FOR THK VOUJfH PEOPLE T*F Ma* "he Didn't KM* WK LA Slap. A very fair singer M Mynheer Sehwop, Except that he NEVER knew when to stop ; He would sing, and ning, and *ng away, And aing half the night and all of the day This " pretty bit " and that " aweet air," This "little thing from Tootovere." Ah ! it wa* fearful the number he knew. And fearful hi* way of ainging them through. At first, the people would kindly aay : •• Ah. *ing It again. Mynheer, we pray fThia " pretty hit," and that "tweet air." Thi* " little thing from Tootovere. "1 They listened a while, hot weaned toon. And, like the professor, they changed their tnne. Vainly they coughed and a-hnmmed and stirred . Only the harder be trilled nd slurred. I'n til, in despair, and rather than grieve The willing profeasor, they took their learr. And loft him singing thi* " tweet air,'' And that " pretty hit from Tootovere ." And then the hoeteta, in sorry plight. While yet he aang with all hi* might, I*>t down the blind*, put ont the light. With " thank* Mynheer ' gooJ-uight .' good night !" My moral dear npigera, lies plainly a-top , He aiway* obliging, and willing -to atop. The name will apply, niy dear children, to you ; Whenever you've any performing to do. Yonr friend* to divert i which L* quite proper, too,) IV> the best that yon can— flvak of lighUuug, IJt on the moon like a thunderbolt. Nought COULD he tiud but a man with a lantern. Hiding about on a pea-green colt. Oh ! Heigh-ho ! Why did I oooie here ?oh 1 A fling and a swing, and a flap of tuy wing. And baci. to the earth L'U go. Of! he eli D like a biasing rocket; IVvwn he came like a falling star. What should he meet but a gay little goshawk. Flying up from the earth so far. Oh ! Heigh-BO ! Toor Utile grasshopper, oh ' A snap and a SQUEAK in the bonny bird's beak. And there was an end of him, oh ! The fls'iKlx r ■■ Kiprew More than a hundred year* ago the ureal country east of Germany, known a* Russia, was ruled by the Empress Anne. It is a very cold country and the winter is very long. The capital is St. Peters burg. and through it the river Neva runs. This r: ver freezes in winter, and the iee is frequently so solid that it will bear an army of several thousand men with all their heavy guns and martars, and these be discharged withont so much as cracking the iee. At the close of the year 1739, during au extremely cold winter, the empress ordered one of her architects to build an ice palace. The great square in front of the royal palace was chosen for its site. Blocks of the clearest ice were selected, carefully measured, and even ornament ed with architectural designs. They were raised with cranes and carefully placed in position, and were cemented together by the pouring of water over them. The water soon froze and made the blocks one solid wall of ice. The palace wa* fifty-six feet long, seventeen and one-half feet wide, aud twenty-one feet high. Can you imagine anything more Iteautiful than such a building made of transparent ice and sparkling in the sun ? It was surrounded bv a balustrade, !>ehmd which were plooed six ice cannon •n csrriages. These cannon were exactly like real metal ones, and were *o hard and solid that powder could be fired in them. Tlie charge used wa* a quarter of a pound of powder and a l*all of oakum. At the first trial of the cannon an iron ball was used. The em press with all her court was present, and the ball was fired. It pierced a plank two inches thick at a distance of sixty feet. Besides these six cannon in front of the palace, there were two mortars which carried iron balls weighing eighty pounds with a charge of one-quarter of a pound of powder. Then, too, there were two ice dolphins, from whose months a flame of burning naptha was thrown at night with most beautiful effect. Between the cannon and dol phins, in front of the palace, there was a balustrade of ice ornamented with square pillars. Along the top of the palace there wa* a gallery and a balus trade which was ornamented with round halls. In the center of this stood four lieautifnl ice statues. The frames of the doors and windows were painted green to imitate marble. There were two entrances to the palace, ■>n opposite aides, leading into a square vestibule which had four windows. All the windows were made of perfectly transparent ice, and at night thev were hnug with linen shades on which gro tesque figures were painted, and ilium- j Inated by a great number of candles. Before entering the jialace one na turally stopped to admire the pots of flowers on the balustrade, and the orange trees on whose branches birds were perching. Think of the labor and j patience required to make such perfect imitations of nature in ice ! Standing in the vestibule, facing one entrance and having another behind, ' corn-cakes that James hadn't eaten up. " This is a pretty fix," said James to himself, quick as a flash. "My ride and ax are both in the cart, and that ugly beaut would claw me to pieces be fore f could get 'em out." He was afraid the bear would chase . him if he ran, and corner him if he staved, and so he set his wits to work to find away out of the scrape. Good bright wits are too much for a bear, or a ban! lessou, or a tough job of any sort, if they are only kept at work with uo •' I can't,"or, "I don't want to, "car "O, dear !" to hinder them. It didn't take James' wits so long as I have been telling it to you to make a plan for him. He jumped to his feet quick as a flash,- grabbed the tongue of the cart before the boar could say Jack Robinson—if he hail known how—and started ou a keen run down hill, drawing the cart aud the bear in it after him. "Well, I s'pose there never was a bear so asleniahed since the pair saved from the flood stepped out from Noah's ark and found the world drowned. He had nyver hail a ride before, and didn't i want one now ; but the cart was going ! so fast that he daren't jump out, and so" he just clung on, and looked ont from one side to the other, and fairly howled as the cart bumped over the roots and stones. James had been to the city once and seen the street cars, and when he found he had the bear caught, the fun of the thing made him laugh. When the bear roared once, he hallooed back, " All full inside—take the next car!" And when the bear gave a ter rific bowl, he