INSANITY. THs Kr no |„ pepniatien nd Ikr rmr a | In England and Wains the ratio of in s inn to win population is one to 373; iti Massachusetts, one to 423; New York, one to 587; iftinois, one to 866; and lowa, one tot 1,101. This shows that the density ot popnlation has a more or loss predisixwiug effect, producing, as it decidedly does, a deteriorating iuflueuco on the human race, morally and physi cally. The increase in the nntntar of msane in the State of New York for the jvist quarter of a century is over ltXl per cent., and, a ceo riling to experts in nieu tal diseases, tins increase is not ootiflu.d to any partionlar sections of the State, Lint is mete ox less general. No one who has been a constaut read er of the dsily newspsj>ers for the past few years can fail to have been impress ed with the givat iuctcase in the repcrts of suicides, homicides aud the commit ment of alleged lunatic* to the different city and county asylums. While much of this is directly due to the rapid in crease of population of New York and neighboring cities there must he other causes for the disease at work. Increase of popul %Hon brings with it overcrowd ing, disease-prod noi ng anmuimluigs. had sanitary arrangements, which, by lowering the tone of the people, Kith in a moral a$ well as a physical jaunt of. view, dirqptly predisposes the very poor i and middling classes to mental disease. l>r. Tnk<\ a well-known London alien-i iat, has written a work atider tko title of "lasaaitv in Ancient and Modern Life." In this he elaborately investigates the causes of mental dis eases in (treat Ilritain, where the in crease of lunatics has been enormously large duriflg the last half century. Af- j ter a careful examinatiou of all the statistics, showing that the unniber of insane people confined in asylums in Euglami atrl Sod laud at the present j time reach** 06,696, Dr. Tuke concludes ! that the principal causes of mental dis ease at the present time are: First, in toxication. including the action of alco hol aud allied stimulants, not only in j the individuals taking them to excess, but upon his or her offspring, whiae weakness prod noes degeneracy in the succeeding generation; swiid, that de fective nourishment, lcadiug as it does to exhaustion and malnutrition of the uervons centers, "cause* degeneracy of the race, the evidence of which can be sivn in large, iQeuficieutty-fed popula tion. Closely allied to this, Dr. Take considers bed samtarv arrangements aud overcrowding in ftlthy dwellings. I'nder the third class of causes he con-1 aiders moral influences, " partly mixed in character which excite or depress the emotions profoundly, as a dissolute life, depraved habits, domestic scirrow or mis ery, commercial speculations and loams, religious excitement, disappointment in love and general overwork." Under the fourth and last head is considered intellectual strain as a cause of insanity, which he holds to be the least frequent of all causes, if examintsl alone. An examination of the reports of the principal lunatic asylums in this conn try, public ami private, con firms to a very great extent the observations of Dr. Tuke made in England. A Hiri Vanquishes a Wolf. Five miles from Eureka. Kaa., lives a prosperous farmer named Robert Loy, who is engaged in raising sheep. His "boys are all girls," and one of his daughters, Mary Belle Loy, barely fourteen years of age,is the shepherdess, whose rosy checks, snn-burned face and graceful form as sh® mounts her pony would excite the envy of many city belles and charm th® eye of a connois -ear in search of a sensitive rose to com plete the latest work of his easel. Some weeks -aKe,while looking after her wool ly wards, she discovered a full-grown wolf of the coyote species and an nucommou ly iarge one stealthily approaching the flock, when she pat her horse to his speed, %nd the wolf, feeling that his sanitary condition in that locality was very unsatisfactory, the race and cbas eommenced, over the hills and prairie, neither showing any indication of fatigue, tintd he was compelled to consider him, self "ran down." Now came the "tug of war, ' and any one who has ever seen a coyote at bay snapping and snarling, holding his position against a dozen dogs, can realize her situation as the acgressor. Nothing daunted, however, she unbuckled her bridle rein, and with the ring at the end, and this only, male good her position as mistress of the sit uation, and without alighting from her sit:ldle she hail soon disabled her foe, ssved her lambs, and deprived him of afc least one toothsome morsel. Then she started oat for the nearest neighbor to the battle-ground, nearly two mile® distant, for assistance, but found no one at home whoconld assist her save anoth er eirl, who mounted another pony, and firmed only with a dull knife, these two yonng girls were soon galloping over the prairie to save the scalp, for which the county pays a "royalty" when pre sented to the proper officer. When thev returned, th® principal of this Red Rid ing-Hood escapade had partially recov ered, and wag moving off. At this junc ture he was again invited to remain, while one girl threw him down and the other to administer Western justice by searching for his jngular vein with th® knife. Such instance® of feminine bravery as this are rarely met with, even on the frontier. Srittley and his Habits, A London correspondent of the Free man * Journal (Dublin) writes of Stan ley, the African explorer; "A renewal ot celebrity attends the traveler Stanley all the more vivid for his short absence. Interviewers again besiege his doors, and furnish us with the minutest details of the habit* and customs of the man who has already furnished us with such clever and amns ing details of himself as a traveler. These enterprising interviewers inform us that Mr. Stanley takes no exercise, oats nothing, drinks nothing,but tea, and works fro*n morning till night. The chairs, tablea, sofas and settees—nay, even the very floor—are laden with * books, newspapers, mannscripts, and •naps. Nobody has ever venture*! to dust a single article in Mr. Stanley's room ever since he first took possession. He sits all day long on a wicker stool about eight inches high, of the exact shape and pattern as that in use among Nisms-Niams, and he writes on a little table of perhaps treble that height, just large enough to hold an ink-pot, a quire of foolscap, and the meerschaum, his faithful companion throngh all his Afri can travels. We are informed also that he loves to be surrounded with flowers while he works, but the flowers he loves require no watering, no care, for