CONSTANTINOPLE. A Crnpbtr lr*erle.os at Ihr Twrhl.fc Capital- Tliere are four cities in the world that belong to the whole world rather than to aov one nation, cities that have influene • d the whole world, or round which its history has at one time or another re volved, cities iu which students and philosopher* from every country are cQiially intcrestiHl. These four are Jem salem. Alliens, Rome, Constantinople. The first has given to civiliaed mankind t heir religioA: the second ha* IHHUI onr great intrnctree* in literature and art; the third hss spread h>r laws, her lan gU'ige*; her jxaitical and evb*siaatn*el instituWm* over half the glol*e. Aud ♦lion • , 4 I C->n -tautiiH>plc can lay no claim t i tho nviral or intellectual glories of these other three, though her name does not command onr veneration like Jeru sdeoi, nor our admiring gratitude like Athens, nor onr awe like Rome, she has preserved*and seems destined to retain, an influence and importance which they have in"* great measure lost. They l>o long ifiwimv to the jiast; she is siill * power in tlie present, ami may b-> a mighty factor in the future. FOl flfu>et) hnndnHT*?ears she has IHH-U a seat of • mpire, and for an even longer peruxl the emporium of a eommeixv to which the evmita of onr own tiaic SHMII dcsiittevl to give a growing magnitude, _ If yon U>>k at the tuap you will w what a remarkable, and indeed unique, position Constantinople occnpiea. It is on the greet higuwar which iMiine'ts tiie Ulaek Sea with the Mediterranean, and se{iaratos Europe from Asia. Thus it oommands at oinv two vis ami two coutiueata. All the marine trade, both export anil import, of the vast territor ics which are dnuinvl by the Danube and the grvt rivers of southern Russia, as well as that of the uorth oaut of Asia Minor, ami of those rvh Eastern lauds that lie mond tlie Caspian, must iass under itigwaiU. When the ueighUirtug countries are oivned up by railways it will be the center from which lines will radiate qver European Turkey and Asia Minor. With a unit ao to speak, on •xioh continent, tlie power ihat possesses •! can transfer tr\s>p> or nierchaiivhsc at will fr. \i one t > the other, end can pre vent any one else from doiug av Then oonsidt . how strong it is against attack. It is guarded 01. U>th s: ii - by a long and narrow strait —to the N. E. the Bosphorus, and t>> the S. W. the Danla cnlles— each of which can, by the eree tion of batteries, (waaibly by the laying down of torpedoe-"", IH easily retidir*Hl impregnable to a naval attack. For the Itosphor**, you probably know, i tifUen miles long, with bold rocky hill n t .ther"fiide, and a ohanu-1 which i" uot only win.tine but it is uowhere over two miies and in some place* scarcely half a mile wide. And it jHsssesses a splendid karhxr, land-locked, ti.leless, aud with Wat. r deep enough to float the largest vesscla. Ou the land side it is "scarcely Mae defensible, betug COvere-,1 by an :.lr9cwt continuous line of hills, lakes and marshes, with a comparatively iam>w passage through them, which offers great a.l vantages for the erection >f fortifications. There is noother such site in the world for an imjwr:al city, lu other rrt *peots it is equally fortunate. Of its beauty 1 shall say something presently. Although the climate is very . hot in sammer, and pretty keen in win ter. it is agreeable, for tlie air is kept de eionsly fresh bv the seldom failing breeKwthat blow dowu from the Euxiue up from the .Egems sea. and the sen ♦self is a gr>at purttier. Though there 1 no tide there is a swift surface current sweeping down into the sea of Marmora ind the Mehterranean, a current at one •oint so strong that boats have to be t wed up along the ah re, which carries >tT whatever is thrown into the water. So, though It is oue of the dirtiest towns . the East, I fancy it la one of the moat healthy. People are always saying that the iu - de of Constantinople dispels the ilia- VODII which the view of it from the sea or the neighboring hills has produced. But those who say ao, if they are not merely retreating the common-places f their guide-book, can have no eve for ?': e picturesque. I grant that the in • rior is very dirty and irregular and tumble-down, that smells offend the n se, and load harsh cries the ear. But t en, it is so wonderfully strange and irious and oomplex, full of such bits of ■ • lor, such varieties of human life, such t ir reaching asaixriations from the past, that whatever an inhabitant may desire, a visitor at least would not willingly see anything improved or cleared away. The streets are crooked and narrow, •limbing up steep hills, or winding :>'oog the bays of the shore, sometimes ■ >\i with open booths, in which stolid old Turks sit cross-legged sleepily smoking, sometimes among piles of g irgeous fruit, which eveu to behold i< a feast, whrle sometimes they are heru med in by high wmdowleas walls aud cross* 1 by heavy arches, places where yon think robbers must be larking. C •nstantlnnple has absolutely nothing to show from pagan times. Though Byz mtinm was nearly as old as Rome, t e citv of Constat! tine is the true crea t on of the first Christian emperor, and possesses qpt a relic of paganism, ex c pttlie twisted serpents from Delphi d an Egyptian obelisk planted near them in the hippodrome. There are no shops in the streets of Stamhoul proper, for nearly everything, • xccpt f e taken. Hotel lodging, and indeed almost everything, is very dear : for Western books von pay half as much again as in London or in Paris. There is little sign of a police in the streets, and nothing done either to pave or clean tliem. Few are passable for carriages and the Turks leave everything to time and chance. The only scavengers are the vultures, which may sometimes be seen hovering about in the clear sky, and the dogs, of which there is a vast multi f trie in the city. Though you must bitve oitcn heard of these dogs, the tradition that obliges every one who talks abont Constantinople to mention them is too well established to be disregarded. No body owns them or feeds them, though ■ a?h dog mostly inhabits the same quar ter or street; and in fact is chased away <>r slain if lie ventures into the territory <>f his neighbors. They are ill-favored brutes, mostly of a brown or yellowish liue, and are very mach in the way a* n< walks about. At night they are a serious difficulty, for the streets are not lighted, and you not only stumble over them, but are sometimes, when you fall juto one the holes in the roadway, ■Mimbled head foremost into a nest of them. whereupon h terrible barking and snapping easnes. However, they don't molest yon unless yon first attack them; *tud as oatfiiie madness is unknown, or nearly so among them, nobody need fear hydrophobic. St. Sopliia is one of the wonders of the world. It ip the only great Christian fhureli wliieh ha l>een preserved from - cry early times; for the basilicas of St. ,T< hu Laterigi and St Mary the Greater, jit Borne, have been considerably altered. And in itself it is a prodigy of architec tural skill as weil as architectural hpantv. Jts enormous area is surmounted by"a dome so flak-pitched at so low an angle, v> c that it seems to bang in air, anu one cannot understand how it retains its co hesion. The story is that Anthemius, the architect, built it of excessively light brick* of Rhodisn clay. All round it, dividing the recesses from the great cen tral area, are rows of majestic columns, brought hither hv Justinian, who was thirty years in Imiidiug it (A. D. .