said, " Move up to the front, please—anddon't grumble. This ia a through car—git up there !" and he ran just the way the car drivers make the horses do when they are late, and pretend they don't see a little boy cross ing his fingers for "em to stop on the crossing. The tin dish- in the bottom part of the cart rattled like a peddler's wagon on the pavement; the ax and gun bounced on the bear's toes, and he looked as if he didn't know which was tlie worst—his mad or his scare. Down the steep hill James ran, straight for the comer of his log-house. He had his plans all made, and as he turned the comer, he ran the cart against a log and tipped it right over, with Master Bear on the under side. His other rifle hung over the door, in the house, and he grabbed it down in a i hnrry, and as tlie bear struck his head from under the cart, he shot him be tween the eyes, saying : "There, that settles the question/' " What question ?" asked his wife, who came running out to see what the , noise meant. " Why, the question whether I had caught a lieor or he hat! canhtg me." " Mercy sakes !" she said, a* she saw ■ the dead bear. Then he told her the story, and she kissed him, and laughed and cried at the same time. And he bad an overcoat made of the skin, to re , member the time when he " gave a bear a free ride." Suirllf ml the Derr. A friend of mine who has been in the habit of bunting deer in the Adirondack mountains, is of the opinion that the deer is often more than a match for the dog in sagacity. Tlie deer seems to be well aware tiiat the dog is guided by his faculty of soent in tracking him ;* and all the deer's efforts are directed to baf : fling and thwarting this keen and won derful sense with which the dog is gifted. With this purpose, the deer will often make enormons leaps, or run around in a circle so as to confuse and puzzle his pursuers. He will mount a stone wall, ' and ran along it for some diatanee, well i aware that the dog cannot scent him so well on the rock as on the grass. If he can find a pond or stream of water, the deer will plunge in and swim a long dis -1 tance, so that the dogs may loose his j trail. It is a joyful sound to the poor, hunt ed deer when the dog* send up that sail, dismal howl, which they give utterance to when they have lost all scent of the deer, and despair of finding it He ia then a happy deer. He hides quietly n some covert among the bnahes, anil he will take care to place himself where the wind will carry ail odors of his Ixxly away from the direction where he sup poses the dogn to be. So you see the deer is by no means a stupid animal. He knows better than many a little boy how to take care of himself aud get out of the way of danger. From a correspondent in Springfield, Mo., I have a letter, in which the writer says : " I suppose the Boston boys don't have deers for pets. I have a young one named Billy, and he cats corn out of my pocket When I come home from school he always runs to meet me. Al though he can jump over fences, he never tries to run away. He wears a collar with a bell on it; so we can hear him when he is down in the orchard eat , ing apples, of which he seems to be very fond. Uncle Charle *, in Nurncry, A SHOWEB OF PINE BAKE.— The Ral eigh (N. C.) Neu> of a late issue says : "We are informed by eve-witnesse* of ; the oocurrence, that on Tuesday last, in the afternoon, about two o'clock a great | quantity of pieces of pine bark fell in |and around a yard in this city. The | fragments of bark appeared to have been violently torn from the trees. Many ! of them were of the size of one's hand. I The pieces of falling bark might be seen , at a great height in the air—as much as : 200 or 300 feet. The puzzled viewers ! of this curious shower could give no ex planation of the cause of the occur rence." - I A Living Heath. In lite various work* describing *#v | age life, and the harliantio* attending it, | wliieli it liaa been our fortune to read in the course of the last few years, we have ' met with nothiug more truly horrible 1 than the following aeoonnt of the foti*li - like erueltie* practiced by the Kaffir* ' I toward* their own race and kindred, ' < The details are giveu by ('apt. King, of ' the British arinv, who took a prominent ' part in the lab' Kaffir war After giving * several instance* of butchery toward* r such of the soldier* ** were unfortunate enough to fall into their hand*, ('apt. ; King say*: "When a chief or a great man of a tril>e is seized with sickness, the ' witch-doctor,' with forma and ill 1 cantations, diHinis some |xor wretch to * death, on preteuee of hi* having lx<- r witched the ailing man. Hi* flix-ka and a herd* are forfeited to the ohief, and hi* r children left beggar* and fatherless. 1 One instance may suffice to give an idea e of their savage ferocity, and spare tlie repetition of outrages on the poor sot ■l tUrs, or those unhappy enough to fall x iuto their hands. Tlie son of a cluef named Macomo having fallen sick, a t • witch doctor ' wa*,according to custom, a consulted, to ascertain tlie individual y under whose evil influence he was stif , fenng: and, a* usual, a man of property .1 was selected and Ooudenilied to forfeit r ; his life for his alleged crime. To pre 1 ! veut hi* being told of liia fate by his * j friends, a party of tuen left Macutuo's ~ kraal early in the morning to entire the reoovcrv of the atck young chief by e murdering one of hts father's subjects, e ! Tlie day selected for the Kaon floe ap s | peared to have lxartv of men from the r 'great place' gave him no other concern than aa to what part of the animal he r should offer them as his guests. In a * moment, however, the ruthless party e seized him in his knial. When he found t himself secured with a rheim around his t nook, he calmly said, It is my misfor -1 tune to te caught unarmed, or it should .1 j not le thus.' He was then ordered to e imxluee the matter with which he had s iN'witohod the sou of his chief. He re t i plied, • I have uo bewitching matter; t but destroy me quickly if my chief ha* j consented to mv death.' Hts oxecutiuu * ers said they must torture bim until he * produced it; to which he replied, 'Save i yourselves the trouble, for torture as you will I cannot produce what I have 1 not.' He was then held down on the i ground, and several men proceeded to pierce his laxly all over with Kaffir i ueedlce. Tlie miserable victim bore i j this with extraordinary resolution- his t 1 tormeutor* finally tiriug. and complain . 