A boat W hit* Etcplunts. In Knmf parts of the Ea*t they believe that the aoala of some of their (rode go into elephant* that are white, and when they get hold of a white one they make a wonderful to-do over it, and worship it. In a book of travels there ia an ao oonnt of one which wa a male with white eyee afid a forehead and eara swotted Whites aa if they had been rubbed with sand-paper, but the remainder of the bodv wa* black aa ooal. He waa a viei ona brute, chained by the fore leg* in tha center of a large shed, and there were all around it some gold and white cloth muUrellaa, an embroidered canopy above him, and some bundle* of aj>car* in the oomera of the room. The attend ant* aaid that a young one had lately died, and that the king had been poorly ever since. This animal was suckled by twelve nnrrea, hired for the purpose, who thought it a great honor to uurae a white elephant. Ralph Fitch, whoj traveled through Ikinail about the year 1582, speaking of the king who reigned at that time, says that "he hath four white elephant*, which are very strange and rare, for there is no other king hath them but he; if any other king hath one, he will send nnto him for it. When any of these white elephanta are brought nnto the king, all the merchant* in the city are coßimiuiJod to se them, and giv* him a "present of half a ducat, which doth cotue to a great sum, for that there an* msny merehsnts in tlie city. After that yen have given your present, yon may come ana see them at your plea anre, although they stand in the king's honse. The king, in hit title, ia called , the King of the White Elephants, It any other king have one, aud will not send it him, he will make war with him for it, for be had rather lose a great part ol hia kingdom than not conquer lum. They do very great service unto theae white elephants; every one of them atandeth in a house gilded with gold, and th> y do fee*! iu vessels of silver aud gilt One of them, when he doth go to the river to lie washed, as every dav they do, goeth under a canopy of cloth of , gold, or of silk, carried over him by sit or eight men, and eight or ten men go bchvo him playing ou drnmmee, shawm* (olurioneta), or other instrument; ami when he is washed, and oumeth mil of the river, there is a gentleman which doth wash hi* feet in a silver basis, which is his office given him by the king. There is uo account made of any biaca elephants, be be never so great, and some be nine cubits in height" In Father Sar eorniano's " Description of the Burmese Empire," some two hmi- later, we have an acount of the capture and treatment of a white ele phant. When caught in the forests oil F.gia it was bound with scarlet cords and waited upon by the highest man darins of the empire; the place where it was taken being fall with mosquitoes, a silken net was made to protect it from them. It waa carried to Atnarupoora in a j boat hav.ag a pavilion draped with g>!J euibroidervd silk, and covared with a roof similar to those covering the royal palace* On its arrival in the citv a grand festival, continuing for three days, was celebrated in its honor; and the most cost!* presents were brought to it by the mandarins, en# offering a vase of gold weighing four hundred and eighty ounces. This animal was honored no ess after its death than daring its life time. Being a female, its funeral was conducted with the same forms snd rites as those practiced at the death of a queen. YueboJy was burned upon a pile of sassafras, sandal, acd other anv matio woods, the pyre being fired with the help of four immense gilt bellows which were placed at its corners. Three Jars afterwards its ashes were gathers*! b.T the chief mandarins, pnt into gilt nrns. and buried in the rural cemeterv. A superb mausoleum, bnilt of brick, was afterward raised over the tomb. This is what the book of travels says. I snrooee wa all know that a mausoleum is a large tnnkbng pnt over a grave in honor of the dead. It is a sort of tem ple, instead of a mere tombstone. Some mausoleums of both ancient and modem times have been built of marble, and have been very, very splendid. Thb keep ot a white elephant is so ex pensive that sometimes when an Oriental king wants to punish a man, and wants to pretend to do him an honor, be just makes liim a present of one, and then the poor man is ruined with the expense of t .t!jn j care of the brote. This is what the old saying. " He has an elephant on lis hands," is derived from.