\TB .V*Ni from the most famous lieatlieu shrines of the Ea-t, among others from Diana's temple at Kphesus, auk that of the Sun at Baalltee. The roof ami walls were j adorned with anperlt moaiuos, but the 1 Mohammedans, who eomhunn any re- i presentation of a living creature, le*t it shonhl tend Hi idolatry, have eovoixsl over all these tlgurcH, though 111 some plavs yon can just discern their outlines through the oat of plaster *>r whitewash. In place of them they have decorated the building wtth texts from the Koran, written in gigantic character* rouml the d*iue ione letter Altf is said to be thirty feet long), or ou enormous Isamls sn JHUHIIHI from the r*Hf, ami in four fiat Hpao>*s beh>w the dome thev have suffer ed to be painted the fviir archangels whom thev rivogtiiEo, >a'h bv six gn-sl w nigs, without face orther limlia. Oue of the must highly cultivated ami widely traveled tsndestaslies whom Rus sia |H-ess.s (tliev are. unhappily, few enough 1 told me tiiat after siH-ing nearly all the great cathedral* of Latin Enrol*" lie felt uiiou he enteml St. StU'hia that it far trans.ended them all, that now for the first time his religious luatiucta had l*een s.itt*fitHl by a luunan work. Mr. Fergiissou, 111 his " History of Archit*H"- tiir'," s.iys si'methuig U> a similar effeet, This will hanlly b" the feeling ot those wboae tost*"* have 1H-u fiirmtsl on West em, or what we eall Gothic models, with their mystery, their etunplexity, their beauty of varied detaik But St. S.>phi i"ertaiuiv gi\> s one au impression of measuiwltwa space, of dignity, of majes tic nnilv, which no >ther ehnrx'h (unless jwrhai"* the t'atliisiral of Ssvillt that iu these countries .1 slight incident may proTokc a massacre like that of Salonika. Constantinople is not only a city that belongs to the world; it is "in away it self a miniature of the world. It is uot so much a city as an immense rorSMM srrai, which belqng* to nob-xly but withiu wh<>se walls everybody encamps, drawn by business or by pleasure, but forming no permanent ties, and not calliug liimself a citiaeu. It has three distinct histories—Greek, Roman and Turkish. It is the product of a host of converging influences—iufinences some of which are still st work, making it different every year from what it was pefore. Religion, and all those customs which issue from religion, oome to it from Arabia; civilisation from Rome an.l the Weet; Ivoth are miugUxl in the dress of the people and the buildings where they live and worship. Races, manners, languages, even coins, from every part of the East and of Europe here cross oue another and interweave themselves like the many-colored threads in the gorgeous fabric of an Eastern loom. The rarest and most subtle charm of a city, as of a landscape or of a human face, is its idiosyncrasy, or (to speak somewhat fancifully) its expression, the indefinable effect it produces on yon which makes you feel it to be different from all other cities you have seen tie fore. The peculiarity of Constantinople ia that, win e no city has so marked a physical character, uouehas so strangely confusing and indeterminate a social one. It is nothing, because it is every thing at once; because it mirrors, like the waters of its Golden Horn, the man uers and faces of all tlie peoples who pass in and oat of it. Such a city is a glorious possession, and no one can re call its associations or meditate on its future, a* he gazes upon it lying spread before him in matchlms beauty, without a thrill of solemu emotion. Ami this emotion is heightened, not only by the sense of the contrast, here of all the world moat striking, between Mohamme danism and Christianity, and the recol lection of the terrible strife which en throned Islam iu the metropolis of the Eastern Church, but also by the knowl edge that that strife is still being waged, and that the shore* which lie beneath roar eye are likely to witness straggles and changes in the fntnrw nut less mo mentous than those of the past It is this, after all, that gives their especial amplitude aud grandeur to the associa tions of Constantinople. It combine* Aat interest of the fatnre which fires the traveler's imagination iu America, with that interest of the nast which tonches him in Italy. Other famous cities have played their part, and the curtain ha* dropped npon them; empire, and commerce, religion, and letters, and art, have sought new seats. Bnt the city of two continents must remain pros perous and great when. Bt. Petersburg anil Berlin mar become even an Angsberg or Toledo, and imperial Rome herself have shrank to a museum of an tiqnitie*. Ma'-millari Mar/azinr. Singular if True. A few years since, *ayn a California paper, a man from the Eastern States came to this country to engage in min ing. He went up to Tuolamne, and commenced laboring in a claim ou Wood's Creek. In a short time his hair (which was a light brown, or auburn color) commenced to fall off, and soon there WHS not a solitary hair to be dis covered on auy part of his Is sly ! He was as guiltless of hirsute covering as a marble statue. Singular to relate, tlie man's geueral health was good during the time of this peeling. But whut is more remarkable, the general physical appearance of the man began to change rapidly. He was originally long, lan*, and lean, bnt now he began to assume Faiataffian proportions. Although a large boned person, when he came to this country he only weighed 100 pounds, bnt in seven months after his arrival at the mines, his weight was tip wards of 300 pounds. All things must have an and, and ao did our hero's in crease in size come to a stop. Then it was tnat lus hair began to grow. Bat now, strange to sny, his hirsute appen dages, instead of being auburn co.or, were coal black. Instead of sandy buskers he had whiskers as black as jet, and soon. Gur readers will natur ally think the individual, after under going ail these transformations, had grown out of the recollection of his lriends. And so he had, as the sequel will show. Now, the hero of this sin gular transformation, when he left Lis home, left behind a wife whom he loved as the apple of his eye. Alter residing here about three years, he sent for her. She came full ot love and affection to meet her long absent lord. When the steamer arrived, a very large man, with very black hair aud whiskers, met her and claimed her as his wife. She re padiated him. He remonstrated and explained. She would uot bear to him, for she had heard of the wickedness of this country, and she was cautious. She endeavored for two months to find the husbaud who had left her, then gave him up for dead, and returned to her old home sorrowful and broken-hearted. The metamorphosed husbdud is still here, aud bitterly does he curse the change iu his fortunes which so altered the complexion of Ins personal uffairH tliut even his own wife cannot recognize him. At present there is not the least prospect of losing his superabundant ileali, or of his hair again changing oolor. THE I'A KIN KX POSITION. I lii l I •mmUaUnfr* rrralftrnl unit H •% Tho following in a complete list of the Fluted States commission to the Paris 01iHw.1ti1.Ni w* ap]x>inted by President on nominating by the governor* of Hhitcii : OoMIOWUt.HKM CI*HKK*I. lUchaid I'. Me ('ornilok, Wimlitngto". t> l"tn®d l>r tho Pnwidrnt mul continued tiv tho Soio IHHXSU tier I V 1*77" \ihnt. >• n. tfc, ( Oronton (MovoUiut. Joinoy ( dy, N. muiU O. MIU-holl, Now iHavrii, tVuin.. M'll limn W, St.>rv. |l>wlnu. Minn. ; Hour* ll>-**rd, lYvviildtHW. li. 1.. With win T. I'ortw, Wilmlnj tou. IH i . Thorn** It Farguaoii, lUJUmoro. Mil.. W ilium A Au.lor>u, l.o*in*tmi, Y*., (tuolin U. I'uil'lwll, Ikilmwrr. tklihi i John J woodman, Pas I'm Mloli. AuJrow J Swooin-i. VMhWill \ Smuin I l>nmt, Kimikliu Oiov®, ill . Tlioiuu f Jonkiiin, InuiCiillw, h* .Alfred lit**. fi'iH'W*. Kmi Jmuon l> l>a*u\ San Fr*tci*eo, ('*l I' M It Yoaug. At laid*. li*. Arinti.lo# tloim.l, No* OrliMn.n I.* . J.mini* 1 ChmtiU'rlrnu. Itriiu* * ink. Mo Svlvonln V\ ti , St. Loan. Mo 11..\. >; m imtw; -M i.n v jqnsii IS,; A l_ tVmUiluo, kNnbi Uu>. t'rmloi i.