio billowing extract* from a dis
course of the -Rev. T. l>e Witt Talwsge,
of Hmoklyn, will be rood w.th interest :
Pull aside tlit* curiam ami yon
sec tli* goldeu calf of modern idolatry.
It i* u<>t hke otU*r idols, made out of
sUx'ka or stoue, l>ut it has an ear so sen
sitive that it cau hear the whisper* ou
Wall street mid Third street and State
street, ami the ftsitfall* of the Itank of
England, and the flutter of a French -
tiuui's heart on the Itourwe. It has an
eye so keen tltat it can see the rust on
on the farm of Michigan wheat and the
insect tu the Maryland peach-orchard,
and the trampled gram under the lnf
of tite Hiissian war-charger. It ia so
mighty that it swings any way it will
the world's shipping. It lias its foot on
all the merchantmen and the steamer*.
It started the American civil war, and
under God stopped it, aud it will decide
the Turko-Koantau out est. One broker
in September, listiy, in Sew Turk,
shouted : " One hundred and sixty for
a million!" and the whole cotiUneut
shivered. This gulden calf of the text has
its right front foot in Sew York, it* left
front foot m Chicago, its right lock foot
in Charleston, its left back foot lb Sew
Orleans, and when it shakes itself it
snaki - Uie world. Oh ! this is a mighty
gtsl—the golden calf of the world's
worship.
Hut overt god must hate it* temple,
susd tins golden ealf of the text is no ex
ception. Its temple ia vaster titan St.
Paul of the English, and St. I'eter of
the Indiana, and Alhauibra of the Spau
arls, and the Parthenon of the (Ireeks,
luid the Mahal Taj of Ue Hindoos, and
ail the other cathedral* put together.
Its pillars are grooved and dated with
gold, and its ribbed arches are hovering
golU, and it* chandeliers are deeceodtug
gold, aud its fiisirs are tessellated gold,
aud its vaults areemwded heaps of gold,
and its spire* ami domes ore soaring
gold, and it* organ pipes are resounding
gold, and its pedals are trimming gold,
and it* stops pulled out arc flashing gold,
while standing at the head of the tem
ple, as the presiding deity, are the hoofs
aud shoulders and eyes aud ear* and
nostrils of the calf of gold.
Further: every god must have not
onlv its temple, hot its altar of sacrifice,
•nd this gulden calf of the text is uo ex
ception. Its altar is not made out of
stone as oilier altars, but out of rsmnt
mg-rooin desks and fire- proof safes, and
it is a broad, a long, a high altar. The
victims sacrificed on it an* the Hwartouts,
and the Ketchains, ami the Fiaka, and
the Tweeds, and ten thousand other
|H>ple who are slain liefore tliia golden
calf. What d<*w Uiis god care about the
groans and struggles ot the victims lo
--fora it? With OoUi, metallic eve it looks
on and yet let* them suffer. Oh !
htwvens ami earth, what au altar ! what
a sacrifice of body, muul, and soul 1 The
physical health of a great multitude is
fluug on to this sacrificial altar. They
cannot sleep, and they take chloral ami
morphine ami intoxicant*. Some of
them struggle in a nightmare of stocks,
and at one o'clock in the morning sud
denly rise up shouting : "A thousand
shares of New York Central—one hun
dred and eight and a half! take it!"
until the whole family is affrighted, and
they fall back on their pillow and sleep
until the* are awakened again by a
" corner rt in Pacific Mail, or a sudden
" rise "of Rock Island. Their nerves
gone, their digestion gone, their brain
gone, the* die. The gowned ecclesiastic
conies in and reads the funeral service :
" Blessed are the dead who die in the
Lord." Mistake. They did not "die
in the Lord;" the golden ealf kicked
them 1 The trouble ts, when men aaori
fiee themselves on this altar suggested
in the text, they not only sacrifice them
selves, but they sacrifice their families.
If a man by an ill course is determined
to go to perdition, I suppose you will
have to let him go; but he puts his wife
and children in an equipage that is the
amazement of the avenues, and the
driver lashes the horse* into two whirl
winds, and the spokes flash in the sun,
and the golden headgear of the harness
gleams, until a black calamity takes the
tiit* of the horses and stops them, and
shout* to the luxuriant occupants of the
equipage : " (let out 1" They get out.
They get down. That husband and
father flung his family so hard they
never got up. There was the mark on
them for life—the mark of a split hoof—
the death-dealing hoof of the goldeu
calf.
Solomon offered in one sscriflce, on one
ocraeioti, twenty-two thonssnd oxen and
one hundred mid twenty thousand sheep;
but that was a tame sacrifice compared
with the multitude of men who are sacri
ficing themselves 011 this altar of the
golden calf, and sacrificing their families
with them. The soldiers of General Have
lock in India walkod literally ankle deep
in the blood of "the house of massacre, '
where two hundred w omen and children
had been slain by the Sepoys; but the
blood around about this altar of the
golden calf flows up to the ktiee, flows to
tue girdle, flows t the shoulder, flows
to the lip. Great, God of heaven and
earth have mercy 1 The golden calf has
none.
Still the degrading worship goes on,
and the devotees kneel and kiss the dusf,
and eoant their golden hea<ls, and cross
themselves with the blood of their own
sacrifice. The mnsio rolls on under tho
arches ; it is made of clinking silver and
clinking gold, and the rattling specie of
the banks and brokers' shops, and the
voioes of all the exchanges. The so
prano of the worship is carried by the
timid voioes of man who have juet began
to speculate, while the deep bass rolls
out from those who for ten years of in
iquity have been doubly damned. Chorus
of voices r*joi(Mug over what thtj have
ramie. Chorus of voien* wailing over
what tli%y have lost. Thia tetuple of
whieh 1 .peak mUii<lbo|m<ii day ami night
and there >* the glittering god with ioa
four feet on broken heart*, and there la
the aiuokiug altar of aaeriltoe, uew
vietium every moment on it, and there
lira the kneeling devoUnw, aud the liox
ology of the worship rolla on, while
Death elands with mouldy and akeleton
arm lieating time for the oborua—
"More! more! more!"