1 ing of the pain it gave their hands, and of the ueedlee or skewers beudiug. > During this time a fire had Ixxm kindled, . in which large flat stones were placed to 1 heat. Tlie man wa* then directed to . rise, and they pointed out to him the fire, telling iiim it wa* for his future . torture, unless he produced the bewitch . ing matter. He answered, * I told you , the truth, when I told you to save your [ self the trouble. As for the hot stone*. I can bear them, for I am innocent. I would pray to le strangled at once, but \ that you would say I fear your torture.' Here his wife, who had also lieen seized, , wa* cruelly Iseaten and ill-treated , before his eyes. The victim was then led to the fire, where he was thrown ou hi* back, stretched out with . his arm* and legs tied to strong peg* , driven into the ground, and the stone*, , now red hot, were taken out of the fire , and placed ou his naked body—on the , groin, stomach and chest, supported by others on each side of him, also heated t and pressed against his ttodv. It is j impossible to describe tlie awful effect , of this barbarous process, the heated , stones slipping off the scorched and . broiling flesh, and being only kept in I their place* by the sticks of tlie fiendish ,executioner*. Through all this tlie , heroic fellow still rcmaiucd perfectly j sensible, and when asked if he wished I to lie released to discover hi* hidden charm, said, ' Release me.' They did ; so, fully expecting they had vanquished , his resolution, when, to the astonish ment of all, he stood up a ghastly spec- I tacle, broiled alive! his smoking flesh hanging in pieces from his body ! and composedly asked his tormentors, ' What do yon wish me to do now ?' ( Thev repeated their demand, but he reeolutelv asserted his innocence, and l>egged them to put him ont of his mis ery; and as they were now tired of their labor, they made a running noose on the rheim around his neck, jerked him to I the ground, and savagely dragged him about on the sharp stones; then placing their feet on the back of his neck, they drew the noose tight and strangled him. His mangled corp*e was taken into his own hut, which was aet on fire and burnt to ashes. His sufferings com- i menoed at ten A. M. and ended only at , mail Thing* to be Avoided. There are many ways in which we can annoy our friend* without intending to do so. A few of these are easily ; 1 stated. Never call upon people ont of season—in business hours. Idle per sons ore apt to have too little considers- j tion for those who are busy. Call upon : business people on business in bußiues* hours, but not for a long friendly chat on matters and things in gen*ral. Gall I upon your neighbors in their home* at i such hours as they will be prepared to ' : receive yon, and not before they are down stairs in the morning, or while i ' they are at dinner, or just as they are i going to bed. Never stop people upon | the street, if they appear to be in a ! luirry, and buttonhole them for ten or | twenty minutes. Neither is it good taste, when you see two persons engaged in earnest talk, to step in and enter upon miscellaneous conversation. A man's ordinary instincts ought to kupw at once when his company is desired and when it is a nuisance. It is also a great im pertinence to strike in with something entirely foreign to the subject when one is in the midst of a story or a statement, or an argument, and to persist in talking abont " this, that and everything" to one who ia trying to read the morning paper, or a book or anything else. Whenever a man ia so absorbed that he does not care to reply to what yon say, i it is time to stop talcing. There are a legion of other annoyance*, equally trying . Carelessness in keeping appoint ments : keeping other ]MM>plo waiting yonr own oonvenienee ; coming in late to church, or the concert, or the lecture, and always in creaking boots ; delay in answering important letters ; borrowing new hook* from the owner before he has had time to read them, and returning the same at a late date, perhaps never ; scribbling foolish comments on the margin; always depending njvin a neighbor for a sight of the daily or weekly paper when yon are as well able to pay for it as he is ; learning to play on musical instruments in the full hear ing of sensitive and nervous people. But we may as well atop here. From yonr own experience you can complete theliat. Something About Head*. The Scientific American ia authority for what follows: Complete roundness is most nearly attained by a skull from Tartary, of which 97.7 is the index of breadth. With this Huxley contrasts a head from New Zealand of 02.9 aa the narrowest of all known skulls. Bernard Davis has obtained, however, a so-called Celtic aknll which has an index of fifty - eigbt, ao that these indices for extremes fluctuate between fifty-eight and ninety eight, but the average is only between sixty-seven and about eighty-five. King Kalakaua seems to have a head curions ly protulierant along the entire left side, and in marked contrast with that of Mr. Manton Marble, whose conform allows i protuberance on the rear, and almost in- 1 dentation forward on the aanie aide. It < will also be observed that in almost ev ery example here given—and the same holds true in the great majority of all in- i stances—the left aide is most protnber- 1 ant. It may be surmised between this circumstance and the fact pointed out < by Brown-tiequard, that the left lobe of the brain oomes into greater use, in its < control of the right side of the body, than the right lobe, which governs the j left aide. ADULTERATED < O!m:url Huh.mil- # On em l iMI la Ik# Tfahlns al I'aadlr*. lii raising Mdultenxtiun <•> lit" dignity <>( H M'ini<, tho nnxnnfixoturor# of nou fMHumnry lnxvo dun* thoir pari. l'rop orly, there urc only (lireo iMaipuiMil parts in ptiro ponfoetlonerv the "utter, or llxxly of tin' unit tor; tni oitrmot, or tlavoriUK quality of tho aaino, ittul tli coloring pronorty. To auoii a dogroe of ingenuity liavo oaiiily-maker* arrivod, that >m Vimla of thoir ware* aro put up for tlic uiarki't with only a