— The Librarian. Words ef Wisdom. On? to-d.av is fully worfh two to-mor rojrs. He truly lives who lives in other's hearts. Sensible men show their sense by say ing much in a few words. The manly part is to do with might and main what yon can do. Jeajonsy is al ways born with love, bnt does not always die with it. Self-love is more cunning than the most cunning man in the world. Give, if thon canst, an alms ; if not, afford instead of that a sweet and gentle word. Among those who labor for future happiness, he is grateful who lives well in his own household. There are some natures who do not know how to fail, and who never do fail in what they set themselves to ac complish. Power is not always proportionate to the will. One should be oonsnlted be fore tW other; bnt the generality of men Begin by willing, and act aiter wards -as they can. There are treasures laid up in the heart—Jrea*ures of charity, piety, tem perance and soberness. These treasures a man takes with him beyond death, when he leaves this world. That family is the best who obtain not nnjnstly, keep not unfaithfully, and spends in away that produces no re pentance. Tread not in crooked paths. Deceive not in the secrecy of your hoase. Recti fy your own Hearts, that you may im prove others. The path of duty is near, yet men seek it afar off. The way is wide ;it is not hard to find. Go home and aeek it, and van will not lack teachers. A Bead Failure. A small newsboy who is every morn ing to be found on the steps of the Peo ple's savings bank was yesterday morn ing observed by a policeman to remove hia stociiings and shoes at an early hour end hid them under the steps. The lad then took great pains to exhibit biß bare feet to all passers, aDd was often noticed standing on one leg, as if the cold pave ment was very painful, Man after mar. passedtwiihput a word of sympathy, and the sales of paper* did not increase by one. By and by along came a man with a red nose and a gopsl-natared look, and the boj hold out a paper and suid : " Have a paper—my feet are almost frozen." 44 Eh? Barefooted ?" queried the man, asliehalted and looked down. 44 Yes, and my feet are freezing." 44 Are, eh? See here bab, I'll put younff Td muff. Let 'em freeze, and then tithe a lay-off in the hoepital for all winter'? Nice fries—chicken soup nothing to do, and your feet'll thaw out early in the spring and shed every stone bruise ! Fact, bub—tried it seven win ters myself." . The boy looked after him in a doubt ful waj, and then made for his shoes on a skip, muttering: 44 Mebbe he lies and mebby he don't, but I'm busted up as dean as the chap who held his watermelon* over winter for a rise ! Ouch I Wbar's them stcck uns and cow-hides!"— Detroit Free Press. A government secret service detective in the West mentions a case in which a little girl unwittingly caused the amst of her father for counterfeiting. On her way to sciiool on 3 morning she stopped at a confectioner's to buy five cents' worth*ef candy, and handed the proprie tor aodckel five-cent piece. He ei- it and said he did not think it was good. 44 Oh, I know it is," she ex claimsti innocently, 44 because papa made It Papa makes lots just like that.' fc Eruptions of Vesuvius. This remarkable volcano stands on the east shore #f the hay of Nanlca, and about ten miles from the eity. It stands alone on the plain of Oompam* upon a base of about tliirty miles in circuuifer enee. Tn its upper portion it divides into two peaks, one of which, called the Soma*, attains the lw .lit of 8,747 feet above the sew ; and the other. \nn>wu a* Vesuvius, reaches an elevation of 8,949 feet, but varies t>oth in height and ahaia> m oonsequenco of the eruptions of tne Tokmo, Vesuvius ia often mentioned by an cient Roman writers without allusion to it* volcanic character. The tirst record j ed eruption occurred in August, A. D. 79, and it waa during this that the citie* iof Pompeii and Hcrculaucum ware buried beneath the ahea. The mate rials ejected from the mountain wen l lacorie and aahe* alone, the quantities of which exceeded it* owu bulk ; and in the oecwaioual eruptions which succeed ed, those were the only volcanic product* uutil the year likhi, when the tirst flow of lava occurred. The total uunil>er