H> iino |>v>>|sl*v are very much surjiriiwvd
at the nctioiia of ixvople in the Hbn-k ICx
change, New York. liiilihhl, ll ia a aeeue
sometimes that jiarulyxea description,ami
la Ix-votid the iluaglliatloti of anyone whu
liiut never liM#ke<l in. What ana|>t>itig uf
linger ami thumb, tuxl wild Kesticuiation,
ami ruviug like hyeuaa.auti alaiiijiiUK like
BillTaloea, and swaying to and fru, and
joatliiiK and ruutuuK one upon auoUnvr,
ami dnafeiiuiK uproar, until tliw president
of the Kxehauife strike* with las tuallet
four or live limes, crying, " Order! or
der !" and the aatuuiahed s|#ccl*b#r "**•
out into the fresh air feeling tlmt he has
eaeaived from paudeinunitliu. Whatduea
it all meau ? I will tell you what it
means. The devotee* of every heathen
temple rut themselves to pterea, aud yell
and gyrate. Thia vociferation aud gy
ration of the Stuck Exchange is all ap
propriate. Thia ia tlie Worship of the
goldeu calf.
THIS NATIONAL THANKvMsIVTNIi UAV
TrwiiiiMllKm f#y (As /Vrndrxl <•/ (Ac Cmltd
Stale* Fuutui Thurnitiy. .Sot. JV.
W'aaaiMOToM, Oct !M. -The following was
issued this afUYtiooU :
My the l'nu ient of th*UHlbni State* of Amtrtea.
a raocLumnua.
The complried circle uf summer aud winter,
seed-lime and harvest, has brought us to (he
accustomed season at which a religious people
celcbrstes Willi nraisr slid lhanksgivlug uie en
during merry of Almightv Hod. This devout
and public ciinfessitiu cf (hr constant dejx-nd
aiceuf man u|>oii the Divine Father for all good
gift* of life aud health and |#eacw and happi
ness, so early ui our history node the habit of
our people nnds in the survey of the last year
uew grounds fur its joyful and grateful mani
festation. In all blessings which depend upon
benignant seasons this has indeed laen a mem
orable year Over the wide territory of our
country, with all its diversity of soil and climate
and |>rodurU the earth has yielded a bountiful
return to tlie labor of the Lushaudtnan. The
health of the people has beru blighted by uo
prevalent and wide spread diseases. No great
disasters of shipwreck upon our coast, or to
our commerce ou the seas have brought loss
and hardships to merchants and ma'lnera, and
clouded the hairiness of the asumuuity with
sympathetic aurrow. In all 'hat oouceftis our
strength and jx-ace and grealtvosa as a nation ;
la all that hutches the permanence and secnrtly
of our govermueut and the tx-neliorut tuatitn
tums ou which it rests, in ail that affects the
character and dis ostiums of our peo|#le and
tests our capacity to enjoy and uj#hld the
etpial and free condition of aoclrty, now per
manent and universal throughout the land, the
nprm-uce of tie hvl year is canspicuou.lv
marked by the protecting providence of Ood,
aud is full of promise and nope for the coming
genyrstioua t'ndrr a sense of these loHttlle
obiigatious to the (treat Baler of tunes and
seasons and evvnta. let us humbly asnrtie it to
our own faults and frailties, if, in any degree,
that |<erfect concord and bat>pitress, peace ahd
justice, which such great merctra sboul < dif
fuse through th- hearts and lives of our peo
ple do not alt grtber and i Iways and every
where i-revatl. Let us, with on# spirit aud with
one voice, lift up |#raise and thanksgiving to
i >od fur hu manifold goodness to our land and
his manifest care for our tiathm
Now, therefor*, I, Ku: her ford It. Hayes,
president of the I'lilted Males, do appoint
Thursday, the 271b day of November next, as a
day of uatiuual ihauksgiving and prayer, an 1
earnestly recumtarud that, withdrawing them
selves fn-m Macular cares aud la bora, the people
of the I'ulted Slate* do meet together on that
day in their respective place* of worship, there
to give thanks aud praise to Almighty (rod fur
Hi* mercies, aud to devoutly beseech their con
tinuance.
1 wtluess whereof I have hereunto set my
hand and cauatd the ye*l of the Called Mates
to be affixed.
iKine at the City of U ashing ton this twrnty
uinth d.y of October, tn the year of our
Lord one thousand sight hundred and
[ua] aevetity-sevdn. and of the Indrjieadefier
of the Uni ed Slates the one hundred
ami second. E B. liaTM.
By the I'rrsudent:
'(VtLhiAM jf. Evasra. Secretary of State
A Kuuawat Train.
From some cause or other not vet re
portoil the engin<*er of the continental
express giKiJa train, running from Lon
don to Dover, in England, a few days
ago lost control of his engine when about
half way between the two cities.
"Shortly after tle time that it wan due,"
ssvs the London Timrt , "the trains
with the brakes on and the whistle blow
ing, dashed through the Priory at Do
ver, and, running through the tunnel
under the town, tore through the hsrbur
at a tremendous rate." An empty truck
on the track was doubled up like match
wood. Home large gat-* and an immense
briekjpirr were carried way. "ID the
soft mold u! s garden, not fifty yards
from s number of dwelling houses," the
engine finally imbedded 'tself. The
fireman jumjied from the tram, and *■
only lig!itly hurt; but the engineer re
ceived severe injuries.
We should lent n. by reflection on the
misforttitics which have stlctnied others,
that there is nothing singular m those
which !efsll ourselves.
Illesawa's Pablvesiloes.
Ores! reduction in price for PCs of OUtucm
Ptri>>nal tu #2 a year. Single copies flw coats.