-t Sm. U-r Mmuiliontor, N It., Edward tViwlw*. i loirlaud, Ohio . Jmuon II Suimt. lii.limitin'lm, lihl IVtiik Millwmvl, Covin* tuu. Ki , tloulMniu I tlwllmi, Chicago. 11l JnniO M S*.ir 1. N**li*ilK\ Trim., Mil lltlll Hnl! rrm.inwsi, Otl . Soroun I". Morrill, If'loll. Win Milium A. M.swo, r.lru ton. N C I. J. tUi 1"TO, Annlin. To*** . KJ *.,! ||. Knight, IfMhuij.'luit It l' Johu A roiiuoi. Vium. Aruon* . Aimtin S *go, lk T C. H. Ihn nott, S*lt I,Ao Cit, Cuh. Willl*m c Hon : oiler, Stud for. N M MilUxiU li Slooio. Chovobiio. Wv. 1 Kltwood I ron*. OljriMM*. M t H.vexm i\t**iMi>•*•* (li imutlol l>\ Hi* Koiornurn of the V'tAfen hud *p;siutnd l>* tho I'romJout 1 Limmi Kugou* A. Smith, Jmuon Hoimt, Mota'.o. Aumwi --Alooifro K. l'.nhfo, little nock IWIU>U J llivwu. VKQ Hiuvn. C*ia>'*si*. iViiliuu c, giuiat i, s*u>i*u -ol*iH' Hwtir* ll*nh Sail PrlH iCO. tVi iiiuim. - I'.olwt 11. L*mhoru, Denver Msorw Finlior, lloi.vor. C. HH*. riot'T. Milium I' |t!*lo Nr* Haven Hour* I'. MTU to, lfutl.nl l*i XWXKE. UniiiKlii Sli'lnoil, Miliuington, Rolwrt M MtmUiU. Suiyrn*. .iKlin. litmrgo I*. Il*fl. J.*kou*lilo Johu IX llmtrulgo, Jm-knimvlllo. Onuhi.l*. John A. Spoor, I.* timngr , I'rxuil* IVuUutio, lixiHot*. John M tirrgorr, ChmupAigu OwhOru K KciUi, i'hioo. hwoi t'loui StuJolikrr. South ltoml . Krm.k C. Jolmnou. New AlUmiy low*. liuiUiUi It. Alffml Hntmr.l Hod l>*k. KAAV**.— Kugciio 1. Me*or, flutchui*ou Flood I', linker, I'o,>ok* KiMr.iv. llonnctt 11 Young. In'Oimllo lormli M*gortin H*rrodntiurj;. I*H'tHt*N*. In" * Bunh. New tirlowu* ; t'bkrlon Pwrlmige Tor it iVtipoc Mii*t IVoderi.k llobte, liorhmn Arthur K. lriukw*tor. El worth. Hisiumi.—liohorv M. M.Tjuio. lUitiuiore Thorn** M. Huokler, lUtliiuiorv Minn*. uc*rrrn. iloorgw C Kiotmrvl~.ii, BvWtoli; Alcimulrr 11 BulUvk, M . rovmtrr. Mt. in.i iv. Mxtiu llyrfwoii, tirmid ltapldn ; John J. B*gley. IVtrvut. MiHMa*>r*. —E. E. lrmke, St- I'tal A. C. iKvdge, Altn-rt I .e*. M.nMnmei-!. -K. I Whitfield, Corinth Mtx Iml*.u*e, Henmudo. Mlvtol KI, J one I'll K Stephen*, IhxiUTlUo ; Ch*Jion CbouUkU, Si. iioUin- VEKH****. J. SterUug Morton, Nelmh* Cit* , Chwrlon H. iH-wy. >m*tm N'itai.*. MTliimu S. Key®*, Kurek* , Johu W. M*ck*v, Virjtuii* Oity. Nl* lfvKi"iiiuK-r*roa* H '.!. Couevrvl . t'h*rio® K llobert*. t'ouoorvl. NEW JIIUIV. iloorgo A. H*i*®v, Newmk ; MTlUern W. Skippen, lloUAeix. Nrw Vonjh hum i rod win Now hot John T. N'ortou. \ !h*uw. NOKTB CAhouw/*. M. H Tvtrkor. !t!elgh . L. l*h|>m*n. ArStriUo. OHlO. —Henry C. Voang. Ciueinaeti : Jchn Onvainn, lTuoinn*U. Oum.* Johu Ym Itourden I'orti*i*d Hoaior S*ntnirn. lvwrtura. l*ortlmid Pkhxhtl***!* Johu H. Herje*, !'tll!del (ihik : M'lllmni I.tk'tou S,-*ifo, I'ittnhnrh. HUODE Uunu. J. Herlwrt Shenld, ITori denoe . l>KUlei J IjttletioJd. l'*wtticket. SOCTH C*K"UHi. rtloUli* (I. ('(otUeUB, I'rudlotou : M'liamu J. I-*> *!. Colum! a, Tttvosri lVlor Suuh, KUUETIHc , ttotm 9. .11 Bk*h. Metuj hl. Ttul - .Uhlol Smith, Houston: A. W. Sixught. OkiroMtoa. YEKN. ijct. -J. (irtftirt Smith. M. Att *r*i> , Luke E. I'uUnd. Bctimul. YtKiiixi*. -Johu KohoU, StKuuton . 11. I'. Archer. lUehmoud. We 3? VIK .IHI*. 11 M. Delkplmuo, Wheel- i tag ; L N. CKiupeo, I'krkemhurv. Wi*\.**i> llohert 11. Bekor. ileciue . Joweph O. Thorp. E*u Cimro. ITio Mntrimonial Lottery. A joung *tranger caiJoi! on Dr. M*C—4 one evening, whilo he wan a {utßUir in New York city, u> engage hit* nervier* in the perfortuanoe of a nuptial "I wi*h to make a bargain with Too, doctor," mud the yonug man. " I tuink the girl I am to marrv will make a flrot rate wife. If Ton will wait a y**r for yotir foe, and aire turn* out a* f tliiuk she will, I'll then give yon lifty dollar*." Thev agreed, the young o>ii|)le were married, ami the incident paaaed lroiu the doctor's mmtL At the end <>f the year, at the same time in the evemug, the young man called again. The doctor did not recognise huu at first. "l>o you not rsmember the k.rgain we ma>ie when yon matron! inc a year ago ?" " Oh yea," replied the doctor. " Well," said the young man, " she is twice a* good a* thought *he was. There'H one hundred dollar* for yon." Exactly the opposite of this is the fol lowing : A clergyman in one of the Hudson 1 river towua united a German couple in marriage. When the knot was tied, the bridegroom mud, " Dotniuie, I've got 110 moniah, but I'll send yon won leetle pig." It waa done, and the circumstance VP forgotten by the clergyman. Two years altera anl lie met the German in another town, for the first time since the marriage ceremony was performed. •• Dominie," said the German, "you remembers yon married me, and I gave you von leetle pig?" " Tea." • "Veil, if you'll uumarry me, I vill give yon two l>etle pigs. Editor* Drawr in Harji't'" Magaziw. Who Iliscoverevl America. The Norwegians glaim the discovery of America. In the year 1000 the navi gator Leif, with thirty five companions, sightel tlie island of Newfoundland, | and pushing on to the westward he f.mil l a vast country covered with vines, i to which ho gave the name of Vmeland. j This was North America, near the moutli I of the Ht. Lawrence river. A Scandina- j vian Oolony established itself on the ' banks of tin- river, and soon pushed on- ( ward to the New England const*. It is j claimed that a company even ventured j as far as the bay whereon Boston now j sits so proudly. Regular conufuunoH tion was establish'sl between Norway and the New World. The Pope ap pointed bishops in America four cen turies lvefore La Casas. , About 1350 the civil wars which rage*! among tho Scan dinavian peoples and the terrible black j pest—a aoonrge not yet forgotten in 1 Norway—seemed to have CBUHXHI an in- j terra (Mian of commnnication lietwaen tlie two continents. It was noarlv a j century and a half later before the New World was definitely discovereil. The spirit of Norwegian adventnre showed j Etiro]M>atiM the ronte to America; chanoe : lost it ; genius brought it to light , again. Hnch is their talc, Moienient* of the Stars. Tlie star known as Groombridge, though in the category of fixed stars, moves at the rate of not less than two hundred miles per second. With this speed it cannot be stopped in its career by any star which it may approach, or compelled to form 1111 orbit around a star or star group. Whence originated this enormous velocity f The combined at traction of all the stars known to astron omers would not confer it. It must have begun outside of our visible universe. The alar will pass through that universe with unchanged course. We know neither whence it came or wluther it ia going. As to the proper motions of other stars, they are so different in their direction and speed, that we must conclude that the stellar universe has neither the sta bility nor the regularity of onr solar system. Bat these and other considera tions—in iaet, all modern scientific dis coveries and research—point to the con clusion that our universe h i< I a beginning and will come to an end. IVI of lh I'lMMitHrrnpli. For public u*bk wc lmQ hive tfhpffl#s win'it l ph! wingers will tlh> kepi (or * tliouHu>l yw*. In* til#""' galleries R|Hiki prtwcrvtvd from wnliirj to eotiluiy. with nil then (wnli antic* of pronunciation, dialect, <>r brogue. An wi> go HOW to see tlir ultllc , optioon, wo nlinll go to puMin hulls to. hour llieec tronnuroH of spinvli nn>l snug hrou It lit out nulvtrotr|Hsl oy luiuctw thence obtained , w ill be put into tlto hand-vugvuis >f tho t street*. and wo nlinll hour tlio to-to*l voice of Christine Nllnnon or Mum Cor) ground out nt every oornor. In publto exhibitions, slao, wo nlinll hnvo reproductions of tho m'liiuln.of nature, mnl of uoiros fnuiUutt ami unfa-, miliar. Nothing wilt \n< OHM fir ijutn to catch tho noutiiln of tho wnvon on tho ' Peach, tho roar of Ntnpwm, lire therrwvh" 1 of tho streets, tho noinon of siiiluuls, the putting nuii ruh of tho iiulroml train, tho rolhna o| thniul#". t>r gvcii tho tu mult of n imttlo, Whou popular airn aro snug into tin phonograph, aud Uio uoUyv aro thou . produces! in ii-mrif toier, von . tuit'iu, ami Ivcautiful musical effects tiro aotua Union produced, having no apparent re noiiiblntiiv t<> tlnmo contained m tin ir originals- Tlio instrument uiuv than l qwnl an it sort of UIUSbWi hull uk*op. , by nicfcn* of whioh mi infinite variety of now oombtnatioua may bo pnaJuoed from tho tutuucal ivoni|vositioUH nyu in : run.piiakug will, i* ■ t Ix-u puffnves, clocks. Complaint iKJiin ill publto oonvoyalioon ami .tpyn viiWnl with a mka r tulm having novoral tuontiipiooon; ami Mmlanio 'FuimjniJ'a tlguro.i will hor.