of it* great eruptions, dowu to the present time, ha* been about sixty, and some of them have t>eeti remarkable for the vast movements taking place in a short time. Between the years 1 ltiH> and lt>sl no eruption occurred, exoept a slight cue in 1500. lint throughout tins period Etna was iu a state of unusual activity, aud this, perhaps, gave vent to elastic vapors and lava that would otherwise have fouud a passage through the orators of Vesuvius. The eruption of ltWl was accompanied j with gn at current* of lava, which flowed over most of tlie villages at the base of the mountain, aud at the same time tor rents of boiling water were aeut forth. The eruption of 1779 is described a* among the grandest and most terrible of tlieae phenomena. White sulphurous smoke, like heaps of cotton, rose up four times as high as the volcano, and spread about to a proportional extent. In June, 17m. occurred a terrible erup tion, which destroyed the town of Torre del Greco, A single stream of lava was estimated by Breislak a* containing more than 4.000,900 cubic feet. The eruption of 1822 broke up the whole top of the mountain and formed an elliptical chasm about three miles in circumfer ence and supposed to t>e 3,000 feet deep. In May, 1855, the Ataxia of lava de stroys! the village of Cereolo. An eruption of great violence occurred in December, lSt>l. The disturbances commenced ou Sunday morning, the eighth, in tremblings of the ground. In the afternoon a large opening waa made in the ground a lutio above Tone del Greco, about half-way op the mountain, which waa won followed by other*, from all of which proceeded torrido explo sions and jets of flame. Streams of lava poaml forth, and on the morning of the ninth wore flowiug in a current half a mile brood. The explosions, like the aound of heavy artillery, continued till toward evening, and at night were suc ceeded by the moat brilliant display of electric lights, forked lightning and col umns of fire and smoke continually ris ing from the crater. The convulsions continued for several days, and even up to January 1, 1892, the trembling of the earth hail not ceased. The effect of this eruption was to materially alter the shape of Vesuvius, deepening the old crater and forming several new ones,— Pittsburg Dispatch. Some Stove-IMpe Jokes. Last week we advertised for a brand new stove-pipe joke The following hare been handed ic, and the authors all settled with save two, aud our detective has just telegraphed us that he will have both of these before another moon is hung and quartered : No. 1. Why is a stove-pipe like a political candidate? Because it is all holier. [Author killed on the spot. ] No. 1 Why is a stove-pipe like a broken leg?" Because it is n painful operation to join it together. [Postman who brought this su foully murdered. ] No. 3. " Mr. Editor: You can get np a new joke on a stove-pipe about it's being like a toper's arm ; always crook ing ita elbow." [No name ; detective on the traiL j No. 4. *' A stove-pipe is satan's best ally. It makes even oeacous fall from grace." [Hunted him two days. Found him ; verdict : " Death from unknown causes."] No. 5. " A swallow bnilt a nest in a stove-pipe, but when the hired girl bnilt a tire with kerosene he flue away." [Convicted, and will be hung next Fri day.] No. 6. What pipe is never the pipe of peace ? A stove-pi pe. [The other one the detective is after. Chances good U> catch him. Look up that stuffed club, John. Yum, Ynm! Be-lud, be lud !] No. 7. Tfce season of the year ap proaches when the fond husband and father Is called upon to arrauge the stove-pipe in the winter kitchen. A strong man can endure the presenta tion of a aotice to pay a note in bank when he has no money ; he can endnre the gentle persnasious of the highway robber, but when he comes to adjust ing the joints of the stove-pipe, the climax of hnman endurance is reached. [Saved ue any trouble by dying on his own motion. ] No. 8. A Groesback boy, in answer to our advertisement for a new stove-pipe "choke," thinks we would "get enough to soot by burning egg coal for awhile." [Eggs-actly! We smoke the pun I A man haa been sent on to smoke him oat. The entries for stove-pipe jokes will positively close this week. Cincinnati Break/ant Table. He "Greased the Baggj - ' The man who obeyed directions to "trim the orchard," by first