Tb# Home CirHr to #'J a year, single copies
five cent*, for -ale by all urssdealer*.
t llramm'i IfonlAly fWfxmtorv to tl a year,
single co(>ie# ten cents. Adl postage free.
Tlie juice of chromos has just been greatly
reduced. No uue now gives such btwral term*
to agents as we do. Send for new free circular.
Addrese F. (ileasoo Jk Co., 718 Waalungloll
Htns't, Boston, Mass.
Hheawiallswi tfslclilv fared
" Duraug'v yheumatic Itemsdy, th# great
internal medicine, will positively cure any case
of rheumatism on the face of tbe earth Price
#1 a bottle, stx bottles, 86. Sold by all drug-
Ki. Ser.d for circular to Helphsnstiaa A
tley. druggists. Washington. I). C.
CHEW"
Tbe (xileti Ot* 1
" Man suaa"
Wood Tag I'iug
Toaaooo.
TBE Ptosmui Toaaooo ConvaST,
New York, Boston, and Chksagv
" Yon say Jones' scales aiut good for noth
ing. Its youi interest to lie agin 'em. Bo 111
run the risk, as I have no money to pay till I'm
satisfied, lean buys Five Tou Wagou Scale
of Jones, of Binghatnlou. Biiighsmton, N, Y.,
for #SO, on trial and freight paid at that"
The Market*.
**w 1 aa.
BeafOalti* B'klv. o#k ilk,
I*XII and Cjeruke. (>\A <•
Rllch Oow* IU 00 M U>
tta.a: Uv. OXki# iR
Draaaed ... .... ill k
Shear °<k* "k
Lamb* VSS IS
Ooftoo : Mut.Uing UN# ll\
Plour: Wiataru ; fkc*l to Cbonra *" <• *S*
Slat.; Onod to OUole* SIW
Wheal; H<-1 W—leru 14' #l4!
No. t Milwaukee 1 SO-.# ! SI
Bjra: 5t0t0......................... IS # I*
Barley: HUU 74 # V*
HastoyMait Ml # as
(let.; Mixed Waart.-ra H # M
Corn: MlxMI Waatern 4* A IS
Hay, per eart So # 70
Straw, per ewi ... S # 44
Hop* 78*—us #l4 Tta It • <S
Pork : Mae* lit' #l4 41
Lard: CM?VIM # ♦
n#h : Maek-rwl. No. i, *w. IS W #SO SO
No. . new li r # xsn
Dry Ood, par cwt. ~ ISO # 800
•tarring, Sealed, per Hox. . .• # XS
PMrolann,: Cr.il 1 *%#ush Reßied, I*',
Wo' : California Fleece X' # IS
Tia 7eece . # X*
Snalra-*n Ptree*,... . 44 # 4S
Stole XX 41 # 4-
flaile* . Stale # # 80
eatem; Choice. .. SO # 31
Wclern ; Oood to Prime 30 # 38
Weamrii ; Plrklna. IX # IS
Oheaat : Stole Pactory IX 18
State Skimmed..... 10 # 11
Weatern.... 08 # 10l
Kggt; State and Peuoeylvaala.... 3i # 33
•vmM.
Floor 8 S # SB>
Wheat—No. 1 Milwaukee 131 # 131
Corn—Mixed S a# 41
<>*U X SO
Rye S* # W
Barley S3 # U
Barley Mall SO # K3
rsiLAi>m.rsto.
Beef OaUla— Extra (M # ostg
Sheep 04 # 06\
Hog*— Dreaaed 08k# OSy
Ftonr—l*ennaylvania Extra . TIX # 738
Wheat—Keil Weatern I*3 #1 88
Bye 88 <4 87
Corn—Yellow CO # 87
Mlwd 8 > # >|
Oato—Mixed 88 # SS
Petroleum—Crude ofil#o9|f Reflued, ]|V
Wool—Oolorado SS # j
Texaa X 4 # S>
California 17 # 89
DOSTUM.
Beef Cattle OS d 0* y
Sheep 08 s# 0718
Hog* 08 # 00
Flour—Wiaeonaln and Mti:nee.-'a.... 780 # •00
Com—Mixed .* 48 # BVM
Oata— " 5* # 80
Wool -Ohio and Pennaylvanl* XX... 48 # 4'
California Fall SI # 35
BSIOMTOH, Mae*.
Woof Cattle 08*# 07*
Sheep 08 # o*lß
lamb* 07 # 10
Hoga 07k# 08
wATiiToww. Rasa.
Baaf Cattle— Poor o Ohoioa 880 #BIO
Sheep afS # 774
Lam be TOO # our
(law la lira* rbeerfal.
Dianas* ta In a area! man* perhaps the
majority of Instances tlia underlying cans*
of mental depression. It will almost invarta
bl* l>a found, for instance, that h*i>oahrondr(
§•• ar dyspeptic, bilious subjects, and all
(•arsons who have had any atpwlauea of such
niM are aware that sufferers from diseases
of the kidneys aud bladder are especially sub
ject to ill. of du.|K>iulbey. The ur way to
ov TMNM di-juessiuti U to try a oouiaa of
HoataUar'a Htmuarb liittara, a cheering eor
dial which is peculiarly antagonist*- to the
" blue*," as well as to the causes which pro
duce tlmm. This popular and efficacious dot
recti ye of a disordered condition of the syateni
remedies ihe most ohstiuete ceses of Indiges
tion, biliousness ami cousUjiatton, uvaruoutes
dis wders of the urinary or nans, purities aud
enriches the blood, and re.lores vigor to the
body as well as elasticity to the mind.