-aftor talk, an woll an look, liko thoir groat prototype* ! I Ai n/nirf, Wonl of W Imlurtl. Frtouii.n aro won by tliunc who Ixjliovo iu winning. Ho but wat m iim aoup who tako* many wonla to t<-ll a aia >rt aUiry. Homo fxHiple aro liko oggn, Um full of tliomaolve* to h"lil anything olk-. Many jwsijilo tint! llmiroio happtboai in forcing thouumlvoM to bo unhappy. Ho wliohaa u < 1a..t0 for orvlor will Ixi often wrung iu jmlguu ut ami aolJian wmaiilorato or oonacroutioaa in bu u - tIOUH. Wlimi wort arc ttfrm* wwtrh wnr thought* ; when in tho family ctrelo 1 watch your tomix laU\ an.l mav avoid* I bv a habit like that XIml to wluclk he uticrihe 1 kut n ji M hi hfi\ of being ten hitnutoa t*i early. Manuera aro tho shadows of virtues ; { the tnomomtary display of tho*e iptali- ■ Ue* which oar tiii'W-oreaturi>* love and respect. If we rtriva to IxncMme, then, what we atrive to appear, mauuern may often h* rwtnl—ml n*fn guides t> tlio iif our iI j^.o*. The moat of all companions is a simple, frank man, without any Jhigfi pretethuons |fi an oppieaaive great- Ones ; one who luVes life and under- nd the u* of ft ; obliging alike at all hour*; aliAve tll.tif tvpi'ldoii teni]x>r, and stead fast as iik lOtohor. For such a one w>- glasllk iifliange the greatest genius, the 1 rw"-' htiffiai.'. wit, tlio profoundest thinker. \ A ('Brians Fentarpnf Toughened nta--. In theßoiuudn. Vrigeigor Hieard, ig Trehewwo tells the followii isle : •• A j child's drinking glass tra Umght one day at teg. Cor tbottt aw nty krnnscr, and hw tv m-Xiiii- it tnsUsn 1 d* char acter df ugbn-akaliTe glass, ffut abont nine O'cloek <•* ove iinr. In the suttr' month, it Was nwxi in ilrmMUyT'Biu tucrr and Was thfn placeil ; With a ißlve¥sjs*'U .in it, rjx'ti a large tdken table. Sudden ly I huard fmia toy room a violent of-, plosion like a pistol shot and a metallic J soutnl. I ran in ami aaw tho w hole thaw strewn with m—llea aud splinter* of glass, K**ttenxl thinly ami widely—wtxi 1 I not only upon the flixir, but the bed, the : table, tho waahstauil, the cartwi and the ; clotho* hung np were fcimmiwini thea." I shreda 1 lotduxl pfwywhrw tor the I cause of this explosion, and a| laet re -1 marked that the child> drinking euh' was gone. Tlio ompty glass lnui expUal- ( i ed—withont apparent cause, withont Ihe appruadi of a light, aud having' a I i spixm in it—with puch extraordinary I force tlirt the Whele househoh! ww' ' fnghUmcd. I rclAk- Una story, the;*- j 'fore, not only for the information of I ciiemiste aud natural philosopher*, hut | also of those families who believe that | in (his so-mlled unbreakable glass they Ismhom remarkable ami n annullable pi i\) i ihing* or useful household grxxS, t-. ■ sl.ow them that when such anexplnsw.u | I occur* it mav cause not only fright hut . mischief." Uie foregning tb- —litot I of the Polyfo ftnk/iin ikliia, thst attch explosion* of touglieneil glaa*. often without any ap|mrent cnuse. have i been pretty frequept of late, atjal jtob# on the j j * //J (wustanUaepte hia uUly. A travnli* thßDugh the Hn-d seuds a ' letter to the New \"ork Tribune , from which the following is Condensed f ,the I I parpow* of showing. f |e wrpj snfl peftt I teal condition of Constantinople, a* it i appear* Pi a non professional. The wtar ' naturally workixl a ami chuogn iu the J lives of poorer chu*e. With the depre | ciatiou of paper money came a dispro portiounte Oilv.vjCe jn the prior of bread . stuff", atnl onneeqnont fuireriitg among | the people. One instance in cited a* hnv , ing oome under the writer's nbeerrntiimi j i A young girl who wn* able to earn five piastre* r. day, with which to aupport ; her mother, tw<> Rinter* and herself, i stood before a baker's shop with her i veil falleu to the ground and her eyes flashing with anger, while lier whole at titude bc'okeuixi grave alarm, tyjis km li, grmlually neon vie pries of krsudiui-1 ' creaw while her own wagea retnainnl | unchanged, until nt last she hail lxx-n told her money wa no 1 >im?c| jnifflcicnt b> keep hr f.uuily fnun settiSl starvation. The pietnre of that jaxir sufferer wa* one | typical of the invaded and dootued re gion. The parent government iV no longer able, if it in disposed, to help it* i children, and the trnifeamen are rude ' and grasping in their demands. The 1 condition of that seetion of the world is deplorable, but it is such a* inevitably follows an unsuccessful struggle at arms. What is Lire! The mero lapse of years is not lifw. To eat and drink and alcep—to he ex posed to the darkness and to light—to pace round in the mid of habit and turn thought into an *f —this is not life. Irt Sll fnis Dtft n pisir ; fraction of the consciousness of human ity is awakened, and the saitctitaes still [ alumlrer which it worth while to . lie. Kuowledge, truth, love, beatitv, ' goodneaa, faith, alotH> i*ati give vitaliVy to the mechanism of ntttewß. The laugh of mirtli that vihrutea through the heart—the tears that freshen the dry wash's within, the music that brings childhood hack— Ute prayer that calls the future near—the (fount that makes ns meditate —the death that startles us with mystery —the hardship that forces us to struggle— the anxiety Unit suds in trukU sre i our natural*being. SUMMARY OP NEWS. eastern and Middle Stater i lletore menmJ'i > of Unai'seuaiUfM l g>i ■ flhsr.ut. si>|h|ii!e)iu ivh( iMltisnt riit. Ii A. Ainhioli, ifr tTttt.rtfgri, nhe an *t till- lii>ii*t of Us P>amixu I'Si'lH L st Uie time t>f the strlks, t*tl!lnl that the hfl ..us ulteiiHt tlin slukors srm> in ilt ltu> tm. |ifinninriil auehtw lisftllg tIRSrM s litit"tr*4 "tsx.l o( mm San* ; | oI Itm > .'ilirm* Xrnt l* mi* hiaa st AllerflMniV, XSd . hint ttist t>* tn.(i*i| Uin in*ii wtiultl aUad ; hs Us'ti iiglihi. ..isl pneuwa Una *roi* awt i ■ui^cjr. I'tm >(- mi idiimnt of th Huitanu rival i-trtuiri Mssrlits I i|Siklihl two tails* twin* . , Hll>S Hlii|j. N Y , Silt Ixn |*s nam 11**!* wrio ' Villfit nulllslll two worn (Xtnllv sMIitTHI Muf I imml nihi l - nmlini wilftlW liijutlss M'srrrli IsiW, U>kl.i-v|" i of th* I'lsnrt ' Mill* llsimfsrfarin* ( niu|isiiy, ItreyXlyii, ' N , lotuitUtis finiu tho euiuiHUiv's l.snk In ! No* ini X wln ir ho lis.t iliswn ♦t.O— wllb whta htn |v nit tho emptiiyeM. I(t *• so . I'lausutotl by so sasl-t*llt, *ho oVt'-'ff ♦fQ" | Wsl'o Whou iu so Uti(ro.|uootait !.-*Tit) , lint war* *|>]SiHU'hoit liy thioo uiou, .litWWsl : s- Islntiris, who >Uititoulv sltsokoit tho HB* I Lii 4 iy inl'4 tlea I't IU Ue uioott IU 1 IwiuMin*' Ih r.'fr tliey (vnilif slii tnolr fert ! Iho lhloi. w.ro r silling .• IT ui s wsbmH tyst i l ass wslUiifi ui nt s • ■nit. itesSU sis I i ins-). K'""t Itiolr —|ie. Ih " Tst'i!) Ultra l4Ul.tiii||k Wim*'illSßniyt ni It* lire In hooneiillr, N Y , oaasliu; s lna ; *stin* yea.noo. s,t* * wtint* hi.—, w I*l K" I a-iiior- liullsra in l'hilsilrl|.hls its* I'lii Ui.t, tlie rtfr lelliji Mir al tho lu*t>st thst h*a nor iinto,! tho city slut csusiu# sn oU- j aauot I.