vnr* K illit |ruportion of tho tlrat, an.l wiin tlio coloring an.l flavonuff of no clioap a quality that thoir manufactured article* onu be thuiglit at tlio *aluo price j me qualitiea it forming from fifty to sixty |x>iatc creams, of which children ore so fond, are made of trrra alba and glyreriue mixed together, the glycerine keeping the earth *oft and pasty, making it ad here so it will not fall apart, and then the Istlls are rolled in tallow, with suffi cient grease t<> allow one {xmud of choc olate to go as far a* five or six (xmuda would if properly made. The worst effrvt* of the use of trrra alba are, that the terrible disea-c* of stone tuiil gravel are caused by the in troduction of earth into the system, and the large increase of |atients Buffering from these attributed by high medical authorities to the introduction of this terrible ingredieut into the confection ery and similar articles consumed in this country. Glucose, or " grape sugar," is the uame of another dangerous article ex tensively used in the adulteration of candiea. It is not, as its name would imply, made from grapes, but from po tatoes, and its effect is to produce par alms of various portions of the system, eajieciallv the kidneys, where the effect is not only to para lyre them, but to turn them into a sugary substamx'; in other words, to produce Bright * disease, a malady for which physicians have found as vet no remedy. l"he reason for the use of glucose is the sama that is given for the use of every other adulteration—cheapness. Gum arable, for which it is used as a substitute, is worth fifty cents a pound, while glucose sells for five or six. Most of the cheap gum-drops are made from this compound. More disgusting than anv of the arti cles named, though |>erha|>s not so hurtful, are what confectioners term the scrapings. When a sugar ship comes into port and is empties] of her cargo, a good deal of syrup lis* adhered to the sides of the vessel and run down into the bilge water. The first is scraped off and the second pumped out, , mixed together, and lioiled, and of this cdinpound candy ia made. The coloring of cheap candies, al ; though it would hardly come under the head of adulteration, is yet a fraud, and oftentimes a dangerous one. Instead of the cochineal fly which the liest confec tioners use for the rod in their wares, the unprincipled manufacturers use aniline, a powerful And poisonous color. For yellows chromium is used, one of the elements of which is arsenic. We have already mentioned some of the other preparations of lead and copper used for this purpose. The yellow in the liest candies is produced by tho use of saffron. Most candies flavored with pear, ap ple, banana and other fruits are unwholesome, these extracts in manv instances being made from fusil-oil, taken from the refuse of liquor-stills.— 11 out on Commrrrial Hullrtin. (liinumen'H llone*. According to a Snn Francisco corre spondent, whenever a Chinaman is sick and beyond recovery, he is planed in some ont-of-the way place and left to die. None of his countrymen ever go Dear him, and he is loft to " paddle his own canoe " across the Styx in his exit from this mundane sphere. When the deceased is buried, however, offerings will Is* made at the grave, and in time his hones will he nent hack to China, in accordance with the contract made with the six companies which blbnght him here or from subscriptions hy Chinese merchants. Every year there are tons of hones of defunct Chinamen sent to China to be buried. The business of exhuming and |>acking these bones is an extensive one, and, very naturallv, it is fmrsued by Mongols. Many of these ►ones are polished. When disinter ments are in progress the graveyards of the Chinese prneontthe appearauoe of a Golgotha. Very small wooden coffins are uaed, jnst large enough to contain the liones of the deceased. It is pro posed to impose a tax of ton dollars on every dead body disinterred, and to re quire the lioues to be placed in a me tallic case, the price of which is some fifty dollars. The object of which is to prevent spread of infectious diseases hy careless exhuming. A White Robin. A snow-white robin may bo seen at No. 1208 Broadway, near Thirtieth street. It is a real Albino, and ita dark eyes are surrounded by a narrow rim of pink. Last summer a German, of this city, while wAlkiug in Whitestone, , Long Island, saw A robin's nest in an , npple tree ; on looking into it he saw four young birds nearly Hedged, one of j which was white. He took them home and reared them all. Three differ in no | respect from ordinary robins ; the fourth j differs only in color, Bird fanciers say j that Albino robins are very rare ; more so than white blackbirds. .Veto York j JYibune. SUMMARY OF NEWS. ■ ■•tern and Middle State* Au oil train amis fr night train on lit* l.elugh i Valley railroad, at Hl*iiugtoti, I'a., votlldnd, mid lb# shock cailMHl an explosion of tba ■ld#m was killed sod atxiut fifteen mors or IMS dau* gnloti.ly wounded A fltghtful spectacle was presented, as the nil-covet rd men ran wildly in all dlitM'tlons, mapped about Iu flatus* which allot up several fest above their beads. Only' one mall had pressure of mind to run to the rlvsr, wl.ile another tan Into a house and the Inmates amotheled the Manias with raipeta. Sotni of tho ull soaked men passed friends who wets helpless to aid and could ouly look on lu iui|K>teiil horror The iwcuularv luas Is esti mated at yjiHi.noo At a variety performance in the Pawtueket lit. 1.1 Opera house. Mile Volants supported au apple ill*. II lior head, and Mrs. J entile Kuwler, whose stans nam# Is Kiaukllu. was la shoot the Sppie while standing wltb bar back to the mark, taking aim bv tiie reflection in a mirror. The ride was diacliaitfrd and Mile Volaule fell .lead ou tha stage, the bullet havlug pierced her forehead. Mr* KrauklUi *at rest followed. Governor Mct'lellan has appointed John P. Go**, John h I.ee and Kdwar.fT, hell oeuiuns loners to tho Pari* *X|KM*tWu from New Jer sey. l'he.New Jersey legislature has adjourned for (he session A UftV-horse (aiwer boiler in the engine mom nt the llostou slsuipiug iuatiufarU>ry of Isiavey A Co., Cambridge, Maes., exploded, and tliiee men were killed, another was talally tnjuied, and six others more or leas severely Sounded The