4 New Verb Vllestrrl 4 .avpawf.
The head>|uarters for minstrelsy u> America
always will Ist in New York, and to I* the most
excellent ui point of enterprise ami eulerlaiu
meul Ui the nirtro|s>)ts Is io he at the very top
of Uie business lu the country. 'This distinc
tion is uiiaiilutously accorded to Bryaut's Min
strels Neil Bryant, survivor of Use famous
liroiltcrs, has organised a company un lb*
basis of talent ana pec faction, aud Ihc triumphs
of the tiyguns ysars are revived. The company
now playing at Brysut's Opera House, 7'JB ami
790 1 roadway, is in ail r*>v|#erta a splendid and
superior one
Barsrll'e Fleverta* Kilrtrl*
Hie superiority uf these el tract. consists in
their perfect punty and grsat strength. 'They
are warranted free from the poisonous oils and
adds which enter intu ths eompudUun of
many uf ths factitious fruit flavurs now la ths
market.
The elegant t>otß|>any fr-m lu!Ts Brosd
wsy Thenter, New York city, are piaytrm U>
a sueoeesluii uf crowded houses in New fork
Htats end Canada. In Uis hands of tbl*
talented organisation ths jJay of l'luk I Html
nose has made a (leaded Lit, and is Spoken
of as a madsrlj lerlonnawe.
Mrs. brssrsl Nkoisss.
wife of '.he general of the L'uited Slates army,
says: "I have purchased I>urang s
Itheumatic Kernedy for frteoda suffrtiug with
rlysuiratism, end tu every inatauce it vsurkad
like magic." Send for circular to lletphso
sune aud Beutiey, druggt.U, Waahtugton, V. C.
who are
all speak lit uubounded praise of its rehahthly.
uniform stirngth, and merits iu pruduotiig s
oeileut rolls, biscuits, Iwead, etc.
Blllssusss ss4 IteaSaege
cored by taking (Juirh * Irish Tea. Prtee 2S
cts. per package. Hold by druggists.
nnwfl Mi tOi l KK*. Prelaw has Address
VIUnS l .real W. ira ' .uo Wurk* fiuavir Pa
DWrilTI 11. SIITIOM. MiaiSi m. e
f aiuuuns Sua* half aa Uottr K*ui I. mail ti > u
■XlKtrritl CXI. 114 Seem If St. Pfcita4.dpCa.Ps
/N—V L ftavwss.Tasrluesr Osle. PtaaaQwwaA
biTiiMfslivSailwaai* see
t ' I ia Mussc*. I nrmasian. Musw,
Ky^aixuiafsenalStseaeaMsaa
PIANOBAND ORGANS.
DPfIT AND I HKAPKT la the Hllltl.il
fihSl p.rl "red lev
|ila*lrated ( aia>Mara. *l.l>T Masisd.
Uerarr H.irr. A owes, tU K Itu. M X I
BOSTOI VEEET TRAISCRIPT
TW b**l fatal f tsswspsper paWisksd sis til pass*. Sfty
Silt iiullltil rwadins
Tro.s Ir mssw slabs of slssss. (Id par
ALII iIB m |4IT|MS
I*M I.MKM I'OPY tIMTM.
Ventilating Rubber loser Soles
PftSwrt th* Peal tram C4d and Diaisin Idnlidm
s xar.oieed or mtmmf refasdwl Pruw Ktfiy rests
ALFRED HALE A CO.,
MAvrrintuu or
RUBBER GOODS,
' VI K.klssloa Mrult Rsslsa.
AQENTB
WANTED 1
rut riKTict'i.iß\ AUiixua
WILSON SEEING MACHINE CO.
M Nrsadesv Nvs YsrHriUl
Cbtcase, l>a.t New Urieswa. La.l
er Sas graseSsra, fat.
TftK NKWATiK
DAILY AID WEEKLY COURIER,
XMCWAMK. MCtT JKHhZV.
, r. F. PATTERhOH, Editor sad PupsidMr.
TUB I.K tDIMi KKPI OI.ICAN NBW.
PAPt UP NIW JUtvCY.
frrsn D> 1. f KAMI JMT anna : Weskty. f f .00.
ifiwuestriu isssrud ua liberal Sanaa Seed l<a
*****
TUB >KW VOUK
Commercial Advertiser.
Tow. i - i'M if Preealdi-Da.ii.Bwe paar,
tl m00U... *t AO Uows *aiaa. it.Midae
tfirtlj H)te.ll;Si *olß.Mwaa Spssi
Kaaaibar. Mil ua a Aa nln mta
i AmiU tot slab of l*e Ui* Ua.l) I oc.ai.of Ourlr.
! TW( tdirrilarr s Itsbwl jbpe.
icaa paper pa'dubsd ia 0-w < -uoiri lu Wsakfr edl-
Uae la WMarpMsod K|wl torew u. Ipsa
ftpottx
"The Beßt Polish in the World."
RiM?
smvF PIIUSH
CONSUMPTION CURED.
Am M p Apaw—n. nUrad fr— praaAra*. kulwj*
I mt Ihm üb Udra mmmttmmn U—4orrala v* a
ampl* vaeaubt* rw lr tor wntl ae# frmmmmrn
run at to*. ''' *. wtar, and all
throat and loaf afartom*. aiar a ro. tor nee-toad
bihy aad ait Mmer complatnu aitor harm* Mud
•U ranun pomn la Ikiiwati of eaaaa, ha* Ml tt ha
duly to auir It tun to ha ulinji Mnt Ma
iIJ by • dMttv to rmixnr* human •uffuria*. 1 mmm
fro. to all who de-r. it, Uu recipe I ianwaa. French.
- yaaafliifcaa MT7S.T;
HAwkri kiaiiw \
YECETINIbi
GOOD FOR THE CHILDREN
Boa To* Mow*. It Trior Rtroai. [
Boatnst April. IWa i
I ft R St* i *wa ... . „ .
I—' tor- W. foal that tbo chiMrwain <mr Ham* haw
boo rwallr boio.Ai.l b r lb# VKorTINK m law *o
kindly riwo a* fiwa i.m# to tana. aapatoaily tbo**
tewbU'-.th th- hcwfjU Rato-
Tmnlor to Holt t All llr.uUu.