*** of over #t udo,ooo. I Oinptmlhe iiinl KoilJ, of N* YuX Oil l.s- Wilt ten S lotto! t, Ihr stt.il in i ueliorsl nf thr htsto 111 fsvi iuf tlio r*Jn*i VVillimii M. j Ti.oe! fr—u farther eoudhniibin rimipsrnhli I Koiljr -si -ui hi- loiter 'As s'pulihv ufUgw 1 . ur*o U>b tk>rhsrKo, O-s'i-t f Mini, til- f fiiltkol ileti-uUnli lu s .tohtnrii'{.risnu Is liolthox j I ■ ingirisJ to tho Msl* as sn oismyt* U yijf j dw r*. onr in auy -ni-o sorTliiMY.il> to flieritv. ' MisOwlilir, llm! Lss nfUM*t to testify 1 liirtkectn tot-sir to " rtng " rrsiMs inttl to* fwf ' rolispwd. Tt|o Uias-s* lUul4oik -a ti, -U'U insj h'V i a'ruriM* U ihoisl -inx*. Ni fUt'oai , SjUiiWt tulsllv iti ali.-voit toy lire. Slut aoyootooiti ' TJUX-lDeas films Sllffrrnt li'aara rVHtktMKk si. ' i - Ismkwnud, l|-i".Va At 'n.'. tloatnil' bonk I nil. , ihi.i-is, hso sa-i.ia*4 .oh Bs'dtkir* ..r i ekhijooo. Juflso lUsU-lifi.ii], of Now York, list Icn ilrn-4 s', vi i lea SS IVi n-ti vmi lti J.Ttk" 'lift! AiTT.tr t'.u I'niti 1 "tstoa for' tin i. i. M.orat n' umriae eu- Yia oi-.il .- mstitiilnj ilurli.o' tbi olo-ti..u ,-sn.,eisii in Is. il-* * itivx wt Us iifxyw-n j Will 0* Iu t III,* iho I'Aae Ir fill a jilfy Oil Tin 1 .iiioati u of iho si.i..am of Mi i* ] dunok II" .loi.u ,ri, fr. Iwl-i Jb I*7l, duf- 1 Ui* wtilill ho In Site U|i Ito tvl .1111 l.ii#c!f, I*l sli"W*-! Uio iwrnw U> ll.sk. ll|. 11.0 tolutu j slut I will tho lai thrrroii auhjoi't to a ptuslfy uf !li 1 oout. 11.* mvU rcjwirt ut Ai tllu. >uio i .nV-iiilriit It. iiry t. faiftk iII the (vmtoiot! 7he ks'iiAc ' h.ks iu tho Htsto of N** f >r* wbi.tts find 1 mile oiuiji W"W #W"i duiasLC j il-* lsut; bjkeL mß♦ X>a Cii'4 ,;l f < ll 'i"\ t- ;i. (Imil. f)fo*Hii n.t V Aifflr or No# ' Yiv*-H mi f iM*st* eatnti. etif I His l:lias o* o.n T**r wsn sss.) Ito i thoir rtiiuuko U-su ):• Aliav i* ol years ; taoio j *unw Sriyw.<4 titan ••rsaliwnt B.r i St Of *£o ui ISah iUjsMll tkoiuUMil. A>-4 lbs WW' | |>l 1 . f tho lii-liuuivu* ha* ahlaus. 'hho tatod i tor- Ul*4 V? tho 1 silks, Is'W 111 01-olalwa.. s** , oil Jsutlsrt I. 147 V, tMS.TNo.XSC lultji itshdi. I tioa, a.* • rpkuof ' _ evev Piv.-a Usi-w fscH tii* til At riT thefts JOhr t*Wl%a.trr!i with little anoounl* Its liablli i Ue# sxo 4l,S.*,ai 77. siul the itaftoaurr is OS Umstoif st i aro loss tnausi-oiuoul. i sin Ulltltig sllßuat to ludllfrtrlicc if ' s£siu*t its uflk . ra ti i lio Utsl of 1 uaursuocHuj-eriutMi.loiit Huiilh, j hy the (biislo . v * vote of 19 tn li. Thr Vsiulrrlitlt inutMUsl wtll case tlrsfw. ak'tig ift Uir Nets Y urk -umtgstJ 'a tmurh Much nf th* mridolKV off. rod to -hi.'* that tky C"lu mod ro wSn -Us m.s.jl.d ft f tlligfify iufiu- ' oucoil in making tea wi.l is Tho Pt imsylrsuiS IteywdfifHsn Nlar* odhyon- Uon wig tx- bold | Western end Southern Statee. llum*tf ■ t ati liuUau oni.fssl.isl.ol* UI U) i Ni.ttl.wvwf fisnV t*v>. A.jiflrmjxl. Hsaa# **o, ro|.r'.od tn hsf* foft-lfl WtorersVtfil'liaajiS ("'brr ruit** slut N"UX in ,N rtl.iru Muutaua .*o U..* r^s2wtJ.E7r3a® thst th* Y'liffak. >W shall I* roi. alod. and thai Indiana -had to XO>4-d to sotu* thoir tl aiitov ' atunu* ihomiolyos wlth-.QI iiitiTforo-iox frnUi , tho m.siiilrd is he t# U*i t siisijtha gurafw mssit Mrs. tirorj;* Wsfy*. Ml Mis# I'hon-h. s w BsMijM. mtfr rrftit JorSd imar )\YIm* ding, W. hy Uir f .rmrr a I n-tkriiu |*w, J. lia Maßac* Aflit tho tuuefor ho so (fi|atd lu* hn,.thxr id tho rrtino and t>lh any sißivtid. Tvactoelsy J..Uii i>uifoasrl u> having kith") th'- thros Si our, s!lo£i:m as s uaiUis li st Mr*. W*!!*-. Sis) tor l.t.As 41 sd t-w*. t uiftilA- ats'Qt lAto and liH wffr Trk' la.f- M:ss I'hurrh wa# that h* *** *f;*a! , all# w 41*1 v.sd .Alt vttlt' 8* b*tl done. l[u -tart- d wiili Mr- a stisra- stid fin phfld fiir th* , !.#ti#o i# Ylim irhnrka, *s4 on th* frsv XQlfd tgolii wtlh s i.eaiii**. Tto*:i ti* JvocJlflod tc" plftisa ftinrrh's and o> Wl|)*tn! hi* tiWnMo wik ' After Iho oinfoa-i.ui sA*Jiof :!> o:g.y.Vl th*o jail. iiaaru*Wvf*# Ui" (iawd.l4a*to a*to*> tho ie -itr suit hnn£ hi at t a i.a aft** idrs* . t "- him i.ostly a w-i*. mh* beT# f ~- < Two Onlivod mo is I'adiwiti Hnsbeitß lX.lt or McA'rosry *r hSUKed sx ktarnwoU QfeMl' iii*i"e. H, C (* '- lh* murder ot hln)))ia Koicks ***!(% aiel lwi><4 uitov l nto ealn. 1.-1 i Vtoo astwdor wa* oommittosi last January, and the murderer* art fin- u U>* <*ak*a iahststo-1 i toy ttoc.r victims, liitrixihiK tn burn up all vo* tifr* uf the civbo, lnv%BM4tiaa tpJ ii> Iff | I itbM*rv t liwtynarrfir had twrii onfntniifo-l and fnrthor imiinrv rrauUlnl m lh- arro*!, Inal. ' I amivii e nili"u4Ntfl"ti yf (he akv.vt uataeh , MrA resr jeBT-eM*! t*k uk pattf th tin. t dotal at bl.si b * utoitt* Vhig ' 77 i Jurl in viooa't.. hflfcofUlmftf *iv, *i*,t£e ' frtV* ftetiarr psaiaffTbit! ftofunii£ cXpTtkl J tlh ishluoy' 111 bio State, and thr lull is now • law. A nturning onr-cent iu the mkrn ayi u# - Uie NaUoftsi perty tiak tawfti kSjj.hicag^. K.\ -Atturticv-Aeurrai Al. u* daft raauuaa-1 e*UU*l fhr Hl-lgr of lb* dUlitiHoi cuurtjby a l;.; ,il.lK*fn ftnnvrttUun lj nndapaU . ~| Miohar! M'hoUikc, msu, wa- kiued sod Mural IstmraTa Wire wt>ui*]|-4 liy an explosion i ~f dvoannto kf Vntitrbrlln. Sfd. t From WaxtUMten. Tticr* are. It is said, 107." discharged soldier who will receive the nropu*ed |teiisn>n of fTJ . s limn Ii on mvonnt of thoir lims in the service rnf Hon. John Allison, register nf th* trea-ury, j i* dead. ruastnai tihueut nJ f W t I'sratna tu to* fluted Stafes'AttnniWi'i Alstogvn* hsJ tieen rejected by the Senate in execuUre nesslon after a ia>nt*slef over two hours. The nontl i axia 1 tnra v! lrgan, Illain* and Kir-wood Tliere waa a maJ.Tiif nf aiv ■ j Ttoo *w#i t bekvik* diviaSna of th Tr.aetrr ' Oepsrtaioiit ha* M-veral >|Nicimntia of onunter- - (eit half dollar* and new silver dollars. They *r ciisH- iniitationa of ttoa gflitftiie 7%* ,' .nunlerfoit weighs lesa tliaf B nnuaiaiai'. lis Tho Boqse I Hint offloe commit too has prac tically figreed to strike out of Mr. Wsddell s i hill, prnriding for the i-lassillcsUou of mail matter, the clause which prohil.it* express ."•in; ante* carrying mail matter of the first and second cl*. Hon. fiienni W. Sehofleld. of I'enn-ylvsnis. has iswti nominated to lie Register of the Ties ! *nry lu place of Mr. Taylor, di-ceased. Tlie n nomination of Mr. Ibinu f'r marshal , i"# b.AnSrto k jf IwSit ft*J it Seiato I )n*l ii iviiUrTfrol 11 >#. msL- l>(f|g>*ing m#j oontlrmstion. Foreign Mows. A 1/Olidnn dispatch state- Uist Uilßbrilijli, naval training vessarl Enrydic. ,N*|lsW(' dm -l i on tsiard rapsizeil on the sonlhei.a*t of the ' Isle uf Wight in a sudden squall. Iletweeii 300 ) J and 40(1 lives are IT|>ortod lost. A six ilsys' internstinnal |>destrisn contest iu fsuidoii teriuuiated In a vii tory for the only American representative, Daniel < I'l.eary, who 1 : made 520 miles aud 410 yards in five days, o'lietimti hours, tlie tournament closing sooner than the time lived on account uf thw great crowd present. The originator of the contest was Hir John Astley. a inetnlwr of Parliament, who guaranteed prices amounting to 43.750. Two tracks were lsld one fur Kngiisliroeu sud tlie other for foreigner* and Weston, the American pedestrian wa* rviwcteil to compete, hut became sick a few d*T* liefore the contest ! hegsu. Hi vented) ivinte-tants slartosl, hut the I race grsdualiv narrowi d down to O'Daary. Vauglian aud Prowji. Uic llljl luiuiej bnug shout twenty miles ato' iyk of llgiAAiiA Jl Bi tlnish and beating the hoc iiSXe 4ti Vat-iSik ' Reside* the rhampion tielt, whirli is valued at I 4500, O'ls ary receiveil a money pice of 4'J.- I 1 (Jnaaies-w erewd# vWt> d flsnaiene ~f eon- I > fesl, and lhu .winner wgs puttouMSattyfUv i oiieural ktoiheVMsc, die band* piajirrg Anien- ' cxn national airs. 1 Advices from Europe indicate that the pro-T posed tMiace congress will t>e atisndoneH, j Knglaiid refusing to |)artici]iale. The Emperor of Morooco is dead. | Tlio Tnited Htales sliip Hupplj. wiMt c.g-U | for tho Paris Exjirsiti n, has arrivedst,liavro, i tioorgo Kaiiui-ter, grain merchanl of Ret ford. England, has failed for 4I,6WVHK>. i|)o no!, una lb Bio ussto* nuii ut n klfjht by teiWig IteAfWiJp ifyrifttef room ifn the top. -i : -ft t 77TT f "7l ST ' r**twiw(t enuMdertovon of th* lajl msiung ai.nropriakiim for d*t*etlug ' rivsdjk* (Ml (Si Ms' lafnt* an! for bringing Into , iitsikt t pnUie lamia tu certain Hlatca, and for : tittoer tairrnaea, liiv pending (luaaiina I "dug on I(a aaael'lhwaail *if M. Iknch lu (hat of U.e • i-iiuiiiit4 on *4>|i| 1 .