holler was hulled through the bitch Sail* of lire el glue-rnnin and the wuodeu walls of tho building Inclosing It 13U feet across the cauaL Michael Mulrland. the eu glneer, was found crushed between the holler slid tbe granite walls of the canal. James Augllii and Nathan iturgeas, at work in the riveting -rount in a line with the course uf the toiler, were taken from Uie canal dear) and ■aangled, havlug boeu swept along bv the boiler in its terrific flight, George • ierriiy was taken from the ruin* of the an cine-room fatal IT injured. The two-etory bulidliig containing the engine was uumuietelv demoltsheil, and tha Svc story main building, in which one hundred uersou* were [at work, aas considerably shat iered. Seven persons injured ty the shower of burning oil at Klatlngtou, Pa, have died. Atioul twenty thousand |x-r*on* witnessed ihe launch of Uie new steamship City of Para, belonging to the liraalhau hue, at Cheatur, Pa. Among lli -se present were President liayse, Hecrvlarie# K-hurr. McCreary and ThtMupeuu, a quorum ftoin ts-th houacw of (ongreea. Governor liartranfi tha mayor# of New York and Philadelphia and other | fits but was t*iusldered harm rus The building contained bet seen sixty and seventy inmate# at tbe time the flame* Iroke out, and of three fifteen wore burned to doetti while the rest wore reerued • Itli much difficulty. The building was of Isrtck with iron-grated door* and wiudows, which made It inqsarsihle for the uiifortQnate persons inside to get out without assistance, and tho aorue* pros, ntrsl as the tire surround ed prisoners eudeav-wed to get away were horrifviug in the extreme. Ten of those burn ed to death wer females and five male*. la-Governor Moses, of Mouth Carolina, was arrested in New \ ark upon a requwition of Governor Hampton, charged with having furgeil a uotafor #Hl< Heruan klon* a Now tiwk dcai. rx iu batters materials, has failed for f toO.OUO. Tiie Now YOrk Praduoe Exchange has began , thirty-nine suit* iu sums aggregating fISo.UtX), against the Penntylvanu railroad company for i -ase# incurred during the labor troubles last July Charles Pardee, aged als-ut M-veutv-five a wealth; banker tf ttkaneateiea, N. if., com mit led suicide by cutting his thrust. SorsUrt Sherman has had anothar con form,-# iu New York with leading batikrrs. re garding the resumi tiou of *|w>dc |wyments. lie expreasis.l a iwlief that resumnUoU would I* practicable at the time filed by law, but deexroil the sell 11 eo-eqieraUon of the laukx Tho aocretary {tfopoaed that the tanks should take tICW 000,001) four per cent, bond* at par ous fourth of one per cent, cummissiiin to be aik'* i-d ki be jxud for iu gdd before January 1. 15179. Home of the bank president* did noil receive the |iro{a>aiuoa with much favor, while others approved it, but no conclusion was reached. H. Angler Chacr. treasurer of the Uuion Mitl\ Pall lUvwr, Mae* , coufeaerd that he had ombejirleil f can the company about 9500 000. The defalcation ha. been going on for a num ber of year*, but was uustiajwvtcd. as Mr. Chsco *v. i\ man uf high social position in P'all liiver, where be has lived since 1 *2"A lie was an ci an-u.b. rof tbe Maseachuswtt. House i f JU pn senutiie# an J Senate and Ue v.ilaa l-rieg treasurer of the I'ulou Mills he vis also pres.driil of the Second National liank and of the Five Cent Saving* liank, both of P'all litver. TV defkication is M-preseuUd by over-lasut of the cutnpanv'a notes, and tbe dis covery that something was wrong was first made when one of tb* corpora!:ou s notes had come to protest. The I'uion Mill* (\-mjvauy •ii on# of the iargct of thegrvwt ixvrpiiraboaa xn P'all Itlvcr. ta the morutng after the defal cation became known the mill property was attached by a Providence banker An unusually alrocxou* murder was com ciittnl in New York ly Michac' Pogartt, who killed his wife and then cut his oan throat. At our time p'ogartv owud a groo-ry st.sv and was pruaperotia . (at wft*l,o(lo, and unsecured .121,000. He also is responsible ou discounted l>aper for ffloo.flOO and ha* no asset*. A strike of Ihe employees of the Atchison, To|*ks and Santa P'e railroad company at To |ioka, Kansas, has Ukeu place, and fraight aud passenger traffic has been greaUy delayed. ! While a parte of workmen were gathered • Unit a derrick on the Tuscarawae railroad in 1 Harris.. ll ( .unite, Ohio, the supports suddeulv , gave war aud ihe derrick fell tn>on the men, instantly ktlhng twoan.l fatally injuring a third. • Tlio steamboat Colonel A. B. Koons struck a •nag on the lied nver, in leiuisiana, and sank. Thriw deet hands were drowned- Isaiah Oabhart, who waa shot in Uie pnblfr wpiare st ilxrrodsburg, Ky., bv Henry Noel, died of bis wounds. The combat, which took place in the |>r*wence of many cittran*. had iu , origin in an election row. The Dim inei And advancing toward one another emptied every chamber of their respective revolver*, tlieu clinched ami fought it ont, using thoir pistol* as dabs. When they were separated It waa secertained that Gabbart bad beon mortally wounded. Dying he exonerated Noel. The boilers of the Handy Fashion, a small \ steamer running fn>m CiiUnltsburg, Ky„ up . the Handv river, exploded at the mouth of the river, and the vessel sank in three minutes in nine f.-et of water. Joseph Newbcrg, a mer ciia.it, A. Gslsirn. and two ethers were killed Tiie engineer, clerk and another man were wounded. Tim lows Onpetibick Iarty met in Pes Moines sod wmiinated a Htate tlcliel headed by M. p'arnsworth for secretary of Htate. Tlw plat form adojited demands the unconditional repeat j of tha resumption act, the rciuoneti/.ation of silver making it a full legal tender; that the coinage of silver be placed on Uie name footing with gold, and that Congress shall not author ire the issuance of interest-bearing ixiuds of anv kind. the Illinois Democratic Htate convention met in Springfield and nominated a Ucket with E. I>. Cronkhite for State treasurer at the head. A small boat containing six young men, on the Ohio river at Martin * Ferry Ohio, was swanqmd, and three of those in the boat were drowned.the rest reaching shore with difficulty. From Waahtnaton. The Bouse appropriation committee ha* , agreed to the poeb-offloe appropriation hill M*it | was rejiorted hack by the sub oommittee. The bill ap(avrpriate*in the aggregate #38.190,873, ] which is #3 257,398 below the estimate sent io bv tho post-office department, and about #B6#, 00# less than the amount appropriated for the present year. The hill reduces the compensa tion of the railroads five per cent., and changes i the method of paying the postmaster# of Uie I fourth class back to Uie old system ; that ia, to i pay then a commission on the atampe they cancel instead of op (ho*e the}."