BEST BOOKS
For Singing Schools.
CHORUS CHOIR INSTRUCTION BOOK!
Hi A N .!•>**, a JrarOPT ( OM
of Una celebrate* i*h.r.a>> mraatoj owl pa. nil. do
•cnt—d.tbtl it lathe m *d b** Haaoal tw laaeh
and M>orwb iwA h* all Real* Itaeaaa aad Oaeve*
una with lho p.. n.-et of nlai* i.andwt Ml ie
paaaa at th# haal meal eroded few Ibo aoawol to the
wot dißralt. and coauoaal'y rof.rrod to Tbo booh
aioo ban anaworo that perplcitn* qoootf*. " H"o to
haw r*"t *"> ta <oaeroot>. Vl.3b. or
VlJ.tMperdoa. _
THh ENCORE!
Br L O Kwraaoa thi. ftoo booh baa alraadr baa
aaad bt iboMMßd*. b* aw :-.d ba ■ ao of> atoa aa to
SH&nSSeTSwUmo Itotod Ro.tr efTitoeagoar
lata, Tma, Doeto. tons*. • . to* Hi. a cap.
taHilae N--k aa eell a. Singto* <iaa* R~k ThefWugh
In.troctir. O-oa* 7id wt.4ltn
Perkins' School!
Br W O Paaatoa Th.*. l.ba th. " Kc>>—"i aa
atrollont (ilo. R -oh a. wall a. S ntti| Scbed Bonk. ad
aill ha • flna ho-ih for O -area'—m aad lor aaar prao.lT>.
ta fhokra and Sari tioa (tood iwatrecl,—. a.oraa, aad
tbo bat of mueic lit eta .o* ttti 7 A par doe
All teacbar* Aid titwatbe hi.ld. fa ara larltad to
.aaara th.tr #•** tbo —aam h eaing w# of th—a
hnoha For aale waiahaa IV-p—a aaat poat-froa bj
ruftil. for retail pr.re
I.VQi A HRAI.IIT. I'Mreat.
OLIVER DITSON & CO . Boston.
C. H. DITMIN A CVo . . „ .
Sl] Hroalaer. Sew A ark.
J. K. n.THON AJ o .
Two Sparkling New Books!
Int.
I Justin McCarthy's New Novel,
Miss Misanthrope.
A brilliant itorf bf lb* aethnc of "A Far twt."
' -Übdl Jaoith" •-Paal Maaa.a." " Lmtoy
' and ** Dear Iadf Diadatn "
One ml. oetaw. pa par, IRI enite
" cloth. VI.OO.
art .
THE NARRATIVE OF A
Blockade Runner.
Hr Capi. J. WII.KINHON,
Of the Confederate Btolaa Narj
fbna ml. lfm, rloth.
Captain Wllhtaana ran oar Hloohada aaooaaafnUr
atebt—in tlra—, and area narar oapliiied. He waa alao
in wmnud of a Confederate r. aaal at the Ira. New
Orleana aaa raplorad "Ha toll, a plain. onTarntabad
tale of prait intoraat."
Reoontly Pulolisliocl.
Mrs. Annie Edward's Bright Story,
A Blue Stocking.
On. eoi llmo, paper. AO
" " cloth, fjt 1.00.
JUSTIN MCCARTHY'S Novels.
LADY JUDITH •< 0°
IJM.KV ROCHrttHII J OO
UKAK LADY DiBDAUf I OO
A KAIR SAXON 1 OO
PAUL MAWiIK J OO
Mrs. ANNIE EDWARD'S Novels.
OUOHT WE TO VISIT HER CI OO
AKCHIK LOVKU 1 OO
STKVKJI LAWHKNCB, YEOMAN 1 OO
A POINT OF HONOR 1 OO
PHILIP KAKNWLIST t OO
LEAH. A WOMAN OP FASHION I OO
SBTKLLE - 1 00
Either of the a bora cent bp mail, po-tpald, on raaeipt
of th* prlaa.
SHELDON & COMPANY, New York.
DAV A I BAKING
HUT Al_ POWDER.
Absolutely Pure.
oo, or.
Mas*. . __ _
*ll "Tgb/fffi .TSiL.'tiSLr'
RUBBER TYPE I
MOnMOHMMMOMMMMBO —■■" .llllOHl Uli**?-
<>hm ..f uoar I!, auiuliii Mltn. ate . •lift pruning
—wttoias hiMlor lI.M, aa—pl* totto* M Baud
IUW MU lib mm.U l I in'.iof lot til eta Addraws,
EUftf jr Tr I ., .Mallei (rcafc, (Hit*.
IMi'Vsll l\C M4UH amtanaa irin.
I X!dAft HI t f Ift ~ wound. w)rM*. mIHMM.
•m pro. • OB I Mm** •>■ of* p*muni am
Inn tftau paaalnai ift.ir praaa*t rating
m lu> low, a* i. ih* com in Ift.oo.ti4o at mmtamaaa.
Wol.imo on 4 aMldrae at aiilß—l •bo died M * a— af
tb* o".| ■>( dt*— OWIIMM I* aarataa, ara —tod I*
•MM. rail liwou olaoill aatt oro dtoaba—adtow
...t.-lo rujd m, or injury oU*r Uui. Oilo**o ■ ■Klin
•bo •or* jwto— at mat am oonaio HI low ratio—. 100
MM ll*o am held f-t lull lOlooololmmi. oitOrooo ollft
"■ i *w3S2rb<
Mm /mm Mil Ptilw tllwil.
Bryant's Opera House. New York,
Mao Its ft tail Brandw*y On* nam Tort Hotel
HHVA*TN HIMiTHKIo
I'nda* to. Imhomi ml ... XKIL SRTART.