catting down all the trees, has found a kindred spirit as thorough as himself. Ttie Yal lejo (£3* l.) Chronicle, says: J. W. Farmer hired an old sailor to work around hiß place the other day. The man is a willing soul, but his knowledge of farm matters is fearfully limited. This morning Mr. Farmer told him to go out and grease the buggy. The man went, and when Mr. Farmer not long after stepped to get into the vehicle to some to town, he drew bis hands back in wonder to find them greased. Examination showe<* that the whole baggy, from top to bottom, run ning-gear, body, eh alts and all, were covered witk a slick coating of grease; everything was greased except the axles. The man had also greased a carriage in the same careful and thorough manner, even to its whole top, and stood by ad miring his handiwork with all the satis faction of a person who thinks he has done a job exceedingly well. Mr. Farmer got into the carriage and sadly drove to town. When he got here it was probably ODe of the most horrible looking sights in the shape of a vehicle ever seen. The road was. of course, dusty, and the dust bad gathered to somewhere near the depth of an inch on every square inch of its surface.* The carriage looked as if it had been built dusty and then driven across the plains anc on a trip through the Yosemite, and had tipped over numberless times on the route. It is now at Henderson's being cleaned. We have not learned whether the man's wages have been raised or not. Fish as lfrain Food. For the schoolmaster—whale. For the pupils—blubber. For the critic—carp. For the soldier—sword-fish and pike. For the office-seeker— plaice. For a house painter—graining. For a shoemaker—sole. For a carpenter—saw-fish. For a smoker—pipe-fish and whiff. For the idiots who crows the ooean in small boat—doree. For a blacksmith—hollows-fish. For lean persone—chub. For a sculptor—sen 1 pin', of course. For a Limburger cheese manufacturer —smelt. For the basso singer of a minstrel troupe—black bass. For a sea captain—skipper. For persona who patronize lotteries— gudgeons. For dwarfs—minnows. Then there is the archer-fish for arch ers, the drum-fish for drummers, the pilot-fish for pilots, the skate for skaters, and the hound-fish Jur hunters. FOR THE FAIR SF.X. slews an* Men* tmr IVsms*. The maidau'a blush ia nature's signal j of warning. Mra. Hherman drosses the moat gor gooualy of any of the cabinet ladiea. The handsomest compliment you can pay to a woman of * ue, ia U) address her aa audi. •• Boots aud glove* to tit, ud a pret ty handkerchief," answered the French woman when challenged to name three essentials of an elegant costume. In China girl" r ** considered ef *> little oonaequeuee that Uieir parent* do not name, but designate them by a nun. Ix>r. Thus, flrst daughter, necuut daughter, aud ao ou. Mra. Macktiy, wife of the California Ixuiuuxa king, has liought a set of dt* monda and sapphires, worth $l7O. at the Pan* Exposition, and a diamond necklace worth 325,000. A German has taken out a patent for making up furs without sewing. lie varnishes the wrong aide with a solution of India rubber in benxine, and then pas* the fur betweeu rollers. The Kiisatau government has forbid den several women doctors, who have reoeutly taken diploma*, to practice ui tha proviaoe of Novgorod. Rn-*iati/e --male jihyatciaua arc usually nihilist*. A standing army is useful sometime*. A battalion of soldiers was reoeutly or dered to dance in tme of the ris'iiva o< the imperial palace at Potadam, ti> se> if the thx>r were strong enough to tx-ar the Princess Mario's wedding party. A miller in Eagland, who bad beaten hta wife and threatened hta ehtldren be cause summoned for ui>t sending the latter to school, was InM mouth soiled by forty women, who flogged him aud then dragged hitn to a pond, where, while drenched with water, lie implored pardon for hia misdeed*. Recently a lady living in Huron, Ohio, gave birth to a girl baby which ia quite a curiosity iu the way of weight. \\ lien born, after being dleased, tlie little creature weighed one and a half pounds, and now its weight is only two pounds. A small teacup covers the head mud neck very easily, while a common linger riug can le passed pver either haml, arm or shoulder. The child is doing well. The regal splendor iu which Victoria travels is evidenced by the richness