they are artificial And thus does he work on amid the apparent oonfusion which is order and punctiliousness to him, for he can lay his hand on any book or paper he may want without losing a moment in t'ie search, so well does he remember the place where he has stowed it away. Be Something. It is the duty of every one to take some active part as an actor on the stage of life. Some seem to think that they can vegetate, as it were, without being anything in particular. Man was not made to rust out his life. It is expect ed he should "act well his part." He must be something. He has a work to perform which it is his duty to attend to. We are not placed here to grow np, pass through the various stages of life, and then die without having done any tb;ng for the benefit of the hnman race. Is a man to be brought up in idleness ? Is he to live upon the wealth which his ancestors have acquired by frugal indus try ? Is he placed here to pass through life an automaton ? Has he nothing to perform as a citizen of the world ? A man who does nothing is useless to his country as an inhabitant A man who does nothing is a mere cipher. He does not fulfil the obligations for which he was sent into the world, and, when he dies, he has not finished the work that was given for him to do. He is a mere blank in creation. Some are born with riches and honors npon their heads. But does it follow that they have noth ing to do in their career through life ? There are certain duties for every one to perform. Be something. Don't live like a hermit, and die uuregretted. Hew the Weather la Foretold. In former times the chief herald of the weather was the almanac, which am bitions! v prophesied a whole year of cold ain\ hoot, wet wnd dry, dividing up the kinds of weather quite impartially, if not always correctly. lint the almanac, gixxl as it was now aud then, and the weather-wise farmers, correct as sometimes tliev might have been, were net always aide to impart exact information to the country; and they have boon thrown quite into the ahade of Into by one who is popularly known under the somewhat disrespectful title of "Old Prob," or "Old Prooabili ties." lie has become the herald of the weather to the sailor near the rooky, dangerous coasts; to the farmer watch iug lus crops, and waiting for g\nd days to store them; to the traveler anxious to pursue his journey under fair skies; and to the girls aud laiya who want to know before they start to the woods for a pic nic what are the "probabilities" as to rain. Every one who reads the daily paper is familiar with the "weather record" issued from the war department office of the chid signal officer at Washington. These reports give first a general state ment of what the weather has leeii f.w the past twoutv-four hours all over the country from Maine to California, and from the lakes to the South Atlantic States; and then the "probabilities 1 ' or "indications" for the next twenty-four hours over this same broad territory. The anuual reports of the chief signal officer show that in only comparatively few instances do these daily prediction* fail of fulfillment. The reason these prophecies are so true is a simpleaud yet a wonderful one. The weather itself tells the observer what it is gouig to do some time in ad vance, and the telegriph sends the news all over the country from the central signal office at Washington. The atmosphere has weight, just as water or any other fluid, although it seems to bo perfectly bodiless. We must comprehend that the transparent, invisible air is pressing inward toward the center of the earth. This pressure variea according to the state of the weather, and the changes are indicated by an instrument called a liaromoter. Generally speaking, the falling of the merenry in the tube of the barometer indicates rain, and its rise heralds clear weather. Sometimes the rise is followed by cold winds, frost and ice. What these changes really indicate, can be determined only by comparing the baro rnetic changes, at certain hours, iu a nam tier of places very far apart. This is done by the signal service. Observa tions are made at about one hundred aud forty stations, in differeut jairticms of the country, at given hours, and the results are telegraphed at once to Wash ington, where our faithful "weather clerk" receives them, reasoning out from them the "probabilities" whieli he pub lishes three times in every twenty-four hours. But the atmosphere varies not only in weight, but also in temperature. The thermometer tells us of such change*. Besides this, the air contains a great amount of moisture, and it shows as much variation iu this characteristic as in the others. For the purjioae of mak ing known the changes iu the moisture of the atmosphere, an instrument has been invented called a "wet-bulb" ther mometer. We are thns enabled to ascertain the weight or pressure, the temperature, and the wetness of the air, and now it onlv remains for us to measure the force, anj point out the direction, of the wind. This is done by the familiar weath<%- vane and the anemometer. The vane shows the direction, and the anemome ter is an instrument which indicate® the velocity of the wind. It is by a right understanding of all these instruments that tlie signal ser vice officer is enabled to tell what the weather says of itself; for they are the pens with which the weather writes out the facts from which the officer makes np his reports for the benefit of all con cerned. Thns. however wildly and blindlv the storm may seem to c m.', it sends messengers telling jnst where it arose, what course it will take, and how far it will extend. But it tell® its secrets to those only who pay strict attention.