Huoabo, Iftnilaiv. Uttte Ma*. (Ho* Mnoft. IMIwO
and w.i*—. Hoclito wl Vila*., hilly Bry—ft, Oaai
White Juoito Mnftloooo
A lorol nrnnir. ul A iwpo-yh OrrkMr*
■ lil ta A braaO Wilder! rHirrlolowroi
KIOM KIOIIIm *1 R. Malarday M•!(•••
•IS. r<i>ulu rntM- . Ml i*4 it M. Moll***
ftioO bO ate
HOUSE,
Fronting Union Square,
NKW TOPIC.
Finest Location in the City.
Earipea Pla • lestsrat Dtsorpassii
H KUMKH * H 111 fit, IVoprMora.
Washburn & Moen WanTg Co.
WMcnrn, MASS.
i
T maisraittMKit*'
1 1
A itUl The B*4- Ma atkm tarn tog
•bo** o* Hi * *0 gat—dp J****™?*JAW.
decay*. Anahe. Mr wh Phi tooted Mr An.
Ml at tool A IM,I* Manor ft* A* —S
aarulr oftaoft I■****ito by —at ft—oo TWO
THOPSAJfD TOMS BOU> AXD POT OP
DC WHO TKE LAST TEAR far eato M the
Mui h*rd<va— am mi •tra—bata ul
Bleple* Bead Mr 01—crated r—sphlat
BURNETTS
KALLISTON
FOR REMOVIVO
Tsn, Sanborn, Frank!*, Eednest sad Emp
tioai of tits Skis, sod for Bsadsriag the
Complexion QUsr sad Bssotifu.
Of all tb* aflart* thai or poo*r* of lit aktii Ir
tb* Air or UA prudoo—, Uw wood dlaagr—abl* k
edited frock tea, or taa. 11 oprmd or— Ift* moir*
—rtao* at lb* |ru .ip—J, U I* called 100, U
arouarad al interval*. finer ktea Tb* IHAAIm
AT* wot itbjwrt Lo thorn Tb* lUUJfTOX,
i r*p*rad by Joii|ih Hurwrtt a Co.. Boat—. cam
talus A pooillu ar—fr# properly which •111 I*
■or* duo* diU(roMt.ooulai !l teal tbaaaas*
UM parfwetly btnoiMt. allay* til tand.arw to
imiaaemaUon. and rwodan U> oo—*texioa rW
•ad baauului.
alcauistoh^
—TEAK """jpMASIf—
A* o —ft Mr Mo ■lom'trn—.ftn— oy—A Hloft*-
s?tsssriMßttrae2
Efto Aki. o*o. niui Cfcoi, I*l H**do. **4 iTlo|-l* lfto
, I—l II ooiiiol ftrtbo MMO at ■iolte MOM
loooift*. Tfto ft'atl.olio' loftiMly
ftono^—tftofto^Ttll'td—— BMiftlo miHft
It tfto Hi—i,.
r*c*Uo<<7 *d**tel to lb* holftl— at Xof—to A Ift"
doo*o *AcM*ft to. o ft** 1 at .
Aa *aortt*ft e**Be—.
After Sm-Sftdbtef.
Uftft>( Ih* loo—Ma— dM* nftl omft
A W-i te Ift* H—4.
For Bite* at M—qaito— tol olb— I—M.
IMHtoiutQQtb* *to— ih*** u*orto*ii*dl.
To *ltey M**t ltd Irrttetio* of b* Skto, te r
—•D—dt-af. te *—ot lb* Hftlr fr—ofill-
A**t; tfto Kattoht* IftamMitr orttft ■ ••—* aa tad
brultT Xor Ift* U— II oft—to b* a**lto* tijftt —d
-Si?.— am. 4 lb* C—iaft H boot ooraftod
ft* o —lioot cbuou. bote** to I*o It BO 1111. at too hair
oad octal* {tor "ftwft wr.in tftr Krutirol to ro—
RJ I FRAORAIMAF ITS IRA 1 T* ARA* C*>— W^SBL
I—oool Cocotin l.i>4oc *%■ ft.fitniilooooc H tllqi
InMoOa*. u—.ooo all i. olocitr to I—drag. a*d tort**
*—• to* am— at the ootoltorta* to to* i—ilil d—m.
P-portol nlf by JOSEPH RX'RXETT a CO,
B**Uhj Por—i by all UrutstoU.
t POMIJITE I i 111 rsi
CATARRH* BRONCHITIS,
AND ASTHMA.
Tb—aAo bar* b—a carad b, Dr. bollroirri'l
lokaloltH. aha man pamommaaA ißcurabto br (ton,
w—a d fro—do Polronto In.— at d—a— tool—
I****>i tb—ooatro*of tfto adrto*ot Dr. l.*ld*>— M.
e— wrrto U—r nam* aod *>—- < dß<t* addr—o. and for.
nil ta Dr. Itotlrobrr*, Mi Arab Mr—l. Pftlto
4*l*ftu. tab— ft* .11 rot. n. Ift—i alto*at *nated q—a
too—.tfto aa-mteoretsft vill—abto bu* te deter*—*
tb* not or* ot tbo.tr sad tb* *rb*btlitr at amra.
Ho vill f -Tward to an, nidi—. hi* papor or boaA.*Mn*
fall d—tn*to—o Of tb* dt I ft t h*tr—to.—.
MM rn. raaoaa . OIL AMR.
I bar* —Hi Dr. Onld— h*o'o lahatou— tor Q—ni,
BraocbtUo. —d Aotbooo. and am lirab ear—
ASXIK REAL.
nDNEYimLIVEE
SPECIFIC
A RADK'AI. ( I KE POR ALA. DIHEAMKH
KIDNEYS* 0 ' BLADDER*
AND URINARY ORGANS.
Pan ittlonito tram tho— d to*o*o* *b—ld —1 tor
tb* I— at qaooloofto. tbal tb* Itoeftnr toot* gto* lb*—
*—*—i •— tb* **tr* —d rarabtliir at tbatr
fla—lteti —d *toii—lift— ft**. S—d for
D—<trt*lir* P*|wr to
Dr. UOI.DIKBKECK PrMnl OSH-r,
BIS Arrb tbrrrt. Pbll*drl*bl*.