mi her railway carriage. Its window* *re shaded with greeu silk cur tains, trimmed with costly white I are ; it* ottomans are covered with cream colored ailk, embroidered with the royal arms and uiouogram in purple and gold, and a carpet costing over SSOO covers the dt*>r. The entire cost of the vehi cle is 800,000. A young lieanty beheld one evening two horses running off at locomotive speed with a light wngou. As they ap proacbed she was hcrritied at recognis ing, in the occupants of the vehicle, two gentlemen of her acquaintance. " ltoya ! boya!" alie screamed in terror, "jump out quick jump out especially Charley I" It is needless to say that her sentiments as to ••Charley" were, from that time forth, no secret. Kfiahltfo N(f* Dresses for autumn are cut with long corsages. Flowers of fur will be among the winter novelties. The postilion back basque is revived in the fall cost rues. The latest style of sleeve-buttons is a miniature folded newspaper. The newest costumes are trimmed with pipings of black satin instead of silk. Sew felt bonnets are of rough appear ance, and are called " camera-hair felt." Fancy coverings for the head are made out of navy blue Spanish lace with car dinal bonier. New satin ribbons are double-faced, the favorite colors beiDg a dark crimson with n light shade of manve. The fashions announce a great change in the shapes of ladies' bate ; broader brims will be worn with much larger crowns. For a simple bridal dress select white barege and have it trimmed with white satin, with here and there garlands of orange bnds and bloasoms, with a feu leaves. Double vails are coming in with the incoming of fashionable young ladies. The outer one is of dotted black thread lace or black net dotted with chenille. The interior one is plain black tulle, uml the combination of the two is very be coming. Belts are very fashionable nnd very wide. Some are embroidered by hand on satin or grne gnun ribbon. The fast enings are large, square buckles of silver or mixture of oxydtzed silver and gilt in filigree patterns. Jeweled clasps are to be use*! this season instead of buckles. A Fearful Famine. A correspondent, writing from Rio Janeiro, Brazil, gives an extended ac count of a terrible famine and jwstilenoe which have been prevailing iuthe pro vinces of Pauhy, Ceara, Rio Grande de Norte, Parnahvba, Pernambuco, Ala goas, Sergipe, and part of the province of Bahia. This territory thus visited, which is equal in extent to New Euglaud, the Middle Atlantic States, West Vir ginia, Ohio aud I idiaDH combined, bas been without ram since July, 1876. The brooks, springs nnd wells long ago dried up. Even the river beds have now become dusty channels. The cattle, of which there were vast herds, have died of thirst The people perishing for want of food and water, have fled from their homes, mauy of them dying— sometimes whole families together—be fore reaching a place of refuge. Those who escaped have overcrowded the eitiea of refuge so greatly as, in some cases, to multiply the population by five, and they are now herded together in the open streets, living like swine noon scanty rations issued by the government and upon such refnse as they can gather in the gutters. Well-iiigh naked and utterly debased by their sufferings, they live in bestial immorality, not scrupling even to resort to cannibalism in some instances, while smallpox, yellow fever, dysentery aud some other diseases are sweeping them away by thousands. As if to leave no element of wretchedness oat of the account, they are the victims of the most brutal ill-treatment at the hands of tho police aud soldiery, and worse still at the hands of vile specula tors, who make trade of those wretches' woes. The picture which the corres pondent presents is scarcely matched in ita ghastliness even by the old records of the oriental plngne, aud the story is the more distressing by reason of tho fact that these people were peaceful herds men and planters, cultivators ol the soil, whose homes have been made desolate by a cause which could neither bo fore im or provided agaiust. Their woes are not those of men who have chosen a life of crime, but those of an industri ous agricultural people, afflicted first with drought, then with famine, theu with pestilence, and finally with that, loss of moral sense which brutalizes men into criminals without ohoice of their wills. Until now this terrible story has not been told in this cenntry; we have auowu only that in parts of Brazil the rainy season has failed, but we have not hitherto dreamed that such a famine sa this afflicted so vast a territory.