|m4SUoimi, protoltotting lha j , (iw of laoney to .Uii't any eitaigu for w.*J or , , ll|glt cit on U<* puUli' iauil* lu Urn Tervibif' J, lew of the I'liUmt Htafes for the Us* of adtual , ■wtUui* tu Um Tvrriloriea, wd not for exmut. , as y tv pruviale that the Uuitor shall hot tie ( oif|Mvrted from the Territory where it grew aud ] Igoyplcsl (orthei. tjyt in Ulc event It *h*ll be ■A|4Strd (iota the Territory It *ll*ll I* liable j jto Siscuie hy the I'nlteil Htates autltiirlliee I w hererer found. Kis-rrlsry Hchurx waa de- < leaiored by llr Hixau'-rr. of Alahama, and hy Mi. Jones, of Eloflds, for ordering th* #el*urw • .if tihttier. and was defended by Mr. Matthews, , li.fDtdy Adjourned witlu'Ut setliai. ! fllni hill sßUini isng lbs employment of tern ! PVUWI.yWk* In tlie treasury ite|iartiueat, and j 'ilJt°Yuurni for Uie punishiiißUt of Units* laud 1 • lyvsps-soSw ass taken up and after Imig dl# ! US-ion. w* passed. The Henste wavnt into ex- i •st'to at--#.n u< Up u aitjt u Bk*k The 4 ) rwMitest iu tiie Henste, witii Biuelid ' ttoehf* : Mr Wallsoo sohiulttsad su snien.l mriit tu tin- tall tc repeal the resumption sol, . making Kieotiideks legal ten.lkt for sill det-ta, public and private, and providing theeichange . if at |wr **ut< lyMnty. to> id hy hsukuig sswwia tiygi .hairing to incn-aae Us*ir circulation for fetpii-Un.ltoi liotos at par, and the caj.is l lstlon Inf el> h t eiai- >• part of the -inking fund .. j Mr 11.. we, of Wisconsin, called up the resolil tU ii ftoigtil.g to |h 4i fsl-vsto"* of to*lg MJ.lt IVer, of is.ui#)ana. and made a Sferrh ar itMg'Upg the policy of the Administration j lli sgtokr #6l i.rdk bctirliu fXillclsm uf Praal dent Hayes' j-.lli'y of csinclllstiou toward the I ieffttb ateithn WVU watpr uipßice of tiie Ad ! luuiisfratioli, chirgi-d th *ii UM |..-liti*ai oaaaer <# Mi, tirhora, [ sttacklug that oflirer. Afte* su eiecullve eee -4 klou ktoat Heaale adjonnwek ~ i Mr. tUsii moved to refer the oorreepoodence 1 i recently submitted relating to the third eoui ■ iwj--. n*r .• Mie OaaattosA >4ofp*, |u the *Hf the swaid and argued thai the decision was illegal, the commission nut lwlng lillAUl uSSv. .JBofigrikt • llun** Jeint resolution rvtending tlie time foi paving the t*t49 l I4JAt wilv |mws#(l WKJi*l amend UKiUt XI.C bin for the repeal of the tisuk | nipt law was reported t-ack from the Judiciary -sniast v- * nil plsomt *u U>< ' ".isaalsr . .'Uie Pxcifl# rknrosd sn.trtny fvHvd bfto ww dt*eeti 5n.44 4 *e*le r • i *>" qu*t*islsr **id diplomatic ppn.|(lkn.yi MliVas stlirvnel toi go over j Kkwnpsw -wswi a and Wieitdiouruiiiett. j A'tsfi vr so (iiirod.iHi'd !• Mi. Conk ling rif' imm-'Ui xyt-i iAiy Ls the iiuprovemeut of ' Hsi Itom i Iwr ' Tire PIN to pay John Ray and - WilDsiu I, MvjMto a . 41,outi each a* contest ant • for Mr Kellogg W seat from lx.uisisn* was ' lt*4d .. 7T-* Pscinc railroad sinking fund , hill was further dl*<-u>"o.l Ihr consular and | dlpkxnafl* wpt.ruprlail wis Uii wa# kaAaa'Up. all A III" aCia"i*l*>st<4BMi and y-Ml-roads aiidar ■ hre ! jjrutod Tim uavfl guKvpriaUou hill j f nPjvke*. Ad jMirrwd. Mr. tot- ] kens, ef Ueurgsa. tktumm- ui the j ' ("wwaith e on oo**ae, rcj-vied a blii u axneud 1 ttto-faws mi Uie subject of c-'lnage, to jwrfeet I the -double tnclslttc standard. * pecytde fur t 4 U-wlug gold and stiver buljlujj ccrUitcatos, and !to red.'. cwTUin silver Coltif Qi'W lu us*. Or- . dn<"( printed and r eoom mi tied R prtirvdew : ttasl '.lie cvMAsfe of goM-and stover tonlhou shall , tw on as equal footing pwohiWt* the frrrthwr C.'mage of twesrtor cent fly*, eefil and liwee cent piss, i. wishes Mi* fractional sttonw coins < legal lander to tho aux rut of twsi.tr owH*r i sulhiW-oo* tta lodarapi.aai al the treasury tu #Ui44 uf etuu w (wet. sad (W is for toe furthr: .x.inSge -to trs.te d hiwu. ss-loatv*). foC-furotgli • Uedr hmiUhg Uioameanl to47Mi *> V.. A Uii was poescd jwdsloung th* widu* , and minor chlidresi of A 4C 4*ulhri*. and (he I surf men why wt*rr d'***■#! . (if MrUwaoh* , disaster. IdMMIM RiU* were taffodaced dedanog M fnspetlt*(il t to change Um tar A U> lasist ilitt 4 ifl.ce bonds. I to rergsouw Ut* army, aad oU.< r ialw .... Mr. ( . Hpritigcr s te.Aisj to stag wad th* rule* and .ryite liU au|U#t-'*n free r linage of sllvae i h#adkd.ist, it.A rwcrlvtug two-thirds of the voUWI Yfr Orwrte . f Virginia, movod to suspend the rtdew and Mtt tie Ml tOBWStBig- ff Ma* I year# the . (w-fstl 'ti cf (nc Wtikfllg Fitn tft, which rwqutry-sUj* annual |y ni*w.,* parch*". , i of one par-coiit. of the debt uf the Uuil**l ; Htatc-a ,iiig|iiigJ Jewry IJB. pay*. UX. not , two-ituds i v the aflimauve. JußpuniM. Iho Jcgbtrdivr, vtAoilffvc and Judieud p --| i*upri*tlsw hlfl was jtjiortHd .. A Ml fas ' 4 iis-scd xftthi iDtr-g a t"imw|slonf nfl the en- ' of the TPsrarv of Oai%t*toV.T%l MAfffWfll MAs mpeftoi Trvdu (ttos- (wsmndft.vf <> • - way# and BMHf ' Mr. XVd wp't64 a rewfs- 4 In ji mi t* make Ml* hill a -fweial ordAr. add *-( i. was adoptod br 137 to 114 . The ■ *^iSSSflhxsaE to. VMnPMV WWmQBI *• 1 ! Adjournal. ,11 HI lif if I > Mr. Davis, of North rtorulum. Mtooduccd s : bt : n> .xagsr-wt* Uie viaasof K eUi two ja I for the as* aad awn: otoHt af . rtwiu landings I . and gr.aatd- by tiw Uukd Hkatr s troops Ito t ferred.,..TUa hill pruvkbog mwaeunw Upew vent UwaaiMteksHen 4f simtwgwee dumewer j from lufsigis.purt* was peeeaif,..Tho coto , tewted ef Dcaiw sgsSUst >A*si, of , M*-ahueclld. was discussed. (IcnrraJ Rut mg Kidtdh tft*i#l?aJf toityfvvff t' l * l , stood I">4 IXO ktw ifv Olira the (Speaker I • **d us Uv* .anehte jgetl *hi(*g4 Mr, kd. , rt N t| ut I A Kttomrln 5fW. Iu tiio conrse of trial of tlie Nt hiiistr. at bh I'etvnJ.urg. *u vtin>tAnf { iry scene rcceufly uecttnal i Ute oo(irt. One of the imat promiueut among till* ! acvuse.l, a man tißßMwl Mraehkin, com . phuitoi ih hJk Jk fktiiß' al ri < uiit at the giune tuw* > : two other priwvmWw mriiM tn thw riff of the latter, and a hand-to-hand fight en-' , blUxl, ui vkuck kltu ufflotor liad hi (roiilatrto . 1 agnioet tlie three, aud at the same time to endeavor to prevent Miachkin from ffntitfl hi inuiler xef tA riul in strong terms against the court and the judge*. drngge.l ont of the chamber. A terrible tumult ensaed in iiepoartk Many vu-. tmjik sAam )l tham iwiA# thai prisoners, f(fint<"l or went into hysterics, , and Iqud cries cursing the tribunal were bcgrrl. AJI s-fTArts to reskoro order wcrv frnitleas, and tho public restated the at teuipts made by the officials to make • 4 hafn l.(toh( i t \'Dlo deflniUuiis. officials. " Sjvyxut-frfore them ; and the president himself fvWHo rnMy cxgftMd tlmk he left with- M defiiiriui thffi Aaifli)g was closed. It is further stated tliat the Rusaian journals hsve " privately" Iveen en ioittod to moke jiof NWftrk on this ex i thwMhiary - tyurSßtocw.a- lx>n