FOiMfBICT
POND'S EITRACT.
The People's Remedy.
The Universal Pain £xtracter.
Note: Ask for Pond's Extract.
Take HO Other.
"ttrar. far I mill ■*—tk *f rarrll**, tblara."
TOM'H EXTRACT— Tito ptttt Tr**t*il*
l'sl-t nrnt—trr. Ha* borfllo uaonrarililnr
w oro, and fur d—ullM— asd prompt ettraUr*
vlrta'-o —anot b* rtrolled.
( 111 I.ItK EX. fbtollr can afford u>ftlib
•JI I'and'a Eatrai'l. Ar. ldrnta. Rntltoo,
lontiolnt, Cat*. Hpntlaa, are rellored aft
n. liaotonily by rttrrn.i applit atlna. PrompUy
lirt— naln* of Baraa, Hc-alato. Eir*rli>
ilan*. C'haflapa. Old Horra. Bella. Mut,
•ru, ate. Arr—U l iSantmallon. radue— oaoil
, ,-v if i;>i Nratlins, rrtnovrt d'.oooloraUon and
It oto rajtldlT.
L.ADIKH end It thrlr brot frlaod. It oaouarr* Uw
pa; tic to orhlcb tbry an* potra llaHy •ab)rct-
Botaftljr fullaan and prrcarr la tftr brad, —a*
-•nleo. elr. It promptly amrltorotrr and par
neatly hral* all fctnd* of lolaaa nd
II KHt? K*luHfinW or PILES And Ir „.Uto—*
Immediate relief and ultimate cur- . o c—r. bo*
erer chronic or ototlaat* c— *cu, /—lit lto regu
lar in*. •
VEINS. T* . -to only tuns rurr.
HI.EEIMNU from an" -.jaa. lor thin It to a a*c |.
Sr. it h——redft tuurrdaof lie—whroall other
rrmrdlM falltu* c arrr*t blrrdlng from no—,
fe. SlrT "'Nrantlglft and
Rhr\tftftllß are all alike relieved aud ofc.t
pe*o.auanUv cured,
with Pond'* Katrnct recommend ll In th*lr
practice. We have letter* of rotnm—daUon froci
hundi .Hie at Phjrelclano t many of whom order It
fur u— In their ova practice- In addition to th <
fongoing they order lu use fnr Hwrlllora of all
ktadr. gain*). Hora T>r". Jnla—ed
Te nolle, dimple and chronic piarrhtra. (a
iurc¥ tfto •filch <t Is a at^arc* i, CaU>lala,
all in—nor of sic In dtoe—ea
TO I I.KT THE. Itemores fore n earn Roagb.
nana and (onsttrtlngi html* (lata, Kraptlen*
and Pltoplca. H fwtr. (""Mr— and r
frkm. while wronderfullr improwlng the Cow*
TO*i?i ll *EE K-P*#e Etliart. Ko Stock
Srcrder. no Ltvery Man cunaSoH to he without IL
It touted by all the leading l.lvcry Stablea Street
Kallroeil* and flrot Horsemen In New York 13W.
It has no equal for Sprains, Harneee or Saddle
Chafing*. SUfTnead. Scratches. Swellings, Cuta
Laceraslons, Hlecdlncw. I*neumnnla, < olle, Dlar
rfama. Chills < old*, etc. lu range of actio* Is
wide. —d the relief 1: affords to eo prompt that It I*
Invaluable In every Farm-yard well ln every
Farm-bouse. Let It b. tried onoe and you wtQ
newer be without It.
CA CTION 1 Pond'* Extract has been Imitated.
The gtwtulne artlole her the words PoncPe Ex
tract blown In each bottle. It to prepared by Ue
only pewwoßß living who ewer knew bow to
L r^.iX, l Crl> fh,^fee^Wto^"
physicians and In tb* hoapllal* ot thto oouutry
** to >2O c
60
WOIPSSMriCI-t&s!Wiß^^
3BLnt ■Msaeeesis^
ELECTRIC BELTS
rkmatat. Ds.A Kaaa,batlte^SJrTT"
DMMTSSgaiSgg
•400S3S^?F^^
$33!1-s^K^L=
WANTED grtcajLxar -cvst
raLgxa£Jßw9aa%igsT
tmsmsm?-
tliUbAO
WORK FOR ALL
{.Si tIWNf SM 1 llWishli*m #Ritt l saw*-to, m fitlD l ll Epa
it<f\ srjLSVJimiizzrz
bDull S 532 E^CTLd u, Mw
sio to am
SI.OO suoo
Osgood's Hefiotype Engravings.
Th* iriniuwfi /*rLp#
JAMES & OSGOOD ATO.
au* *a— m J—j—
sUoo mamNm * MAm ' SIJQQ
KNOW
nil* Sif F—BtvaffTW " * A—dt too
fH ITSELF
lt—tstjoft -ctaf t<s* b—k Odl Medal ti wdil
•km •*—*'. Ta* tAatm Rooatdaar.. " —Rio—*e#
'Aft is bftp—d aft -o*i —IIIMW
THYSELF
Of OTHERS ads* ha— Sabeete dbHSna. arts* ara
.JI —toes toO—a*.
Read This!
Allen's Lung Balsam
eiiiMi >| a C—wd tor On— topKi— * ft— ft*
Trw ■ • wvUs—t
jW Y Vo* UB ' *" is—Udto M a arm
' oaWAV i*to idi—l— .bftt t|W'
MBIHMi mi A d<ia.i#sidr*.—Jfes—
2HH. %r*tT*iitl—to——d
rri xTH i ?2z!ss
NtriHmart timim* ara mm* Oiißßjir tnm
T-.
i3SS5s^25Kr
Tb* ran ft—t.u too fI.OU.