— James 11. Flint, in St, Xicholas. American Ingenuitj at the L'xpo-dtiun. A correspondent writes from Paris: | The Paris Exposition is the interpreter of the thought, and the orator of the text. Now take some of the work of the j hand of American labor as you see, and study it in the Paris Exposition, and trace it over the earth. In ail the gor geous sections of the more pretentious I ancient nations, there is not one that ! does not partly pay unconscious tribute to American ingenuity. The agricultural implements of England are many of them mcxlelled after American originals. The watchmakers of Geneva admit the suc cessful competition of the New England chronometer. The printed cottons of Manchester yield to the superiority of Massachusetts fabrics, often sold over British oonnters to foreign customers. The jewelry of Italy is woven out of the finest fibers of the gold of Nevada. The delicate processes of French refining and metallurgy are conducted with the quicksilver of California, American sewing machines are for sale in all the cities in Europe; American scales are i used in',the distant capitals of the Orient. American pianos and parlor melodeons | are bonght by tho humble foreigners, and even by those in good circumstances, who cannot afford the costly instruments of Paris and Lendon, and even trained experts prefer the former to the best product of the great piano makers of Germany. The cutlers of Sheffield ad mit the finish of the cheaper and better work of American manufacture. A Dry fioods Palace far. A correspondent of the A nieri'-an Manufacturer says; The United States Rolling Stock Company, at their shops in Chicago, are getting up what may lie called a new departure. This is a palace dry goods car, to be used on railroads bv dealers in dry goods, carrying sam ples along as well as stock to be deliver ed when sold. This car is sixty feet long, not inclnding platforms at each end, or sixty-six feet long over all. It is built as light as possible and yet is strong, ' The construction of the body is very simple, having only two large windows on each side for lighting purposes, but at each end there is to be a stateroom for the traveling merchants to occupy nighta or days, while on the roads. These staterooms are lighted by three small windows each. The inside of the car was not finished for use, so we can not tell just how it is to be arranged, but no doubt convenient for the pur pose. This ear has a sub-cellar, ns they call it, between the fore and aft trucks, where may be stored large quantities of domestic goods while in transit, and it haa what may lie called a mansard roof, or double deck, for light and ventila tion, giving it the appearance of a sleep ing car—except the finish. This is a new enterprise, and it remains to be seen upon trial if it shall prove a sue- I cesaful one. A WirFs Fight Willi a Rattlesnake. Miss Mary Flesh man, (laughter of Perry Fleshraan, living two miles cast of Platte City, Mo., recently hart a thril ling adventure with a rattlesnake. She waa ridiDg on horseback along through the woods, when she dropped her glove. She dismounted to secure it, and as she was stooping to pick it up she discovered a large rattlesnake, at least six feet long, coiled and in the act of striking. It did Btrike, but failed to reach her and fell at her feet. She sprang back with a cry of horror, but almost instantly the snake recoiled and struck again. This time the venomous fangs struck in the front part of her bonnet, and the hold ! tearing out with the force of the blow and the weight of the snake, it fell on the ground at her feet. Instantly it reared up in front of her, its venomous breath right in her face. Scarcely knowing what she did, she seized the snake just below the head with both hands, aDd holding for a moment, with desperate energy she slung it from her nd fled. It was a narrow escape, but Miss Fleshman sustained no other in juries than those which result from vio lent excitement and nervous prostra tion. Fashion Notes. Tinted veils are very fashionable. Silver back combs an' again in vogue. The fashionable fan la of medium sise. Veils cover the whole face this sum iner. The " I .avenue" overskirt grows in ; favor. Wide collars and deep cutis are much worn. tlrav is the color for a mountain or side snit. It is the style to wear a large bouquet iu the lelt. The " Aiiuee " is a new and favorite style of slipper. Japanese fans are still the favorites for ordinary use. I.ow shoes are worn aa much as hut tou t K sits this season. Old-faslooued jHitigeo is again used for dresses ami wraps. Faucy organdie dresses are trimmed with Valenciennes luce. Iceland floss is much used for crochet ing shawls and sac.pies. Oue of the u veltics in dress giants is the "bourrstte batista," Smyrna laee is out of favor, ami is not seeu on any of the late garments. Surplice basques are worn by matrons; blouse waists by girls in their teens. Swiss aud muslin ueckties, edged with lace, are worn with neglige costumes. Chauiberv cambric ia cue of the prettiest materials for summer dresses. French hut's and grass fringes are the most popular trimmings for all thin ma terials. Kid gloves for evening wear have the wrists finished with plaiting* of lace or ribbon. The "Mandraliu" is the uauie given to a graceful head dress of lace just iu trodueed. Moruiug wrappers and aacqucs are extensively trimmed with colored em broidery. Torchon and Hussian laces are very much used this summer for trimmiug white suits. A uew pastime for ladies is making curtains of Japanese silk and pasting figures upon them. The materials most fashionable for the weuding gown of the present are ailk or satiu brocade. Carpets are now made to r<er. A panache of from three to six, short, slender ostrich tips, bunched together, is used on Is miu-ts that are to be worn iu midsummer. A pretty idea is to entwine the upper part of the back comb with small fi-.w ers, such as white violets, mignonette, mvosotis, etc. Light transparent linens woven in crape-like patterns is made up in polo naise®, which arc worn over silk or vel vet overskirts. Dressy round hats are turned np only on one side, and the whole brim is faced with gold braid, or with occasional rows of silver braid. Leghorn hats of deepest yellow tints are 111 regular Wattean shapes, with the brim indented on each side as well as on front and behind. A pretty home dress is of stoue colored bourrotte, trimmed with kilting of the same, plastron sleeves and bows of olive green faille. The broad-brimmed Fra Diavolo, and the picturesque Peg Woffington hats are much worn by young ladies at watering places, or when out driving. Both these shapes have very soft wide brims that are richly trimmed inside with gilt or silveT braid, or else plain velvet or satin, bordered with beads. or trimmed with flowers. Yor.vr, Ginns' HATS. —Tho Derby hat is the shape chosen for general use by ladies. This has a stiff high crown that ; mav be either round or square lopped, i and a narrow brim that curls upward all around. Black or brown chip is most nseful for such hats, and the trim ming is a band and binding of wide gal I loon, or else folds of black grenadine, with n gray wing or a dark ostrich tip stuck in the left side. For more dressy occasions broad-brimmed chip, Leg horn, or rustic straw hats arc worn with oddly indented brims, and are trimmed with riblnin or gauze and a half wreath of flowers iu colors to suit the dress. Thus a pretty dress of pale blue bunting is worn with a white chip hat trimmed