— New York <)bimter. .lefferson'H Tea Rules. Take things always by the smooth handle. Never spend your money before you bav e it. We beldoin repent of having eaten too little. Pride costs more than hunger, thirst and cold. Nothing is troublesome ihat we do willingly. Never put off till to-morrow what you can do to-day Never trouble another for what you can do yonself. Never buy what jou don't want be cause it is cheap. How much pain the evils have cost ns that, never have happened. When angry, count ten before yon speak ; if very angry, count a hundred. Thing on In# Hollars Virak. A It to in thit ty on two doliAixt week. ll.' mfn "1 have boon an rttv% steady worker wince T left school, where I wua the recipient of • thorough English, French and classical education. 1W dint |of herd wotjl Slid cIOM application to j biiMiN-xH f worked up • large trftde. and was in lout* tho principal of * tirui tho 1 profits of ft)ich am>itft#d to many thousandsyewtiy. Buf,hiannimou with • tliotisuivis on thin continent, I liiml re verse*. I'lvpui ty and Imfm*** wptt quickly sw.pt awv Mv lift for aoino time hmt l*eii a clone struggle with j .tfutli in tho attempt to t-ttfu fcUflh'ieiit for utT wunto, stil lin fir I nm • thankful to IHI ithli* to ui liutl iMit urn* tiny itnn ptu*#.sl in w inch 1 had not nt . l<-u*l una U).#l, uut liavo 1 njupt out of 'door ut nttvJbiA •* t.ag.Tly **n !ho |>4|pr*, and rffphfta nl! a.fv.rli*enierme, hot sri fur without MhvcMn; niiii wo nil kuow that I'hope deferred mnkxth the heart nick.' Soil!# Wreh* slliee I obtained tho chance to cabeit orders for nrticlon of prune ne cessity in oftlcca Mill warehouses, *Uil ,mu "till devoting tho dny to it. Mttuy ou whom 1 enll nitv |mlitoly timt they *ro not in ueqd of tho articles other** fofftr mo to tho lii lli oof ' I'Dildii jv Hud tHygnrs not allowed on tin* protunton,' forgetting, prolmhlv, thnt thoir travel, orn lu too South Mid Wont nro (until fiitf, peddlcis ;hvais. Ivtw. An |n>vorty tends to t)\|iko * in*n wry meek, 1 never ro mi nil thom of thin Inot. " I nvcrnitc "ulj - two JoiUra wtwtklj t tliia trntlc, as ths oitr m WMtvnaiwil, but ou tins arnouut 1 live, my room i i-oetmw 91.HA n wreck, nnd ecrcn mcitlu j*r week, thirty live rciita; tlx* halMioc Suing for {HietAgt* atampe and washing. I o not Huiuke, aud my role drink is w*it*r, .** Codt-w Mhl h i *r- lag) cxpounive Should my exceed Ifcc aivfivc I scud tho mtrpUu whom 1 luivw it is nttmt txwaioil. J'ttc tlyo-* on e.oal (h n fair oue, Mid no Than need *t*rv< ln*re win* oau couuitMxi tliat itrnall Htiw daily; bill I am not *urj rfm.i wiifn ) I nee go many attempt to drown thefr u< '.nw iu lnjuor, fur live (rub will buy a h. oner of hqyr iuni a plate iff " 1 have not applied solely for the berth of laaikkoejirr ~r acqoiuitaut, but have, trie*! a* Interpreter, watchman, garden er etc. 1 havw had mudi ei|reriri|oe in tbe ltdt< r "ocupnuou, l*etK naturally foul of flowers Mid the ()oai*r for 1 tunny v dAT of a largo fruit, flower aud vegetable garden, which 1 worked rn iitit'iftur. • % Nww, tiicrasuv .houaauil** even worm* off*than 1 am, who are trying to exist houetly, and who never teg. 1 write that it may bo th" moana of tlrawing, in aome caaea, at least, a kind wojd for the Hour ioUller wb*> m addb* tn a to lhdi*iiigl (if litiugffr which Dnxt la* borne putiently, has also the greater hunger by the hea.l boWoi down, which can la wllawd only by a few words of sympathy kiadly beatowed aud coating the giver not'img. " Who Was tbe Uead>maxi. In hit history of bis life and time*, Lilly, the famous English astrologer of the seventeenth century, when examined tasfore the timt parliament uf Charles , IL, anent tlie virored executioner of j Charles 1., said that the next Sunday , but one after Charles 1. was beheaded, liobert Spavin, Cromwell's and other* dine*! with him, when the chief subject it ; when done, went in with him again. Then* is no man knows this but my master" (Cromwell). On the t other liaud, Willuuu Ifulett, a/Li* Howletf, WAS tried and couvieted of having strack llie fatal blow. But there waa very j . strong evidence timt he was not the nian, ' and founded u belief tiiat hi* oimviottou mainly arose out of a determination to fastei tke RUiit somewhere. One of tbe wituoNMS for lug defense aaid : " When | my la>nd Capell, the Duke of Hamilton, niul tin* Ear! of Holland were behea*lei in the palace-yard, Westminster, my Lard Capell naked tiie common hang- | mau : * Did you cut off my maaU-r'a head?' 