URRNMB KMrtR-HBiaA* ta rmhrbpiw
™—Jft—LM* tor BDJOO.
aa ul—*s —ufg— — Oil* silnto Oadtor s*d
ttlsmlru— gr*— wWb —aft half doa *—*" *kana.
a*—-, dftwte dibnssi ITEEK i* II at pnaa
ESsKuaJsSsSr^er
AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
m ILLUSTRATED HISTORY ro
THE GREAT RIOTS
It I HI- a ftsQ -in.—l at Us* i— at ton—to
r.B*bqga S stof i*. thi ngi gad -tow ream _ Tb*
•—Date —ft— tb*t(—*• —d Oft* as— Totnihoos
S—wdft— —d iliMl nHi ii■ at pi*irty Ttei'la— totan
—di———u.*to..*te Sand tor a rail dsiHips m at
tb* wwrft end *——*—— to A*—to, Ad.il—*,
Raft—tot. rraunwraOa. Phil iitM. Fa
nr Bmmk Ameaatrn To Am I*ffeo.
JOSIAH ALLEN'S WIFE
R— - Wrwto A—abv B—h " sd Sto I—l 4*.
Saxnantha at the Centennial
A* a * a. —4 *. I O—4*ie ft—U —4 Itetw
Doosbk. to— It* ruti Bourr ftiftfd Dit
watt and Li < *r c—to. and Ac* tot—>. —As. a
Bryan's Electric Belts
'K,"ST! sr.mrts.~as:,
NT—(.—to.Rsdtserlll*—piliiiwl*.!>l'iw***f.f" !}••• •'
<*•. Tt<*ift tbaA art— ftn— • I—* oSalktr—
H'l/kawf Tut lei at p Mrtlt+lmra.
Tb— are —pi n— MI <i *U*db— —*— ttmma
that g<** • —UM iiwla— at Mag—is* Ktorm. ky
j ftttn-.-ot aaing V—agar at other Mod* to arail* aab s .
' *j>T f ast eA'fft ftHMsiwv mi llnr V**ilj 'kwWßf FHA* t'eeWL.
Ula—ftd F— —btote to—
Aids—a H. UAIdV, tloasnd Ago—
Dr. Warner's Healih Corset,
With skirt Supporter and Stlf-
A<nuttac Ml
IJ I" B*ea*lrdy*r Hcawtw, My to
APPROVKU rraLLPHVOfCtARB
liffmwFn™ any ..a* by —ul la Sau*e.
nyi'di®#*: O—t'ii. tl ft. Rarasng Oaeeai.
J MSTTi®" Mum as' Lion—Man.
f LflrlLM AtJKXT* WAJfTED
i "HBf /ITARAKH RRO'ft,
WraNpßLa u I Sr—Jway, b.T.
TO ADVERTISERS!
i da amr at ■—■*■ totauii, lb* Twnran awnow at
i AYER A SON'S MANUAL
FOR ADTKKTI'ftKK*. WjtoapF Marweomplato
■ iiidfitoinlrai ads—JKygSa* * Jto "taind
I "Sato Iftwian M S"aSm to ado—ttoar
tb— a— ba fa—4 ——? *har pabbaatom. All hto*
■ ba— bo— rtfall* to—ad, and who— practical—
prt— bawa be— sad—*4. Tb* ——Sal odtota are
iiaaim and anaootalk adwaotagwi— Banto to
bafy. **-ffi.t>f s**JEjSs r
DramUM A<l**r*.tt!— Bolduu!pt..UM Utoa
BABBITTS TOILET SOAP.
I —ja \My aaJTBTriTMSSi!!* *** '
" •—|u
tofth* Tb*rnrarr TSILET ddAFto"—"^?— ML
P>hltFKWraili mbHmiim sis IIIIEIOB'I
-2r y£jz
frntmmip Wo. BDs—islf frnkos Df • —s. sdcA. —I free Be aoj mM
Wa m rarap f H OTwtR. AMrv*
"• f
flK* Ibf'f
IVhal la IJfr WHted lltostrb f H to Wftrtb
1—•;►* to# paldy*t*.Wtc Troo bat haafift i* ieft••
J yon* toaoh A tow due— at TaX** t'a R v***g*cp*T
KKLTXXU Armtn uwtorao your .(•#—tbTt. jour appa
tito. your choarfulnaoa. an I laton a* aeeaasoaa]
i ale—Uwa It will baa* tb* eyntoi to i—toto **4*e.
THE
6000 OLD
STAND-BY.
MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT
FOR MAN ARD RKABT.
Raxaxu*xxi> SA Taanx Alway* a—aa. Al—
toady. Al— handy Haa —wwr bsltod. Ite*
mifHoa. ft—* MM*d dL Th whale aarM apprtrw- the
(ion—old Muatong—ftba Baat aodCJhaapaat tanim—
is .itatane* 45 o-u a boctto. Tb# MeM-d UHmaa
—no vtoe nothing al— will
BOLD BT ALL M KDIOIH f VWDMU-
Sandal-Wood '
A poastlwe ra—ady for all dftusea* at tb* KMeeys
Bladder nd I'rtwtry Orssie;l> od > B
alcal I'd—plalata. It a# war peodaaa# mrfttm.
nwtaln and sp—dy la tt* aebea. It to fast —raadtog
all other re—adtoa. Sixty aapanto# ear# in *U igb
day*. Ro oftftar madict— a— do th*.
He ware af Imlusttoa*. toe. osdng to lu era*
—liiraaa.nnpbto* ba— aOatad.aama anmaatAaaaar
oua. oausing ptto*. at*.
DCNIIAN DICK A" Cd.'B d—s— to/! top.
tola*, a*at—al*p OH / Paaialufd. aU SI id dto,
If*A daft far cirralar, *r wad far ama ta am*
W—JtorjßS—Jj_Atow_Fvlk^______ i _________ — ___.
a N. TJI. F. **•