  • n Telr- j graph. A-troloir^. Aatr> V>gy wge'! vf Uirt uUeet'lnd miwt favorite method* of divination, and vfeatpntatnwl wry generally io the middle age* and to toof extent until recent timflie iirigloallv the oofcmoe meant dimply *j the knowledge of; 1 lie atar*," and id to Sidroiiomr what AlcWny id • ehomintTV or legend to ldotofy. It noon,, bovovor. undertook to predict future evontd and, MMCUIIf, the for tunM of 'merr'ffouv the poMfion of the oelcdtinl lodiea. It Tpre vailed among; t) Kgyr *•■• leans, < iiiH'w, ui.l U\* **at*i ntio"d from the very eomniyioeraent of WW** pmledUnnrlftn a.HSfrined of Mohnmtne dafW*tn fteavoA rathYMCatftleaHy mltlvai*e,l I by the Areb# and the other follower* of the " prophet" between th<> ncventh and thirteenth oentnrioa. For many >n-1 turioe Wie-mhet 'learned tneir oontiiined i to atixVv ill id delofv* aoienOe, tint at length the Onqx ruiaan ysten> revealed it* taUury.. iWevtm to-day the ij*or nut of idl ooujitrica beJicw) iu astrologi calpreiuAione, iia may le aeon from the numlter of audi prophecied whieh appear in the almanacs, while in the Eaat and among Mohammedan nationa they Btill exercise fall away. The (Ihineae play a game called tan, in whieli small buttons are thrown from a bos, liko duve, and the plavera guess wltatluv tlie uiimlx>r is odd or even. Wong Ah I>ec was csiiglit, in Han Fran cisco, using a box that nod a slot to hold n butt, si," with a spring so arranged as to drop or rutsiß tt at will. His companions cnt off ins one. The American export tiwle is assum ing larger proportions with each suo 'ctgNltng month, and it destined to set nor fluancial matters all riglit in spite of .lle fkMigreasiunal wranglers. Among the piano export* tn Kampe aud the 8.1(1 tli Aiutwiuau HUles Uie popit lor firm of Ht(" k A 110., of New Turk, fig ures largely, tteosiMM their uistruuimiU liave gained the reputsUun rt-ri*rt a nniveraal refued*. adatded to the iciiusr ahineuU of a large rja** of people, re -lilhr tn .fifferetd latitude*, and subject to . anm Himalb- tnflurno*# 7 to answer fo the tirst profweltion. we would esy. kare. arw named and known by .vrtaUi " slfu*" or •vßip t um, and. X# Uie mother dose at need s I'hydrtau lu teU tier that her chrid hae the win* <| -tag ruug U, or lieticare a rxwualy. an peu ' I>le when stlfcetad with many uf the symptoms . ..po mlUiit to "ÜBllßre blood, '' " iufrid ltrsr," aud " luwl digeattuu, rwjulrw nu other knuwledae of M-elf touditiun. ot the launtr i udmatnJ, than Ulfr ahaiedy |ru!-.stl>'a -M* i< phyatclan* argue that do* oaar# are Mcliuuilijf peon liar, and. that treat ment must (hrrefor* vary, aud yet qutnine, trnvphlnr. podopbjrllm, ao-l bondreds uf other remedies arc Jv*cijld in all countries to orsr , ..me certain condJUon*. I* it not. therefore, #r If-evident that a ptysirtan whose larg* x --("-rtence has made hi Hi familiar With the many >.ha*m inrtdenl to all Uupuntte* ui the blood, J corral and uervoo* dobUlty. Uver complaint, v-pcj-ia, c arc a *af* aAd certain cure few UwyiJ liver and . oustlpati m. U you wiah to aave money by avoiding doctor* and keep or regain your healOi.toiy The Pwupk * OominptJ Bena* Medical ' Adviser, au UliMlraUd work of over * page*. It our.tain* inrtrnctiuu enwenflng anatomy, phyrtologv. hvgleuF. and the treatment of dis ' caea Over one hundred tl.omrand eorOe* al ready .Id. Price rjHrt jHUdj.4I.M- Address th* author, K. V. Pilew, M D.. Buffalo, Jf. T I •'•■r>l for lb* treble. Debility, whether it he inherent, or caused try overtaied sirwngth. or protracted lUnea* 1 has a most (topresatng mflaetHw upon the ! mtbd. breeding an abjeol inrlancboiy nearly akin to drsjoir. and enforcing the abandou tneut of fhcrialitsl proJorU and high hope*. Happily, the enfeebled systom, even in ex lenwit case*. sueorptlble of inrtgoratMiti. It lA# I roved tor Incontrovertible cvideac* thai Hmilettt-r'a Stomach h.ttors 1* an unfalllag ktiwagthener of th* weak, and thai, in addition K, vtla'ixuig the physloal orgamraUou, tt oatabhahe* regolarilv among those organ* up on wboec efhcirnt discharge "i the duUea un ' ;-wed on Uictu bv nature, ooctinned vigor and health dejvend. IVui-xrvd* of Itatanmw might W ("tod tc show the regenerating mfluaoo* of ~Ihi toe'lk iitrmg a*en W caee* of debility, i .lam dtarto*. ailment*, ocn , du*"'"' Bikrruutieni fever, tmuary and ub r lix, tree him. gout and rheumabam. and other i maladie*. CHEW * The Oeiehrotad " MaTrwiwrn" Wood Tag Ptog Tuoaooa Tn PVoSKXa Toaaooo Oovasv. New York. Buetoa. and CBiieagO A KetleMe Artk-lr. ' It is a pleaeure to "oomxnd an article of a * thoroughly reliable character, and we do not ' bedt*i<- to do *o In speaking of IVxdey"* To*t 1 Pewdec, which an vxpertanc# of uwr feu year* 1 (twrvineto n* ta the be*t and mug reiiokde bak .* puw dtr in the merit**. 'T The patronage among thw flrat-claeahotel* in . New York I- oooatonUy changing from one hotel to the other. The G bakd t isnui llotkl has rvcetiUy id.* tad thw direct wrath of Ita oarape I Bears by offering thr same accommodatam* one i and tw-u dollars per day J*s than the other*. )forv (>.*" tbrvw-quartorv of a century ha* J uiaiwed Nftoe Johuecn a Anodyne Uaiment wa, *yituL and it I* to-day th# moat vrulky known a* well a* th* tnoet vats* I it* IntarsaJ ' and external raruedy ta th* we rid. No family should bu without it a day • Mi* *ai4 hy rvwiohk perwuu* that tiberidan'* i Cavalry 0* ouiUos Powder* fed aparingly to ' itoftv hctis v..l UNrcoa* the unaatity of egg* ' two fold- Try it. It won't cod much. a If i, wwis n.i,. 1* on* that ta tHhrwiw (ret from your druggist a jiarAsgeof lywrkW Insh TVo. Pace SS eU * j ' Tbe tlreeieel OtoeeverV St lU# Age a Dr. Table-' cwlslwaled Veestieß bmaiWW en betar* tn* pablic. art mrvM to car* Dtarrtoa. Dywaotery. . US", art Spuwal*4sr. inlennlt *eOeww,Otamt* * fthasmstaaao. Sars Ttiwata OU*. Brwtoe. Old Soros, and I's.ns alb* Ltjat*. Rack. *od (toat. MMwettr II has nsosr fsSod B* '*.! will evor be wVOwvt . *ri-f anas eiwn* )) a fair dial I" is*. 44) saea* Da TOBIAS* VBSimAl* HOBSB LUHMKJrr. I* PWM t Madia*. *1 Ob* Dollar, b wmto taponar ta anj . etuer. or JtO PAT. to Uw em* *4 Oato. Dwta. Brwues. , <*4 .Vara*, ato. SoN h all UrwgvMta Dseat— IO Park Ksw Vork Th# Market*. Is ) WWW TOO*. Kssf Oatti* -"attvo 0* • U Twnaond 47h*r*a*t - Wttri W B'lrb (Vyi..,„, tO t0 VSTO 30 ' Hasw-tJvw. OShN Dries, d OS | 04 M iJnfe XV 44 * Ooueo-WbtaSug - tOhN W% , Pleor-Waelenv—Weed to Obole# IB .4 I W ' Slats —itaoi la OboXw. 4 <4 14 *4l llr.ckwbrat, jwv cwk I ta It 1 M SlWel —Ued W"oi-en....... 1 >1 SIS XO.-IBIIVWM4 I M N 1 If , Ujt ("'■ - W N ft [Urlsy-SUU f Barley Mall —. •• (* XX Buckwbsel . ~ 4 SO Uata—Mixed Wmteru...... St 4 B 1 Cart,- H;lrt Woalarn 47 N tt * 4tay,per evrt..^.—S 4 B SuawTpsr uwt..s.Ms N Bop* r7: T4V-4VI *4O ... VV 10 | 11 l\i*- M(w*. 1440 Nil 01 tamV-Cllv OTSN OTN dUb -Markmd. Ma 1. esw IT 00 NIX 00 Bat, a** * *0 nio op Pry Oed, per cw1........... I B w 4 *0 Hsrrin*. M v'ed, per box. .. 14 <9 17 i 4 -Ore 47M4M7N Hsdtod. Il ' Vfool —Owl! toy PWec* N 44 M Tata* ** .—— XI N H A (Mtratl** " ...., 44 N 44 Slalr XX 41 ,4 U Unt-er—B4*l". . # 8 B Wcwtsrr -47h(Wca ta >4 SJ W(w*ern—-ioodW Prima.. M B Vmtsra —FtrMim. ST k II Obsea*—Btat" Factory.. • " (f " Urals 8k1rcmad........A .. S 11 W Mrtsrc 0*4)4 IX Rggw—Btat*and Peaaaylvwula .... 11 A 11V wmiA WNtal- No. I MUwwntoe 1 tt N 1 XX (lorn—Mixsd 44 At* , at*. to d Ml, Hp" V* ia T* lUrley JI IB 1 Ilariay Malt SO # II # rVILADSLrVIA. P*f 0*1(1* txlra • • OJh# 2S <4 ooig I- - ir _ '.ai)Sa(v*nla Sltr*. * V N ■XI Wbtal-BaS SNea..— 1 M <• 1 40 r o^-::.7r.v.r.r:.:. ::::: 2 Mixed .... 1 4 4X14 Petrel eum—Criid*.. JX'iSk+Wi *** ** , n* ONlfnraU dl N 41 ftOVTOffi.- * lissf(toll*...... 44 t h Steep JJS b"a xi'lnneaou* 0 14 | T Horn —MIS#A ii....(iv.7(w , "ta 41 W( Wool—-Ohio and Paxin.-:T*bl*lft 40 (B 4* Oahleral* Fa 11..., 8 A 11 asisrrnw. UtaW. Bsef 001U*.... MM# "bsep M J* lamb* 07 A T 110*......MM M5..MM.,.. 07MM OS w-TBatows, MUM Daef Oattle— Poor U> I'iolce I SO #S SO ttbxap 7 OP (4 7 T I, b.IW V On M * oo $lO tfl s2B' g§|||§ A CHARMING GIFT. A pANnUra "f lha craSliosa ptciann , *a*r saw - KloWara r'taS; lnn **•*. Itcrap Douks. *4*.. *d a Bv* wwska .übaiwiptlon b> lis., Hot Be. a M psaca ilUiatrab.,l (ami I. wwekiaJiilsHi *81) •marnix* MbiriHs b> *i>l* wtuera Ibiißorius Bkisclti>ns, PiWtiy, Pusslea nr th. yvun* 1,.14*. sto . All aenl KWtr su s.sry "sadar ui thia |,apsr wlH> will forward >1 uswi* I A *l*. In pay asasttaar as*sn sua. P . nisk" 1(1). un]>*fll*)".l oßw Jwv^^ur WUsAs X&s. for ctu (^^^^uwC^apse TRIX, IXLu ES A'^^. t ggVg BfNT MOODS AT IFOWMT Pr—. (Ifur. I aiaiayarr A bffarar. S Mw,Mr. (jait'i *t f a. ()VIHTWAII, MlltKNluKlUllt J THKO.J. H Aft* AC It, !