with bluets and daisies; a dress of ecrn poDgee, made with a wash er woman over skirt and pleated blouse trimmed with cream colored ganze and i deep red Jacqueminet roses. A white cross barred muslin with pleated yoke blouse and a kilt skirt trimmed with a plaid sash of gray, black, and scarlet bars. The round hat is of white organdy muslin shirred on tine wire, and trimmed with bows of ribbon like the snsh. A Singular Woman. Miss Emma Bartlett, who died in New York recently, was one of the "queer creatures "of this country. Hhe began business iu New York some years ago, willing halter-straps which were made for her by a harness maker on the Bow ery. At first he trusted her witli one, which she told him she could sell. While standing near a livery stable fronting Union Square, a horse broke its halter. Hhe asked the stable owner if he wanted n uew halter-strap. Ho [said "Yes." Then she asked what he crave for halter-straps. He told her, i then sue rau to a harness shop; told the man she could sell one if she had it. He trusted her. Hhe sold tho strap, re -1 tnmed to tho shop wi'h the pay for it. Then the man trust* d her with three straps to go ont and sell. Hhe disposed of them in one afternoon, and at night went to his house and paid him for them. The next day siie sold seven halter, straps, and paid for them as before- Tbe third day she sold nine, and paid for them. By this time she had ronde and saved 81.75, which sum she invested in straps, which were soon sold. Hhe added to her stock a few halters, and in time a few bridles, that she sold at dif ferent stables she visited. Thus she worked her way into a good business, and cafhe to own before her death a har ness manufactory iu which she gave em ployment to one hundred persons. Hhe was a small woman, never weighing to exceed ninety pounds. Her voice was neither feminine or masculine, and she had a light beard, s® that she shaved three times a week. What was more singular was the fact that liquor never affected her brain, though she drank of it whenever a customer would drink. Hhe used to drink with her customers, and thus drove better bargains with them. Til FLY TOPICS. 11 is Fly rivor aw " lu-nutifully dronaovl with wliitv foathorw, ami thoir l>dnw paintovl in ! many oolora." In 1H77, in Fnglaml, sixty thousand po*tago MtampM woro found IIHWO in lot ior IIOXOM ami oara, hnvnig luwm ruhhovl off through innufltoiout "liokiug ami atiokiug," ami tlvo million lot torn woro ownrtignovl to tho roturuod lottor uJHcv, Two boya atarttal frotia U K-110110, 111., iiu quoat of mivouturo. They wnlkovi along a ruilr. ■ml for Urn m '♦, and tlion, very tirwl, thoy ant down to reel. Vory SVHIU thov foil anhwii, and ono lay wit it hia hoad iicrcss a rail, so that whou a tram oatuo along ho wan hohou hvl. Home people lielteve they oan think faster ou ratlrviuvl trams than anywhere clue, the tlnvory being that the rapid motion quicken* the action of the mind. Some iiiAuouee of that kind may have affected a man ami woman who met for the first time while travehug from F.huira, N'. Y., into PtMiuaylvauia. They eat in the same Kent, fell iuto cohvwrnn tiou, wore irrxNunlibly nttracUvl toward onv'h otuer, nuvl at the end of HOVWU hour* were married. tlen. Le Due, the oomminHiouer of ngriculture, t experimenting on a new root called chufa. It grown iu Lille like the mitato, is nlKiut the nt.'.e of a waluut tuivl lian the flavtir of an altmutvl. It in no trouble to raise, aud the experimenta made deruouatrate that liogw and chick eua fed ou it are of the moot superior quality, not only iu their aire, but in tlu lucaiottK aweetneaa of their fleali. It i prtu. He was divorced, iu 18114, from hia wife, who pursued her matnmomal venture* with such aucceaa that, when ahe dieil, recently, ahe havl outlived two other huntiamla, aud liml acxutmulated £IO,OOO worth of property. She bequeathed $5,000 of it to her flnvt hunhaud, but, when the executor went to hunt him up, he fouud that he had died five ) earn l>eforw iu poverty and ' want There are over 300 Catholic chnrehen in Rome, independent of St. l'eter'a aud the aevcu catliovlrala. The government returtiH show that in 1870 the ecclesias tical population of the " Ktcrnal City " waa an follows: Uatiiiuais At Bishops HA Priests am! |>er*oita in boly orders 1.4ti9 I'uplls dsstiued for holy orders. Monks and Friars . 2,K3'J Nuns, SiU-r of Uhartly, etc £llß Total 7.400 There arc sixty-one mouaKtv'ricK fvr men, and evcnty-t>ne couveuta for female*,; tweutv-neven college* *tid fifty-eight *c!ioof§ vlirectcl by uuu* for the education of girl*. Among the IH-BI knowu Americanisms, uutiNcsl ami Bcarwly unilcratoiHl in Kug land, are looomotive for " engine," rail road fi>r " railway," fiorwe car* for " tramway," depot for " Ktation," *witch for"ahunt," baggage for " luggage," store for " shop," bureau for "cheat of ilrawverK," clover for " gotaln at tired," K)at\l for "xleala," calico for " print*," com for "maize," dry ginwla for " draper*' article*or halwrdaaherv," fall for "autumn," dres* for "gown,"fix for " repair," gtie** for " think," hard ware for " irou-mongery," hold on for ** atop," homely for " ugly," loafer for "lounger,' mad for "angry," mail for " poet," pantaloomi for " tronw-r*," vest for " jacket," quite for " very," rooster for "cock," wek for "ill," nleigh for " aledgc," *toop for "porch," MlßJN'U dtnt for " brace*," veninon for "deer meat," aud wood* for " n wood." An Atnoi iran merchant in Pari* has iasueil a sumH blue book of fourteen pag*, on " Three Work*of Art," maun factored in San Francisco expreaaly for the international exhibition. The first is "a massive ami elegant porte-monnaie ami card ease " made of gold and quartz from the mines of two States ana two Territories. The seeond is a ladies' powder-box and puff, surmounted by a grizzly In-ar in the art of crossing the great overland railwuv. The thin! i* a jewel casket, •' representing the substan tial mines of the Pacific coast." On the cover is " a pictorial and historical re presentation of a buffalo hnnt on the plains," with big trees and a railroad track with two bulls dashing across it to evade the hunters who are in close pur snit. The casket contains nearlv nine teen jKtnuds of solid gold and auriferons quartz, and with the .other pieces is valued at $."10,000. The case is made of different species of wood grown on the Pacific coast. Having been Ihiuikl up in Paris during the seige, the editor of the London Truth ought to know something about the taste of the meat of the various kinds of animals which were then used for , human food. A shop for the sale of