'Yes,' smith he. * Where is the iualruiueut that did it ?' He then brought the sxe. 'ls this the same axe; are vuu sure?' said my lord. ' Ye*, my 1 rd,' aaid the hangman, 'I am very i sure it is th** same.' My Lord Oapei]' took the nxe ami kissed it and gave him five pieces of gold. I heard him say : i ' Sirrah, wort thon not afraid?' tVith tlx* baptrugui: ''il*y made oieout it* fl, [ and I had £ftO for my pains.'" One Walksr, who died so late a* 1700, also labored under a suspicion 'f having done j the d< evl, and xla > one H'-nry Porler, but the identity haa, we b* liev>\ never been thoroughly ectablislMd. Itae* nrs that a like invstery hang Wound the ex ocntionerof Itol>*rt Emuiot, the sevffuty fifth amiivertuiry of whose death' occur- ! rt*d recently, for the report cornea from Ireland thnt Ihsruey Horan, who lately j died iu a wnrkhonse in that ccnntry, near 100 years old, confessed Uiftt iw woe F.niiuet'* exrcutiouer. Hla life, ur doubt, diM*mled at one time oil at crecy. Farmers yersns Miners. In the early uays of Califoruiau gold mining there were no inhabitant* whose rights tlx* miners felt thomaelvee bound to respect, and when hydraulic mmiug came iu, the habit of getting gold re gardlees of consequence* had ixy*ome ao firmly fixed that vast quantifies of aand were recklessly washed down upon the j fertile lowlauda. The d' brit from tbe mines chokes the rivers, raises their beds, and is spread by freshets over the alluvial bottoms which c institute the richest agricultural lauds in the Htate. The land-owners on Boar river, a tnbn- | tary of the Sacramento, seem to have taken the initiative in organizing pro tective associations. They have brought unit agninst the company whose mines have wrought damage to the farm of one of their number, and the trial is arous ing great interest among miners and' agriculturists. The testimony abows that twenty yesrs ago Bear river win a elear stream flowing between banks ten or twelve feet high, that the bed has been ruaed by mining itrbria ( until the river straggles all over the bottom lands and has in one place form ed an entirely new channel, and the plaintiff's farm haa leen reduced seventy per <7ent. in value. All ia ascribed to mining operations; directly in filling tho river and bottoms, and indirectly iu laving bare the rocka on the hillsides, wiierebv tho suddenuess and violeuce of floods i* ranch increased. California in f now so largely an agricultural Stale thnt hei Bgricnllnrista can make themaelven heard even where the great TtiiiJbg jp- J terest ia against them. ChrUtian Union. Ten .Minute* With a Wizard. "The cabinet? Oil, that's the myt tery," aaid Hermann. "I can go in it, and yon can lock the door, and I will disappear—you can not Me roe."/ i Homebody id the party Ad ring about that being " too thin." 1 "Lock the door," said Hermann, on he Atepped into tbe cabinet. The door waa locked on the outside. "Nowyou can open it," said a voice within. Ttie door wwt o|>ennd; the oabiile was empty. " Let me show you mv dog," said tho magician ; " lie's the boy that makes my money. Here, Minty." A little' black dog ran np, and Her matn pnt a sifver qnnrter into the dog's mouth. The dog chewed it, uad looked an if he meant to swallow it. "Hpit it ont, sir," said Hermann. The dog dropped from his mouth as bright and shining a twenty-doUM gold < piece as ever cume orjt of the miut. Hermann hail not been near him after giving him tbe quarter. v * |J After saying that America is a grcaf country, and that the air ia full o money, Hermann kindly changed the reporter's only ooiD, a trade dollar, into a doable eagle, and retired to the mys teries of his trade.