■■■mwmwa. i wribia ( wiMKA BABBITT'S TOILET SOAP JAWM W AIM IM pa laMli afa •awywtt •* * i taeer tapfau t WTAWBAP %M>,< •aw AWPJ'AI ■AWEW.TR fTr" - - mm, fW mnT rsivrr s#*l- 1. I*wl- • UAWMT (A NATWLI UB W ••••/£*" _ 9MMOK TAE, • isM J LET NFT. RI H tr^gerßSir iaS twits leant* MpaMMt a* PeMke Aj—i IW at.e IIMS • TFIBI xa mG*H* ghmm 9%mm mmmpm lEuiii Asslz .! tfßfanm, < ,„. IRIF RJWRPA. WLW U LUa4 a4 GEO. STECK & CO., NASL'TACTL'REWI Of Grand, Square and Upright Piano Fortes. NaUAilhbad ataaa I MA? Baualturt Ifa Utaß ONLY GOLD MEDAL At Ufa W.ALL*. TWM.III3. First Medal and Diploma Alba OaaaxtaAal. PMUa, IVTS. Ttfaaa KIMSM Lt baa, twfura tAa puWlr am Iwaatf ian aa4 tulaaN all aua t) aa ■B.aaaataiUi riah MWMkau. Mt a.aafaiaa4 w tl fa. lata 4araWtaif aad Bat# Waal ta OaaA *■■■■' ia fawa tfaaa fal i tin air tn /ni*is| rir has# >'•*• d Piss ■■ Wili t* *tdJ mi /•'Mfyf* Me, etrf Is f|NM to P* M iL SMM) M#l # WA MWTO4M>E —l mimrmi* **o, A fall warraetf. we * Sywa' ifßal pu | lees. !• gi>W' aut M T b wHuia LARIW Tha ratlaf la aa prnwin IAM aa awa afaa Uaa avr *rV4 ll Jli Iw aiUfaatilL > .tfalu aaal'.fa? Il runxntaa (Aa UTI imM •till ruawAeaaa, arul aaftrsa aitd bpßla (Aa abta Ifaoanrd/. KHEI TATUAI. AWD NOWWAALM nwlar. wa na nfliM to KHMHF l-uifa akoui.l la .wa .lay aithMt PM Arm NOKI , l OT.IW. fW P-M trjuolrr Intfa tbo UIFA aoa*L> Haaa Sn# IHTMI. UA ITAWD aiawya LL ralmrw MR paaa ataJ ornaptly rabrawd and anmaliß twrad fc. Mililar Mr Nfilil 5 TOT^M blf rrflrtN tfa pun ana fit.a < Carp*. rat 'x&m ar rami b| (fat Bar of Pw J Rairart. It AAARR falla. II1NTUI) Bad I bn af faaf'l Eiliaa In BagaHika (arm, wfai f rw, *ein •! aiaiw eto ""■"jgßg ttgisSa—- Co-operative Newspapers. Mm taw aad ihnaa Uaaaaaad Mnwian it U l uted Mate* ara pmatad *pom itaahmalPa (iMMnlm p *.d| M> p* teat of all It. aateliaa ten. lbi. mi abad. It atka • batter pasar at a M> aoat. aad a raiauailp aaJtedlar tea tear In - ■■an at papara is aaaair item, and MMBT TV* ate Waa aiptite a ttepmw add tea .ItteteM Ida*. pmapantj aia aMa b> ataad tea.da a. aad la ta* of adaartiaiap it odar* nrcnljHte at a actaa ant abteh iba araal ainklba ara aaabir te oaaaM Tte maUai baa liawaa* of ritej !■> at I ■■■, I aad tea K*a lot f*~. a .laraal ta.iaa a a'aal afaTaaa oaanaaaaad apow Ha faamte araaaSa U te tteaaaaf Marte dUMMb aad Mb tear* apaaamte laa* i ilbataa* arl.at.a **r anatataad ta team I rteWtiac dlarrad.t opac tba 0® opteatiaa ■ptetmu a aa KM Tba aa luriltli 1 bat-** fumiabad tea liaa trate | rarafal aaaaara. atoa.te "tteatrn tea artarla* pab I htead ara aam aad tea Tim*, kaa aalaited aad ra taaod b> *t* tteaa ta Uw paftea tii|i imdd ad tatetaa >Wt tetete ' aaa lb* adaarti.ißd limlante aI tea Tim.. aad tea** ala* baaa tea ulaai Ite aa V* tea* Iter* toraaa atear raaoarea Itea to appaal te tea pabbc. Oar win te te* rharpaa of tea T*m~ ara aitepfctn aad aaaa*i ba rafatad Thai will b* mailad te aar tepfeaaal Tba oal, raaam lot tea attack aback a* tea* of I* te b* '. aad m tea fart teat a# baaa laaada rated a ■) ata 1a if adraruatad teM .ft*** aa fi iitlin foar tea aa Mat atroaialtoa fca a dollar aa a adordad bp tea *iaam* af tea fla. Otrvmlar* attb tall par Utmlaia (tea up anil Addraaa. BEALS A FOSTER, General Agents, iiericai Newspaper Onion, 41 PARE ROW, N. Y. "VEGETINE," ••fa a float.w> Phfalr'ea. " tea ao Mul a* Mil punter Wmi< of IXmmamj mvmdmf ml a area. aftereg •iter nten ten h>M I ten! Uaa La borate* ate a ... a van fnll >4 IM UMIM MTU. It (• Mete"! te tarte. rmoU and terbe. each af ertuah tateafcll efariiea aafl ttef ara oaapaatead m iHiißUHru la private atiteaktrij raaaJte" VEGETINE f th (tcMl Blood rm ii m. VEGETINE rui c9i\bm vartt o— ol Sorolvk VEGETINE k tacwte*a4 h I'hjurotee uad AfllNllim VEGETINE Uae elected erne taarralorn auraa n caaaa af Oearwe* VEGETINE lini too *rit omm of CaUr. VEGETINE •a> with wtedarfui ruacaua >■ MarriuUJ .l.nuat VEGETINE •4 andxala Wt Rheum fraa Iha aretecu VEGETINE ftaaoeea Ptippiae and Human fma the Fate. VEGETINE Bene r ooaUpa'"* and Rafuletee ih Bcmlt VEGETINE k • valuable tamed* fur (leaflet ha VEGETINE ViU a ara Drapaia.t VEGETINE ka i n tba aaCra rrelom to a Malthf conditio* VEGETINE •aifiTai tba aaaaaa af I utneaa VEGETINE Rahatee Faihlteaa at tba Stomach VEGETINE Oeee Paiano the Barlt % VEGETINE ■Btetaallf curaa k.dna* t'omflrint. VEGETINE (■ aflactiran lac ara at Female Saatneu VEGETINE le tha greet reined* tor (•eneral 1 VtalitJ. VEGETINE '■ "lattSfSttsaasflaty. wa — VEGETINE I'KKFAUKU BY H. R. STEYEIS, Boston, Mass. te VegtliM is Sstd by AllOmggWs.^ SN !tSu\Ess?ssp&r • S2SOOEEfS niTOBgUBNEfeF 4 i- KiHCUttrajj££3s few* * nijtljf • dgfim Oft, thipaa, l ' EYESSggg-SRSF AGENTS READ THIS! Wawlllway iiirtl • Malar* wf ■?."> aw* RwNk mm 4 RtMMM, b aalt ear Km taAe A T#hl*A torn wart, m the Had p*n. ■fa llu auddia. awywfcaW) at r< At 1118 !■ MM > HM BW4 rumiiiiliiiii (faah eafa efwaadara mm IM .a in il t wwlifn Saw AM MMMMAAaJ •si* ——w j-oaxreoKT's Special Penmanship Department! f - I WWMM 1+ Ua fall BNliaaA at UMW .aaaa u ad eaarr I HMIMI faaßiir Waa ar Ufafaaawfe aw* rawtd adaaaa. 1 s™" iiraw'—rt.xi aarj.gr I (Am lAawl aaaraa a# UUA.tr ia due IliftnwMl wUlarlwnaAa iAw>mlaaa.haiPUi bea< laAaaa awd I tinii'iantrtn Hlw | IW farther D* twaliifai at aimAan addnaa. a. T. JUHNM, tvkrr|L'. N. T. PABCNTS WANTED FOR THE ICTORIAL HISTORY""! WORLD 1 11 eepMuMl* Naa Biatanaai J| ifaiarrt aad IP fa I §335.T0 msittVSL tzt La ati'lzLL. RSfa lUalTa,' STWfa I htlM _ . . . . _ &ETCBITT IODSE, Fronting Uniori Squaro WKW TOOK. Finest Location in the City Empm Ra —InlSßrst fenrpissel KKMWK* e S-i nts. wnjariouMfouiAcy PUEE COD Lira AID LHC.^ Ta tkr Oadwateptlay. - Wttear*. fateaaard or Oao lit* Ou. *■ iiw. aft** i /item *- aarf ml*"*i| Sana af tea aructs aa tenlgfta* ate.*. SKSa tanaaali aftte ateaaa, abcaaa tateaaa.itei dadkrate aaa tean A. B Tnjm^tete*. Kate. TJSK TIIK v Peerless Wringer. IT IS THE BEST. ■. T. Office—loe ChKßbar* BlmC VACTO B V -UPlfOAn. . N. VAN HKll* SANDALWOOD A paaMtw i■■ idp I* Ml Ikiiiu ad tea Ktdaara. Bladder aad friaan Orraaa. aba paf ta Brar* a*rat fata platen. B aaaar ,win. fdniii, Mttete aad tpaadpteNa Mtten. It I* tart auporaadte til ate indlti Km taptalM tart Hdtati R.aara af laHattaaa. tea. date* ta tt* r* ate aaaabtepßaa ate. DtWAS SICK * lO.* Paata. JSft tea •ala*. ii ' J OU V Bun datin id. aaM at atf nee iA fm i lvwiles, er eeeui /W en# Be • l^ri TNE 800 D OLD JTAND-BY MEDCAI KDSTiIG UHMEIT FOR MAN AMD BEAST Htuume M Tuu. Alwar* "r~ * -•' aaadr Alwapa handy Hac Daw wr tailed ■OMww km MM . TH r. >w> (ionoo. oU MutUf-w -w* end kanwaa. MaacuawlU. Ihe *" t-eme-a urn mtMa m""*> am rt!L KHjjTIU ■ *■ n " ,v " _ v " CATALOGUES and CIRCULARS OF Oliver Ditson & Co.: Who pnbhah ao many Muaae Books that * a* qaUa is possible to advaitiia the whole. They print 500 Difltat Instruction Boob. lb* hart, ml amiy all thwa art. fcw alt Ualruaahta fma aMa *a ah area organ. aa4 tor eaparm. Daaorip ttraauaaUta abmfmUy tpnfehad fraa aa apphaatwo Alan 700difanaat eolleotionaofChuroh Muaio Bank*.Sana aiu School Bwika. Uhurucce. Oieiotve, i.lw (??iitaia.cte . for CtaSTapa Maaiaal loeictm Dcccriptira circulars ml fraa. a appi .oatioa.. Also 11)0 diEaeaat collections of School. HUn School and Sunder School Mum. Dcccriptwa droolers ant ftaa. AJpo 1 liO different aallaetaoata o£ Vnaal or Instrument* Music, iaaludin* the cream u< dl the cheat an am I crcr pibltt*! Circular* cant free. AJco HOO other book* taclndina all that any muatccl paraoa can Head/ Tb*se end many thousand pieces ol Sheet Ml) etc are described In Uatalocuea. which a law paaaw* aratl plana is yuar hands. Any book or pteee Imtled, i*xt free, for the retail OLIVER DITSON & CO., | -a' 1 ! t - ' T s 'i X'l 'it