horseflesh having been recently opened lin L>ndon, he writes aprojKis of it: " A contemporary calls upon me to give my experience in horseflesh. It is likethir<(- ! rate beef. It cannot be said to have a disagreeable taste, for it has no taste at all. Donkey, on the other hand, is de licious, and infinitely better tlian beef or mutton. This the French soon dis covered during the siege of Paris, for a | ' portion ' of donkey cost about six times as much as a ' portion ' of horse. Cats taste exactly like rabbits; it is impossi ble to distinguish Iwtwecn them. The objection to rata is that when cooked their flesh is gritty. This objection, however, is somewhat epicurean, for, ex cept for this grittiness, tliey are a whole some and excellent article of food. lam surprised that there is not a socioty for the promotion of eating rats." Illhulons ltees. Wo have always admired the way.says j the Lis Angeles (Cftl.) H< rahl, "tiie little busy bee improves each shining hour," but there is one thing about the I indiistriouscreature that is not generally ! known. An immense honey production . hns grown up in Lon Angeles and San ' Diego counties in the past two or three I years. Every canyon and coigno of van tage in Isith counties has its bee farm. Colonel Chalmers Scott informs ns that the Irees in San Diego county have de veloped A great- fondness for ornngo blossoms and grapes. It was the fashion formerly to make 4,000 or 5,000 gallons of wine at (iuajome every year,but since the liees have made their appearance the vineyard at that point has fniled to yield. The grape forma as of yore, lint the juico is sucked oat by the bees, thus anticipating the wino proaa. They dip into tiie orange blossoms also, and the oouseqnenco is that the fruit is dwarfed. Of course, iti Los Angeles eonnty wo have enough grapes and orange blossoms to make the depredations of the insect a very trifling matter. Besides, the boe ranches nre located at such a distance from our vineyards and orange groves that any injury they oonld possibly in flict njon them is a very trifling matter. Home jllfeeling has grown up among the bee men anrt the sheep men of Ban Diego oonnty, from a cause which de velops an interesting trait on the part of the bees. As is geuerally known, a great portion of the feed of bees in Southern California ia the blossom of the white sage. It makes a white and agreeable honey. But when sheep have once pastured among white sage the bees will have nothing more to do with it. It is quite likely that at the next session of the Legislature there will be an effort both upon the part of the bee men and the sheep men to obtain some legislation from their respective stand points. If the bees multiply at the rate which has characterized them for the past three years, the controversies which will arise about them may rival the fierce collisions of the fence and no-fence meu. Wo have thus far had the sweet; wo shall shortly be treated to the sting. SUMMARY OF NEWS. _____ ■ •■tarn and MUldln State* Fire# ; Crocker# FerUltxer Work* at Buffalo, N. Y.. wnrn destroyed by tiro, causing * loss of i tlOO.IHK), oil which Uio iusuranoo U #*o,ooo , at Klmlrn, N. Y , lloed A C-oo|ier'a foundry ii,oOo, covered by tliaiir alio*-, amt at Newark, N. J., the deatriiotlou by (lie (tallies of Owen M.Tarlaiid'a building In I Milled 111 a loaa of al*>n( #J&,UOO, which la | |NxrUatly iuaiirtal. Ira It Wright, the defaulting treasurer of South 1 ladlei, Mass., lias been found guilty ef eint-efrl|!i,i fiD.OOU and sentenced to live iralt 111 Stale prison. Tbe Aauiea have destroyed a pirUoU of Die Taunton (Maas.) Tack building, causing an estimated loaa of #7A,OUO; in surance, VtiO.tHitt Thirteen bull bugs were destroyed by a Are lu buffalo, N. Y., entailing a loaa of about #100,00(1. While several of the bova of Uio New York Juvenile Asylum were playing base ball, Jauiot CrawleV, agetl fourteen, waa adiuielit ill tbe working of the blast furuaoe of Stepbeu bobbins A Sons. I'blladelpbia. and an effort was made to cool it off, when an arch of Are waa formed lu the furuaoe, which fell Into Uie water Iw-tieatli. I'lte great steam presstue thus formed fatally sea lib J tbe sui-oruiteiideiit, John MoChcsuey, and tiadly tnluicd six other uieo. William K. tiray, who swindled New Y'ork bankers and others out of large sums by altet lug tbe face value uf tioiida, aud tboli tied to Kurope, wliele be coliUtiilml bta nefarious oprratlous, evatbug justice for a long lime, arrived tu New York Uio other day tu charge of a detective. Tom llsllard, a noted oouutrrfaiter who waa serving a term of thirty years m the Albauy (N Y I peuiteottarv for making counterfeit United Mtates notes, stabbed himself lu various parts of tbe body with a shoemaker's knife, 1U- Atctuig fatal wounds. At a confers II ou with New Y'ork bankers Secretarv Stiriiuan said tbat be would begin to make sjKx'ie j.aymeuls ou August Ist. and that be had In tbe treasury t I'Jl .OuO.OOU IU gold exclusively for tbe purpiees of reatiuiptiou. Tho most mij>ortaiit chanves made retvntly are the reuioxalaof (iuin ral Arthur from the pOsltiuu of collector of the (ort of Nr York am) A. It. Cornell from the posltiou of uaval offl.vr of the same citv. tieueral Arthur ta anooM'iliii! by liein-ral F. A. MerriU and Mr t'oruell hy Coiuuel S. W. Iturt. While Oongresa waa 111 aeaeioti the President UotlUUa(eitville, Ohio, Johu Stewart, while drunk, applied for taure lupior at the aaioou of one Mccann. lioluK refused he took a posi tion ou the opjxMlte side of the street, behind a tree, aud when Met'ami and his little son ap peared Stewart shut and killed tl.em both A iiassuig clliaen was wounded by tbe shots fired liy Stewart. In consequence of a notification received by Oowruor (■ear, of lowa, that tram]* are in festiu* Marsballlowu and uUirr point* lu the Slat* and have taken p>aeea*iou uf rallruad trams in some caaes, he ha* issued a proclama tion urging upon Ihe mayor* and sheriffs to be prompt and diligent in preserving the peace and calliug attention to that itortluu i f there n> d statutes authortrmg them to call oat the uiillUa or other cltircus wbeu deomod exp.li eut- The Arkansas l>mocrats have nominated State officer* and adopted a , latform opp>stug eiiforiTal resumption, favoring the e.piaUration of the gtweobalek, gold and silver dollar and endorsing the House presidential election in vestigation. • William Kulchffe. a professional swunmer, while bathing in the Missis® PJ>l river at Sew Orleans, was struck by a pas lug barge and drowned. At IndejietideuoK, lowa. Clarence Shaw shot aud instant J V killc! M: Mattie Kherwood, the daughter of a prominent rttiien. He then so.