#ll, as the pre •etit lew i ij.ridi . ; . , , me ' The House election# committee ha* agreed, by a unanimous vote, to dismiss the Honth I'aroltua omtested slsotliwi eaee of O'Goriftor i Democrat) against Gain (lle|>ublicanh the alt ting member Tha I'reableiit has nominated JnsMn E. Doi buru. of Vertuoiil. to ue cuuaul-ganeral at the City of Mexico. Lite total receipts for the inn# mouth* of the #rt*eilt llsckl veer Wwte #|l>4,oM,4', whWi to #7,Mt..2*' Uk>* the aorr<|Mii>fitii( nine I month* of the prenedtng fiscal year and of this | deficit #5,3(14 093 oeeurisd in iiiternal I revenue receipts, #1.939,141 In mtocellaueous. i and #273.046 Ui custom*. The total exionidi- J lure# for the same tMWind wera ##t,®lo #2fi, 1 which 1* #12,850.21* lea* than Ihe oorrawpotxd i lug mite months of tbe prntwxltng fiscal year, j Haoratary Tbumpaoa lis* tasunl au order directing the eomtuaudets of I tilled Htate* man-of-war lu Houth I'arific waters to aetse all American vessels engaged in Uie coo Ha trade and bring them to a united Mates port for trial. The llepuhllcau* of both houses of Congreea held a caucus and aptwluted a < ViagianaTnnal committee to ad on behalf of the party. A resolution was presented by Natialnr Hargeul that the I'resldeut be urged to " rescind the order fnrLi.idiiut the attendance of offietol* in the executive branch of the civil service at preliminary mertlnga, oaucusea. and oouveu lions of a itiiUlcal character, aud their service# i upon political couimllleesv" After debate the resolution was referred to the o*similiter The tteuale lias confirmed the nomination of Jnhu W. Hoyt, of WiacouaUx, to he governor of I Wyotmng Territory. 'lYie House committee on way* sod means, lu Its dlacuwuou of the tall revising the iu ; teruai rerenue laws has reached those aec Uous (irvvlding fur the relinpoeitlou of the iu < oaun- tax, and the OoiumlUee rejected a motion to strike them out bv a Vote uf five Ul the t affirmative to six in the negative. Those who , voted uay were Mt. Tucker, of Virginia ; Mr. j Hayier. of Ohio Mr. Itohhina, of North Garo- Una ; Mr. Harris, of Georgia Mr Borchard, of Illinois, and Mr. Giheuu, of l.oulalaua The t xfilntullie votes wore hy Mr. Wood, of New York. Mi. Garfield, of Ohio, Mi. Hanks, of Massachusetts . Mr. Kelley, of l'eunsvlvania, and Mr. Fhelps, of Gonuecttout. A meeting ha* been held in Washington t lion of a commercial treaty between the two countries Tiie secretary of the treasury aud the tnetn ; hers of the last syixdieatr Kara ealcred into an agrweuient for lii# sale, fur resumption pur poeea, of #SO,UOU,UUU United Males four aud one-half per cent fifteen year bonds at par and accrued interest, aud >.ne and one-half per cent. | premium in gold coin. • 10,000,000 to he taken immediately and #5,000,U1i0 per mouth during the halanor of the year. Foralan New*. lYit.oe Grloff, Uie linasian ambassador al , Far is, has oompiatiual to the French govern ment in regard to the tone of prominent Tar latan ueaspapera M. Waddiugton, Frsnch minister of foreign affaire, lu reply to the prince s complaint, said that the government has no ooutrol over the (>apers In question, hut the press have been invited to be less aggros aire. l'rtnc# Grloff waa much dissatisfied with the reply. Cardinal Giuseppe lierardi s death in Home is announced . aged sixty-eight. Trouble with Use t xffß-s is Mouth Africa has again broken out, and in one action ths Hrttxsh tos'p# were ix>m|wdld to retreat lYuxce G.i'.scLskcff't answer toll.# Urlttoh •irnnlar di>i>atoh has Ma made pobiia. Hi# Kuss.su minuter * reply if tempertU- hi tone. He .ierii#* that Russia 1* seeking her own g graudiscment aud colls upon England to state precisely bow she would act under the ctrrum- Btauoeaiii regard to Ihe Eastern question. Ill# famine in Northern China Is increasing. A (xsstal o-uimissiuti from the United States, consisting of thirty-flie persons, have arrived in Havana. Four thousand houses were destroyed by a recent fire in To km, Japan. The dais ago i* estimated at #200.000, At the funeral uf the muni end I*>rd Let trim ta Dublin a tnob assaulted the mourners and attempted to capture the hoarse. .Several uf the mourner* wire roughly bandied, and ail of them had to pass ont of the rhurobvard by an unfrequented way lu order to escape violence. (ONUMtMIOKiI. NI UXAKY. Ssssl*. The Naval sppropriatiou hill, as amended by the Senate cx.min.tlce, was passed ~ The dtorusston of the I'acific railroad funding toll was continued until adjonituncnt. Tbe Chair laid before the Senate the creden tials of (Jeorgs H. I'endlvtun a* a Senator from Ohio, from March 4, 1579 The bill removing restrictions against Uae enlistment of colored •uldier* wa* discussed without action l>w bate on tbe Tiriftc railroad sinking fund hi!) was resumed, after which an < lenitive session was held, followed by adjournment. Mr. Morrill reported man the flhanoe com mi l tee a hill to repair and put ua operation the mint at N#w Orleans ... Mr lilaxn*. from Uae committee on appropriations, reported the general deticaeno si q nqaisUon tall .. The Senate then proceeded to the consideration of the l'actfio rai-rnad smking fnud tali After a long debate akmoltun to adjourn was rejected by 29 to SC. ataJ Mr. Tburman closed the dis cussion. The amendments were then voted down and the bill passed by 40 to 19. . .The House bill to place the name of Gen. Hbields on the retired list of the army was presented, but Mr. Edmund* objected t<. present action on the bill Ths bid to rvpea/ the bankrupt j act was taken up. but ths Senate adjourned without action. The Senate resumed consideration of the , toll to repeal ths bankrupt act. and Mr. Mat hews offered a substitute, establumng a Uni term law on ths subject of bankruptcy. Ad fonrued after an eteco.tivw session. Th* amount for carrying the pension hill into ( < ff#c* wa* lacTwasod