-t and killed himself. Jealousy was tbe supposed cause. James (u!mon\ long employed lu the United State* Kxjtress uffliw at Cuictntiali, *•■!• a package of money aggregating #11,030 and de camped for pari# unkuowu. leaving Udnnd a wifo aud four childreu A body of flftv roluuteers. uuder Captain S|efTT, wrfi defeated at W Ulow Hprmgs, Northern Oregon, ht a large fierce of Indiana, t'aplaiu H|-rrv and nearly all hia command are reixirted killed or wonuded. The uprising among tbe Indiiana of Oregon and adjoining Territ- no coutuuie*. anil hostile bands are roaming through that pvtion of the country, increasing iu tiumler* daily. Tlie numU r of hostile Indiana on tbe war path ifi Idaho an J Oregon i# estimated at about I >emo-ratio State oonreutlou* hare twen hold 111 M. Kigali an 1 M.*i>un. In the former the t.Cifl nominated l headed br Orlando M Harm* for gorerm'r. and the platform "adopted arraign* the Ilrptibltoan party. cudoe*o* the l'r.wi >!ciili*l election iarenUgaUou. dwUrw (hat "|told and .liver coin ar* Ike money of the CooatitaUon, and that all W*r nirwift thonld tw converted into *uch coin at the wt.l of the bolJer." and la "oppoeed to the further forcible reduction of the volume of rornwr. In Mioouri the platform ad.pted oppose* laige •tautlnift artnira. diclere* that while the 'loca tion mho ahoold l*c l*remOtent la arttled "that doaure of all frauda connected with thai election and the aocouatabillty of all who were gmlUly concerned," denounoe* the nation al hanking avatem, *ara gr*rnt>eck* alumid he made a legal tender, demand* the rtje-al of the reanmptton act. urge* Mi*i**ippi rtrer tm proretDcnta, *ytnpathi*e with and promiaca rehef to the working claaaea. and advocates a reduction in expenditures of national. State and mumctpa^govcTiirariiU, A battle haa taken place iu Northwestern Oranon between the Indiana and General How ard a troopa, in which the latter were anoceaa ful, driving theh-atilea from ne fortided pm- Hon to another and pushing tliem ao hard that the? abandoned many of their horeea. The tn*'| • had tire men wounded and about twentv horaea killed. The loe* of the Indiana cvuld not be appertained. From *hlnton. The public |*.nter. the aecretarr of the Ken ate. and the clerk of tho Hon* of l>|>rt a*. ooUfUatlng of 25.000 bound Tolumoe of the '' ';7r.. -anil WW*, 40.000 unbound vol uniea of the aatue. 46,00!) metal plaice and 24.- 000 romp*notion plate* for printing the ' Trraat'twii ••, the two-aUwr lire-proof build ing. and the copyright for the complete work. Coufiriw* appropriated 9 100,000 for the jwir chaae of thla proiwcty. During the twelve mouth* ended June SO. I*7*. the leaner of ordinary portage atampa by : the port office department amounted to 910,- 46H.61H, aa again* ♦15.1H1.696 for the preoed irig rear. Tlie inea of newajiajwr atarup* in- ; crea*ed from f1.000.605 to 91,099. MA. and the iane of tani|Hvl envelope* and wra|>per de croaeed from 44.616.1 MS to 94.605,774. Theia ane* of poatal card* increased from ahnnt 170,- 000,000 in number to 900.065.000. The total | amount of nioroaae in the i*ue* for salo to the public war 91,975.169 or 7"V per cent., a# com pared with the previou* year. General Sherman ha* called the attention of all officer* of the army to the clauae of the armr appropriation hill which declarer it ahall nut be lawful for any part of the army to be employed a* a /*'**• cooii'o/w*. or otherwise, for the purpose of executing law*. General Sherman conclude* hi* order* by directing officer* not to permit the uc of troop* uoder their command to aid the ciril antboritiee in tho execution of law. except a* provided by the eoiiHtitution and Congress. The acting aecreti ry of tlie trcaaury haa i *m-d the *ixty-firt call for the redemption of 5-' JO bond* of 1665, connolaof 1H65. The call i for 95.000,000, of which 92.500.000 are con p>n and 92.500.000 registered Ihhul*. The principal and interest wilt be paid at tho ties*- nrv on ami after the 11th day of October next, and the mteroat will Oeaxc on that day. Foreign News. Thirty person* were killed by an exploaion in a petroleum factory at l.yon*. "France. A Are at Maudall, India, dcatroyed 1.700 houae*. England ami Turkey have *igne re*iat further encroachment on the part of Ilueaia in Asiatic Turkey, and in return the *nltau tranefer* the inland of Crpru* to England on condition that *hn rostorce lhei*land in case Uu**ia givo* up a'l claim to Itatoum. liar* and Ardahan. in A*ia Minor. Sir Garnet WolsiU'r ha* l>cen apjioint ed governor of Cyprus. The Berlin correspondent of the London Tinu * telegraph* that ho learn* from |<>rfeetly trn*tworUiy source* that in St. Petersburg, am) *till morn in Moionv grt>at indignation i* felt at the result* of the emigre**. Hu*ian diplomatist* in general and the plenipotenti arte* at Iterlin in particular are spoken of with contempt They do nothing, the |>eople ay, but make oonce**ion*. and aro really to accept any humiliation to gain tho approbation of Europe. Out of twenty-two supplementary election* b.ld in Franco for Ucputuis to the French As sembly, seventeen district* returned Itcpnbli can*. Prince Milan ha* limned a proclamation de claring the independence of Hervla, which wa* .ecured by the treaty of Han Htefano and rati fied by the European oongrea*. Ilocdel, who at temptoro|>ortlon to the number of exhibitor*. In one olaaa all lb* American exhibitor* bare ob latum) mnitala, in anoUier all exce|t one. It la thought the bulled Hlatee will have Ave or ell grand prices and a lil ral nnuilier of |(old med ala. Foreign Jurora hare expressed niueh ad miration for the excellence of the article* In the American section of the KxpoalUuu. Tlio general commission haa Inoreaaml the nnniber of gold uicitala twenty tier cent., silver medal, forty, and lironae medal* alxty |wr oeut. The lleaee I'realdrallel Klerllea lavesllgw- Ilea. Mr. I'otler haa wrilten a reply hi Heorotary Mini man a letter aakliiK that wltneeaea to prove fraud and InUmtdatluii In l.oiilataua be called. Mr. I'otter eaye tile Committee will give Mr. Hberman an opportunity to call Mr. Mlotig bbtu, aa requested. The lettea eloaea thua " Should It later appear that any testimony aa to wrong eudlng Into fraud* and wrong* 111 the retiito* after the election, or to the oou •jarauy referred to lu Ilia teaoluUou appointing the committee, they (the committee) will con sider whether It may he practicable to take the testimony you pru|oae. and that Ui IKJULF adlo- Uuu, or whether the reports of testimony taken by former committees of the donate ami House uiay not be used, and any application from you lu this reapect may be only considered." Secretary Hbcrtnan baa written another letter to Mr. I'otter, in which beagain offers to prove fraud *nd| tuUmtdatioii Infthc Louisiana doc tiou. Mt Sbermati say# lu lit# letter "In view of tbe facta tbat your committee 1* now eu|(*Ked lu taking furthei teeUnioiiy Intended to aliow that the declarations set forth in tbe vartotia protest* are not true, it aeoui# to uio that I should I* allowed to |irove, hy additional testimouv, that theae proteats are true." lu oloaiui! liia letter Mr. Sltortnan saya " 1 have also to state that J am now prepare!, at the convenience of the committee to submit testi mony here In Washington to reuei the charges against me, and havegivsuto Mr. Shellabarger a list of witnesses whom I ask tuay be aub po-uaed." After an extended receaa the committee met agaiu in Washington and proceeded to lb# ex animation of witnesses. Senator Kellogg was oailed couorrnlug the doing, of tbe rrturulng t-oard lu lOTfi and the condition of affaire in Louisiana at that umr. Witness then stated that on the face of the returns the Ti den elector* had a majority but that the re turning board had thrown out enough vote* U> oouul in Have*, and that thl* was dona be came the election iu some parishes had not been free and fair. After examining witness## lu regard to appointment* aiade by the I'reei drul of Louisiana politicians the oominlltee adjourned. Wouldn't l'*y thr Frlre, A I'*n letter ha* thia item: While waitiug for our carriage to come out of the interminable file on Avenue d* Maugnau, the attention of rnyaelf anvl companion* wa* calltxl to an animated vliactiaaiou between a party of American* anil the keeper of a restaurant. Our fellow-countryman, who apjveared to le a prvMiperou* mechanic abroad, and wa* accompanied by two *tout ladle*, prob ably in* wife anil her mother, wa* snj ions to enter the hall of the rent mrant, but was refused admittance be use the landlord insisted that the ti auaatlautic viaitor havl uot paid liirn the price agrcexl upon for the uae of two amall ttedroom*. " Why, confound your pietura,"aaid the mechanic, " you aaid you'd take ua all in for five franc* (five dollar*), and now yon won't stick teyour bargain." The reataurant man held up hi* right hand three time* and tried to explain that the charge wa* five franca apiece. One of the ladle*, who dimly uuderatood French, finally got the idea and endeavored to explain it to her husbaud. lint he wa* furioua. *' Five franc*apiece," he ejac ulated; " 'tamt nothiu' of the aurt;" anvi he miule a heavier directly for the liall door, pushing Mr. Frenchman vigorous ly amoe. He was forthwitii ejecte.l with no gentle hand. Then he weut tn search of a policeman. The guardian of the public jK-xxce came, ami the Amncati explained, in load ami excited tone*, hia difficulty. When we left they had all become good friend*, even the police man hobnobbing with the contestant*, though how that waa arrived at I can not imagine. The NUB Dance. The young men at Spotted Tail camp recently had their annual sun dance, and the liarbaroua festival wa* one of more than ordinary "BUCCO**. " Vvtrty-eight caadiiatoß ja**eaek with hi* weight upon the lariat. The dance then goe* on until the fltwh given way. Should he fail to break !oo*e in the manner prescribed or nhonld he faint daring the operation, he ia forever dia graced. The tlanccd just cloacvl waa field abont fifteen mile* back from the Mtaeoun river, near Yankton, Dakota, and wa* witnc**cd by alxont neven thon and Indian* and "twenty-five whi tea. OKI Spotted Tail waa ma*ter of cere monies. In a lint of British jdaoea. pensions and ainccnre*. in 1819, j>j>e*rthe name* of Kdward ShipjHm Arnold. Jauie* Rob ertson Arnold. Oeti. Arnold and Sophia Matilda Arnold—the first three for X4OO a year, the la*t for XIOO. They are pen sion* given by roval *mn mannal, aud a note i* appended: *' N. 11.—These are the children of the notorious American General Arnold." ©b £ J&tttt. As the time has come for the renewal of subscriptions, THE SUN would remind its friends and well wishers everywhere, that it is* again a candidate for their consideration and support. Upon its record for the past ten years it relies for a continuance of the hearty sympathy and generous co-operation which have hitherto been extended to it from every quarter of the Union. The DAILY SUN is a four-page sheet of 28 columns; price by mail, post paid, 55 cents a month, or $6.50 per year. THE WEEKLY SUN. Who does not know the WEEKLY SUN P It circulates through out the United States, Canadas, and beyond. Ninety thousand families greet its welcome pages weekly, and regard it in the light of guide, counsellor, and friend. Its news, editorial, agricultural, and literary departments make it essentially a journal for the family and the fire side. Terms: One Dollar a year, postpaid. This price, quality con sidered, makes it the cheapest newspaper published. For clubs of ten, with $lO cash we will send an extra copy free. Address PUBLISHER of the SUN, i.i>7. • j ■; y ; - NEW CITY. A Man af liwlrf llrow. A short time aro South, the Walnnt street optician, rrwleived an order from a Ooltunbu* judge to Mind him the lare est pair of i|Mxitnil(* he had on hand. I He picked out a pair from an old •took, that looked an though Uiey might have bean niaile expressly for Joe (loaa the •lay following hia fight With Tom Allen, uud went them hy eipreaa to the judge's address. A few ilaya lt *r the package name hack, with an aooonipanyiug note saying the frames were altogether too small - he ouuldu't get Uiem ou, and munt have the largest aiae manufactured. He had a head that wna a lined, and wanted a pair of glaaaen that oould lie naeil fur both eyes at the aame time. ttpeth puz zled over the matter a day or two, aud then took out the bow lmtweeu the glea ned, put in a uew one ot double aize, aud sent the aperUclca baok tu Golutnbua, (Vin Aden t that lie would soon get a com plaint that they were altogether too large, but he was deteriuiumf'bi convince the judge he had brought hi* work to the right ahop, if he didn't make a ceut on the job. Hut back they came again, with a testy note from the judge that he didn't want any morn children's spectacles sent up that way. He wanted something that a full-grown man could wear, and that, too, without any more nooaana*— he waa in a hurry fur the glaasoa. Hy thia time ilr, M|w-Ui had got mad in earn eat, and made an emphatic declaration that the gooda wouldn't be thrown back ou la* hands again for Uie same cause, lie tlieu set tu work aud forged a pair of frames