to #IBO,OOO , tbe section abolishing ths pension agencies was struck out, aud ths solan** of agents uiod st #4.000, with certain allowances. Au amaodmrut rwquinng lliat tlx office# of panaiou ul* shall be flllsd by disabled Union soldiers was agTeed to. and the bill wa* tbeo passed. Adjouruod. Mr. Butler, of Massachusetts, rose to a ques tion of pnvilage. and offered a resolution directing tbe Hons* to |*oow#d to ths stentmu of a doorkeeper, and nominated Usa. James Hhislds, of Missouri, for lbs office. Mr. Oox. t of New York, raised tbe potnt of order that tb* question was not a privileged una . and after x long and lively discussion botwaen Messrs. Butter and Cox, wbicb caused much hilaritv amoiur the other member*, the sneaker decided that It waa a question which should b* sub- I mitt#) to ths House, (vending which, on motion of Mr lieehe, of New York, the whole subject was (>o#tponed by a vote of 115 to 112. Ad- Joorood. It was decided, by 21# to 4, that Mr. Butler * - resolution to proeswd to tb* stoettoti of a door kcejver was a privileged laastJon. The resnln i tioti wo# to Uie effect that Brigadier Genera! , Shi' lda, of Missouri, be chosen to the offtor. After prolonged fltsrasaiv.n Mr. Olymer. of Fennsylvania nominated Char lea W.'Flald, of Georgia. Mr. Randolph, of Tennessee, nomtn ate a reopening - of the c\s* of the Kiev-total eommntsion and 1 the |>ri'Kiituntiai question. Mr. Dennis *aid he wasoppo-od to the resolution.. . The daficiency appronriatnai bill was amcwidsd further anrl |.*-*eared. Oiqisized by the gale, ahe had sunk an in an instant, carrying to death her human freight. Five persons only were picked up by a panning schooner, and but two of those survived to tell the I brief details of the dioaeter. The wreck I onenred on the southern ooatof the lale of Wight, off Dunnoae Head, about hall past four o'clock in the afternoon. The Influence of tbe l**a •■ Crips. A oorree|Kmdent of a New York pnpnr wan planting (x'tatoea on the l'JUi of tiie month, on the iuoreattc of the moon, or ui the light of the moon; sev eral of liia neigbtiort wate present and a discussion arose a* to the effect the mooti luul on different crops. An ew, ring It# eorreapondent'a inquiry, the {m|ur say a: There ha* been always a {•owrrful aii|>eratitiou that Uie moon ex erted a great influence upon the affair* of maukind, bnt Una idea has prevailed chiefly among thoao who diil not under atsud the uttor iui|xamibility that the miaiu could exert any aueli influenoea. Formerly, the eUr* "were anppoeed to aoaiat the miMin in tlieae interfareuoee with mankind and their labor*, and to be able to " read Uie ntor* " was equiva lent to the {Mmaeaaion of prophetic pow era. Now Uie a tar* have lost Una repu tation, aud Uie moon ia in a fair way to loee what little is left to it. Formerly, craxj people were " u<*matruea, ** bnt 1 now, when we aee a lunatic., (derived from 'una, Uie moon, and really manning | •• moonstruck ") we do not blame the miaw for it. The mi am has now fallen so low a* to be auppoeej by aome to in fluence only tbe twining of benns on the polee, Ui planting of aeeda, the wonting ' of fat pork utMJie pau, nnlena it woe lulled under a growing mouu, and the making of soft eoap. To a reonouable peraou Una eeema a amall buaineaa for Uie moon to l>e engaged in, or a very un likely Uuiig that the moon onu exert any atirh influenoea. If Uie test ia mode, it will be ft —" and I'd got down to a big worm-hole, too!" " Doee your sister Annie ever eey any thing about me, sissy ?" asked an anx ious lover of a UtUe girl ; "Yes," waa the reply, " ah# said if von hod rock era on your shoes they'd make a moe cradle for my doll." >t*tar*' Vtaihrr* ' Vt*tb#r* ' J t D**'l fad to ITix-or* Mr* Winaiuw * RooUiinc Syrup fur oil Allium luradetil to the (wrtofl of teath lug in altildrtu. It ralxevaa th* child from pain, car** wind oellc, ragalatee th* howwl*, and, hy ginng relief and he*2lh to tb* ehiid, gives rwot to the mother. It to an ok) and well-tried remedy. I*#<-*■!•# e#*eir. Old Uachviur* ebo nev~r tmoke. People who will *uff#r from chronic indiges tion. canstipatiou and torpid liver, or •* bU iou*n*a." ebrti Dr. Iloroe • Goldee Madteol Dtocovery and Pteeeoul PuifoUve Peileta are known hi he reliable and speedy rexnedxae for the*# dtoeaac*. Old maids who do not love cat*. P#oj>l* who havr catarrh, annoying and dis euattog every one around them, whan Dr. Kagv * ( atari!. Itexnsdy u known to be a potent remedy f.>r-fhx #l**M Women whFMo not tore babia*. Women who will suffer from oil tho*# pain ful disease* to which the aex to heir, when Dr. Piero#'* Favorite PraacnpUon ia admitted by rvenr lady who use* it to be an effiriant nauedy for the** maiadle*. People who beiiev* their progenitor* were ape*. People who will reed about " Helen * Itabxea, ' and '■ That Husband of Mine," and " That Wife of Mum," and " That Molhec-in-law of Mine, and ' That Son in-law of Mine," and yet fall to read shoot tKri meters in • 1 Tbe Peo pl*'* Common Sen*# Medical Ad riser." Ghrtetmne quarreling with each other on their wa* to Heaven. People who will seek health at fashionable xUr.uK place*, smothering at Horatoga or Long Branch or sacraflrimr thamaelves to " Graham * diet," at Wat** Care* and Hea th Institute*, when th# magnificent Invalids' Hotel, at Buffalo, offer* all the decant oom foru of th* finest hotel*, (xmibined with the be*t unitary advantage*, ltuaaion. Turkish, aud plunge hath*, gymnaatmn. etc..—and to situated in and Deer aome of the finest natural •canary in the Empire Htate. The most peculiar of all are the people who read these paragraph* and fail to profit by them. T#e Hrr*S. To one pound of floor add two teaapoonful* ttooley Yeast Powder, a little exJb hatter the tire of an egg robbed ia th* floor, otto pint . •wort milk, au) the yolk* of two egg* beaten v. ry light Add last, stirring in lightly, ths white# of the egg* well beaten, aud Inks in a square )>an in a quick oven. Break in sqoarwa for the table. CHEW The Celebrated Wood Tag Ping Tonaooik Tn Piojrmm Tansooo Ooxrxrt, New York. Boston, and Chicago If there to a person in th* United State* who doe* not know of Johnson * • .dyne Liniment, w# hope thi* paragraph a. reach that per son* ere. and that he will write n* for partic ular* of it. It is more valuable than gold, silver or pracioua stone*. Established 1865. To obtain tbe highest mar ket price and quick return*. Shipper* of farm truck. produoe. fruit, etc.. should try H. C. Acker, 105 Park Place, New York. RIIIWWM##* aw* llr*4*rkr ail red by taking (Juirk* Insh Tea Prio* 25 eta per lockage. Hold by druggist*. 