B|>ecially, big cuough t<. At a mule, and nent them for ward wttli a request to notify at once by telegraph if they were too amall aud he would send on his sign. A day or two afterward a Columbus man dropped in aud inquired of Bpelh if he had yet sent the sign. " Good heavens ! no!" said the opti cian. " Hid he want it!" •' Well, no," said the visitor with a queer BUiile. " The spec* Were a leetle bit tight, but he thought he could man age to get along with them till he oould come down and leave his measure." " Well, I'm stumped," said Bpeth. " ] got up them frames for a joke. What sort of a Lead does that old judge tote around anyhow 1" "Him?" Why bleaa your life, man. he's got a head like a flour barrel, and everybody says that's what made him bow legged. You just ought to see how amall them spec* of youra looks when he has 'em on. Blamed if they don't give him a cramp*l look that makes a fellow fidgety," said the gentleman; •' they do. honest. It'a a pity you didn't spread 'em jtt a leetle mite more. Cincinnati Breakfast Tal>le. Ho You Diet Murk t " I>U you diet much thia warm weath er f" asked a friend of old Puzbuz, aa he took off hia hat and mopped hia brow the other day. "Dye it! "dye it !** answered Fuzbui, running his hand through hia hair, and looking at hia fingers. " What do you meaii, air ?" '' Why, you look good and hearty, and aa for oolor—" " Color, color ! What ia it to von, air, whether I dye m* hair or not ? rtarg it, air, if I had* such an awful looking head of hair us you've got, I'd dye it aky blue." " Look here, old Fuzzy, what in the deuoe are you talking about ? I asked you if you dieted, seeing tbat you were complaining of dyspepsia the other day, and you liegin to rare abont hair dye." " Dye ! dietOh, all ! I see ! I didn't understand." " Hut I do, and find that in your case ! one must never say dye."— Boston Cbm* I tnf rc>al Bull tin. ror ninrarl# of thirty year* Mrs. WWLOWS HtMJTHISOKYKL'T haa been used for children with never■ failing moons*. It corrects acidity 1 of tiic stomach, relieve# wind eobc, regulate* . the bowels, curvw dysentery and diarrbira, { whether arising from teething or other caases. An old and weU-tned remedy. J5 eta a bottle. CHEW Tbe Celebrated " XiirxuM " Wood Tag Plug Toaaooo. TUB i'loxm Toaaooo Ooarm, New York. Boston, and Qnoago Ibarsbfr This. Tl.at when rua bar a can of Dooley'a Yeast Powder TOO take no clianeea, for it la warrant ed absoiutrir pore, full strength, aad full weight, and it cannot fail, if projoa:tive and ssUafectory re suits; not ouiy tu ttarmta, rolls, muffins and fancy cakes, but tu ail kind* of batter griddle cakes aa well. Accident* will happen, and it i* beat to be always prepared for the®. Sufferer* from Cuts, burn*. Hoalda, Wounds, Bruise*, and Sprains, will And immediate relief in the use of (iraoe'a Halve which also cures old Sores, Felons, Corns, ITcera, Ac. Cramp# and pain* in the stomach or bowels, or in any part of tbe body, no matter how severe or what the cause, can be relieved by Johnson's Anodyne Liniment used internally and externally. Such name* as Or. O. W. Holmes, Washing ton Irving, and F.x-Prwudcnt Van lltircn, have j Untie ttmiony to the efficacy of Whitoomb'a [ Asthma liemedy, which is for sale by Ihtiggist*. 1 Morn than twnotjr yww ro %fo ww had fthlllc Mid fatar, MM! UM ranollaotioo of It makaa na aliak* aan now. Hot thia dtaaaan BokufW Irrriflna oa. I'araonc Pargbtiva PtlU or* b aura prarimUra. ma OrMIMI OlMwtarr al tba Aa m Dr Tbbtaa' V at Uatta. Oata. Brataw. OKI borw, ata. bold by all DragglWa PapM-lOPbrl PUaa. Naa Varb The lATUti. WWW TOM* Baaf Oaltla—Hattaa Nkf 10* Tata* tod Obarakaa 01 * 01* Milch 0eat.................. WW *4O 30 Kofa—lJta, MM# MM I Ilrwaad W*4 Hhaae 04*# Hit Lamb* 01*# 00 OoUoa Mlddllbd ll*# II i ftaur—Waatarn—Oaad la Oholaa. 410 i 0 * btaw—Oaod la Otetaa 114 # 1 00 Murlabaal, par cfl ........ I 01 # I 00 Wbaat— Had Wauta. 1 <* # 1 04 Ha.— I Muwanbaa. M # 1 <0 Hya-0te1a............ ............ 01 # 01 BarUy Mutt. It # 14 barl.,Malt..oo # 00 Mucbabwl . 00 # 00 OaU-Mlaad Waatara.„„. ft! # 01* Oara—Mlaad Waalara...... 41 # 44 t. Hay.par Ctrl 00 4 01 Btraa, pare*! 00 # da ttopa Ma—til *Ol ... m 10 # II Part-Maw..... ...10 II #l4 10 Urrt-OWy Htaaw 01 # 01 Plab -Mac*ami. Ha. I, uaw. . II W #l4 00 " Ha. 0, baa 10 00 #l<> 00 Dry Ood, ft cat............ I 10 # 4 00 ■arnad.i aWd, par faai. .. 11 # 11 l ttrtH.uu._Om 01*#01* HaOaad, It Wool—OblMiari Olaaaa M # II Tviaa 01 # M A battalia* •• 10 # 41 •UK 11 ... (1 # 40 Mawar—Maw.. >HIMW 14 # 10 Waurr -Otoiaa 14 # 30 Hwltra-Wood It TrUaa 04 # 00 Waatara-Pirbiaa M # 10 Ulwee Wal* Paelvry. W # U maw dti.-i.mad...... 01 # 01 Waatarn <**# <1 ■ lata—lHataand T—b*ylraala. .... 10 # 14* MIMId. rwat t n # ■ to IWI Ha. 1 MUaaakaa. I 10 # 1 14 Oaru -M 11*1............ 40 # 41 iU.. It # M bjr 01 # 01 Bnrlry TO # N Mar,ay Mall - U # 00# f | II A fIUIK A Baal Oattia—Rrtra. ... *# 00* bbaap. ... 01 # 00* Hoga-Prwaad 00 # 00* Hoar Obauiylraala I lira. 001 # 100 Wbaal —Bad WtWara ...... 01 # t by. 01 # 10 , Ob*b— ..... 00*# 41 H!Wd.w. n w..>. .... 44 # 44 Oa. —MI lad ■ # 00 Tmrolatua— Bltllt, 10* Waal—l Colorado If # 10 Tasaa..... 10 2 ft OaUfaraia -. # Baaf Oattla 00 # 00* *"•0 00*# 10* B0b 00 # W* flaar—WTaooniia aad MlnawoM 4 #0 00 Oars—Ml 1ed.... 10 2 01* ; (law- 04 2 10 Waal—Ohio aad Paeb*yi*iila XI 40 # 41 Oauferiaa I*ll.. U # tAWIOf, BAJi Bmt o*W+-frr u> Okmtm 4 90 # 9 81 iftL—?s l;s OUKB OMAIS^FbPS^B 1 CIKNTW WANTKO fa U Im aad Mw A .iril.. PVuma K.a. aad Mit.lw Trwaa radaaad 33 w oaat A Hm. J. •**' Bow aad Hiblt tlaaaa. Pl,.!adal*t"a Wufi. or M Laaa i i£|i CHAPMAN'S- CHOLERA SYRUP Carw Uiatlai. IWrrtot aad bnwwatOtaipltlan cfChildrna fnwMk (.KUBHR MOOU. | tot i.cm( Pal*. H. H. Bold br ail l l jjpMi $10; $25 Novelties Outfit Free z j J H Bt-rPUBO'b MISS, Maaalaatana* PablMbaci. 141 w 141 Praablw IMiaat. Onww. Maw ltWabh.tiad naairty Btty yaara. po^ T^T^Go^ A CKj MttfmSJ/fi SCMf CO. PSS BROAD WA Y. AJ.Y. room io Botanic Mediuac Co., BBSAIO.N T I fcWi linmm tww. NWMW —* ■***• ' jspaafia'aas^^afggr tftl m AaaMMMtMNtea far Ma fMajpMi 50,000 MSyflHjg; CLOCKS ' T*l7 Att -*** *>*—* *_>— wni temw I X EdillOa Ppw Lmi—t Ooaaaaa, ia Aatortai auptoMtUW-tIIMM aiyyMy Trada aoal.ftaaJly 11 IMNMIM- Apaair wail iiwwbi im >a>w *ty#T-ar _ $lO. S2O. SSO. SIOO. Inaul |ad. WSM. KOHI.f A toOS*. MM HarrUoa Am . Baatos.Maaa ! TKAIIIaiKK. DR. BECKER'S \ Q / * < KUCIUUIKD BALSAM ftjldfctftX A IBM OCM ttti"*Bvrr mux sraa V S BTYEH aadftOMKTJCUDC F vs. *OUD ST Aid. DUGlsm • —■* APrt ST MAIL niK ft— / B!3l\ \ / ysnMTHO*SS \ U \biici twnay' j \ \ BEEP GOOD / / AWiu4 K.-ab-a Saba lit at. far