1 "jA Farmer * Hon or Daughter." He* Advt, Tb# Greatest Dtaeevery el Xhe Age ■ Dr. IYMa*' *#l#t**i*d Vaaetxaa l*mwat I B #or b*e*r* tb* ymblM. asd warrssXad Xs ears PtoirX**. P|—>■!. Oellc.asd Bpa*au.t*k*a Inxsraollr *ad On*. CXwaai* ftb*nm*n. HOT* Thraaxs. Oaa RraMm. Old Motaa aed rata* ia tb* Isaxba Kate, aad Cbma. ***ra*ltr It ha* morse railed ft* toafl* will rem tm witbosl it aft** ww *.-in* H * fair Bill Pr>#*. 44) **ata Da TURLAB' VKSrriSN HORSM I.ISIMBTT. >■ PIM Rctttoa *X OB* Dollar. U sspaemr x* WJ ether, or NO PAT. far tb* *mr* of o*M*. OMa fintma Old Mar**, ate Sold bf all Drwnwta IO Pari Plo*. W*w fwt The MnrteU. U**f Oattl*—Matlw o#k• UN Tata* aad Oharokee OthA o#w MUch Clow* 40 00 #TO 30 B age—Live. 01 Dr*ee*di k* OD% — OfIVA k Lanih* I'S* oft* Cottorv—btlddltwe oVA 10V Flour—W*eton>—Good to Oboto*. It# to 1 W mat#—Good to Oholeo t • to i4l Buckwhmt, par cwt IX to 1 W Wbmt—H#d VTeatrni., I IS to I SX No.- I Mllwa ik##. 1M to 1 D* Hya— Stale —••• TO to W Bartag—Bt*t tl to d# Barter Mai M to Buckwheat SO to 00 Date-Mixed Wrate-U Jit*to MM Peru— Mixed WesXatU W to •> H*y, per cwt....................... 70 to #0 Straw, par ewl 4# to 00 ROM wa—et OC2 ... rr ot to io Pork- .....10 tolO 40 LwiV-011l Steam SM WS Flab -Mackoral, N*. 1, new It 00 tott 00 Vo. X new • tolO 00 Dry Ood. per cwt 4 TX to • 00 Herein*. 8 x'ed. par hex.. II to " PHmlacm-Gro OTNtoOTS Bafiaod. lIN Wool —Oxltfor r FlaecO V 0 to M Trial " It t An*t--.ll*P " *4 to * State XX 41 to 44 Butor—Htate. to W Wenterr -47h01c*...... .... ID to * Vwtwn-dMd tt Prim. *4 to 0* Wtethrn—Ftrkln*. 01 to 10 I'hiMoik test* Factory... 10 to 14 Htate Mkluuned 0T to Weetern OONto 11 tee*—mate and Pennsylvania. 10 to 11 errvaao. Flour • DO to TOO Wh*at— No. 1 Milwaukee. 1 4 to 1 Oorti—Mltad to 40 Date - *0 Hy* '} '* 32 Barley Mall #0 (# 00 iitustxnit, tle#f OaXXl*— . H8 C|( ,f. .... W to 06* Ho**—Drcesed 00 to Odjf Floue—Pennkjlvanla Kxtra T M to 8 10 Whsat—Red WMteru 1 20 to 1 10 Hy* 07 to • Ooro—Yellow J to 'J Mixed - M to UN Oats— ■ to ■ Petroleum—Crude OOittol* \ Bsflned, UN Woot-Colorado M to 14 Texas M to M OaUfornla,.... 11 # il ■corns. 8 heap Oo*to OTN Hog# 00 .1 Ooj} Floor—Wloontn and MlnnasoU.. 6IS to 71# I OPTO—Mixed as to FfN ! (late- " S4 to 00 1 Wool—Ohio and Pounsylvanl* XX. <0 to 42 California Fall II to 24 saiuHToa, was* Beef Cattle... (Mto OSN I xmfaa 0T to 10 Has* UTN 0# VITBMWI, MOM U**i ttoitla—Poor to Okolo#. 4 4" 4# 6 *0 ' Ha*#p a, T 00 to T Ti I L Mite TOO to 'OO 1 MME. DEMOREST'B ILLUSTRATED PORT FOLIO OF FASHIONS FOR THE SPRING AND SUMMER 07 1878. A |rf* ma* B.nnllfnl •' *4 !■• Prttto. "nil—- --1- 800 LA MOB HXUimnuW tt tta umtmd B^BtfttoMa.t.dtas all Us ttmtatd —4 •Mini — R-G— tar LILM UI INUUM'T DM. WLTT HWIL and Bnttieh tirrriyiii.R. ■■■■! tt T —T—-' —t Bmty Lata amm tt bmfc tt La—UlMttMim. gtawnttW Nw, llwtt IrtlKi. ill MMK, IIKMOIIKMT. 17 Ktttat Uth MtNM. MME. DEMOREST'9 WHAT TQ WEAR FOR THE SPRING AND SUMMER OF 1878. A BOOK or I*o MOW. Tliwiili 1.1 tali Hi MiWi 'tt* —rr >' ita.rit ifl mnlil ■ wwt AWWO I iIW ml OMMi ■iiM. ta.tadlm Mrisnrlr. Tn..l.gii UM. Trettln. WIIAM aad Kiwiki OsaSta, O* m t ell ImwniHi. Jewelry. OIIA.HI. MBltouy. tta.. MA. wMA taU liWMta ta DIM. MU.M. ul niuM ulirwilii. tat MnikiuM, MllHatta, Dratt Ream. Hi U4M. I WM, l> WW. ft tai. Hint M MII DISMOIUMTi 17 VOmmX. Uth Mtrwwt, A HEW. lEAtmrUL, HHTEETAIHIHt AHO OOXrUOUOUITX FAULT f A7EE: The Demorest Quarterly Journal of Fashions, Fb IMB ii A • . h . . . n a ■! k— W) lit —^mfctmlAf H*>.iwim 1 iw.r nrtt Mi ran— ta,M . hrtlEatt total tt tt. MW. toff tar LwAtaf aaAUhUtaml P—a MMIMBI IIA W. JKNNIHOH DEMOHKMT, 17 Kmmt 14th MLtmL Hi.ati lihXTinr ro hiaui. TU mm ' •fkrturera uf tiharwUn* Oavfclry OuodUlon I'kwiWl infirm u. that Utttr [ewdar will af foctunlljl tor. cut hue Ml IM all othwr dls- H HI ui Lu... uid that thwjr will loot warn the Mae and wMght uua quarter. I,arga d aeuoaU U par MAUI uwuuie two to Ibra* hundred baga. OBCAIS sls=.llßgfca&aS; Ladles Desiring Employment Met hear of mm i|nul U lad, ilk. inrapellra tar a ' taw kim wt dag. b, rtM Uw| Ma m tan 010 : ItoMl . wmk A Mm. Mi Omar, wn <1 W. I j OmVii i A Oe , Milium Aiun. Mm Tort ; IFIHIi hrar's Mi * Doctor 1 UAu. erAare far In to lull' MaroA (Liana f HIT kuaee ul fmi'aaa will. im aMMtoa to tt. pro Ma.< .<• 1111 . .intoM. na to KmBHW* XM* ul huu t' .iM". to. da—ttiai_ Itat w Mnr la mm mmm Mack Alm Mtta HetXtuJi He, > Untar, I I FHw hTOmuu. IgrillHlk (Mha'Dtak laal ) 1 Steal OhMh, h m—i mmm ! wild, warhad tato .liter lr w ilrrf I rU i Urnau Ul MMM (to nubl c armada. Mwatrto to farms . rufttuftn a J NKUAEA no.. Mm wA. K. ; E7EBY YEAH TOO LOSE Mtoa lbaa h. mMj -Hui Mni r Aht - B# MM kl till ul him . mm rua. mm pay na|M . b. ymr mmm I|H| ul MM MiHHirar.l H>Th Uat Br.la. up'm IBM. I IIUn 800. AlitoU Utl tar tea. rm LtM Ul tor. Mw. L.i ttl )tta> tar , lanrH JONES Of EINQHAMTON, BhMMttM. B. T. TXT BEST FERTILIZERS. fmi A (.carina iMHia tCirfl, mm I RR L BTORNOTO'RETOTO NMAW TO UTOSTTT Iw DMin Etotar MtM tatoftou. HAM in HUT IBM in) iHHI brr Ikto tarr*. Ito.i.un M MMtol. uauia to tar yrtto. —to. IGUANO. srcJraMLmtataH* [wMMMTQ *•- ■— a a caiman, toeto 1* ayru-eilefel 1.1.t0.M to Mtake IT EASY. " Common-Sanaa Chair* and Rockara. W k to Alteon StoAny ruth Bar tola b* tt. uwAr M.wata. ..todtaf.A.^^^ Bm neru>e.l. to *imrel rraaa. ul fall Itrrtoin.i tar ana* Mam pen to rank btolle. to will b* ww taw. to eat aßßtaat. OMOAB q Moan, m mnleell Bum. M. Tork BABBITT'S TOILET SOA> I ptoto Ttar mm TBiunr •at/u"iii. , v Aa MMH j For Um Ifl tfif NurMfy It Ho f Q . . Vtt MB aBBMBB Ik BBRII #*BTk MMirf WdMlKif H(VS T W4. 'B>kßk| 1 —km aUt Bd WBl M kB * | THE GOOD OLD JTAND-BI MEHCII MDSTII6 UfMEVT FOR MAM AND MKANT. tatuuuai SB mat AJww* waraa Alwnr laadr A;wen kr.kr Baa aarar fa* tallrl Itol ■ llUto. kawr UHll 11. Tb. wtiwU wartt HW"■ tt u 111 I SB ark a waHJa. Th. nm wbwe atoktak ata. wUL BOLD BT ALL WBOKJUrB TBWA 1 DR. WISTAR'S ! Balsam of Wild Cherry. 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