—A'ctn York Paper, i Throughout the world 7,000,000 He brews are scattered. NBWB SUMMARY. fhgtmii ami Middle tttataa At tha mjtirst of tha Masaachuaalta hank iioirtiiiiaai.rtirta tho Islington aavlnga hank has liaail onJitilled from IIOIIIK further bllaluaaa, and ita a(Taiia will b wound up without loaa to I tlw depo.Uoiß. Ilaar .1 t>\., New Voth atoak hrolmfa, liar* falltal for about •'ilHi.nntt. The CVmoord aavlnga bank, of Oouoord, N. 11., has aua|*eilded. Jiittbi H, Ml.I rill, baa been re alerted Vnitad Slatea wnalor by Ilia Vermont leglalstur* In tie of lUv. 11. II llavitail, rhatgrd wltti the murder of Marv Stannaid, In Mailiaoii, I UU.. the sitaad tar* fuiiinl a tree bill of indtetuirut for murder lu Iho flrat librae. A.*i*otiluig to l>ua, Harlow \ Oo.'a New York luM.auliln a*eiiey ||,n nnmlier of fallrtra# in the I 'lilted lit' ate • during Ihefllat nine mouths in IH?h la i A7>. the amount of Itabiltttea twiug ♦ 1 'JI 71 MM, Purim lha outnudtug i-rrluil in 11*77 there ware A Sflfl fallurea, with Mtl,- idl ,J .% of Uabthiiea lu (!anaou two of them dived down and came up outaid# i nruugh the ouaipanion way. Oue man •ho ounld not awuu was left ill the forecaatie. rue other Ave at length fell j through into the water and were drowned I'he two who r oat laahed Ummaeivea on j the aeMhervldo of Uia wreck. Ou I uoeday uiortiliig New York pilot boat No. • fall In with the Wleuk. Louh off tha two men who were ou the outalde, an I cyl through the bluff of lite bow and took out the man iuaide allVo. One uiau. who had laahed himself lu tile rig ging at the time the ahlp capaiced, waa left T ie toll of the veaael haid nearly cut hlui In i two. Tbr*e* men only of tho ahip a ooiiioany i of tweaty-flre wore saved namely, Joseph 0. lteig, Henry tiouaalve and Manuel Alpho Tho li. lawaie ilrneubaek party bald a Kta'e conveiiUon tu WilmmgitMi, nominated lr. K J. Stewart for gmernor and John tl. Jack*, n : for Cougreaa, and adopted a platform which j demand, the payment of the bouda in green back a - that greenbacks be made a legal under for all debt*, etc. Woe torn and Southern Stetaa. , Hiatal diepalcht-s atato that Mount Yemen, lud.. was |u the wildest state of etciteineut Our a aertee of the moat revol.iux Crimea anJ tree 10 Vengeances that evor txx'urred in that region. On a recent Monday ulght, at elerwn o'clncli, a party of seven or eight colored man sent to a disreputable hou*e lu the outskirts of the tuwu and knocked for admittancr. There were three white girls in the houaa, and aj>ou their Un)ulr ng what was wanted they re- Oriset the repiv Uiiat a ineaaengitr with a note *as watting One of the girl* opened the door, when a g•gantlcsfeliow with a cocked re . voircr mterel and orUgfod Uin guia into one room, while the paAy fiansarked the hotiae for plunder. After aectiruig all the valuables they assaulted the women Sell luoruujg there was great excitement tu ttie town. Tba otß< hen a double barreled shotgun was !l nut ana discharged 11 bill three feet of lum. eighteen buckshot striking Themes in the face and brratx, and cutting his Jugular win. He staggered a few feet and fell dead. The officers assisting him rushwd into the house and •ecured the old '"* p. but hi* son was not there. Harrl* as looked up with the others. A mob gathered about the Jail tu the rooming and de manded the prisoner*. but they were refuses!, ai d the uiob cooc uded to Wait ÜBUI night (Tfldav before proceed.tig furthvT. A Colored man who wr<# iu the m-. b and talked (reelv In lafsaceof the prisoner*, was ahot and woundost in the neck. Early in the day dlapetcbrs were ' sent to Evausvtlle, whs re man* leading ciUrsna were attending the United g alea court, and It aas ram-col that Governor Williams had tie termmed to send the Evans* lie rific# and tight guard and tha inhlUS. This new* put the mob in a frenry of excitement Two hundred men. well armed, wars stationed at the de|A to prevent the nulitia from leaving the cars A f cannon was brought out by the rest of tha mob and pianied in front of the court boose, facing the street to the d<-p >L The luudl* did not come, and the ricitement 011 •cure aulwldot. altisuugh the aimed mob fepi lla pivsition in front of the jail ail day. At leu ou the following Friday evening one hundred ' na-kid men fired upou the uffl.-er* around the | .tail and eutered the building, and by meant of a si.- !- and crow-bar gamed access to the prisoners ; the latter In the tu-autuns t rraying and singing most earnestly. The old man Harris, who bail been wounded when j Hbcnff Thomas was shot, waa lying upon a pallet, apparently Indifferent to lut end One I of Die masked men setaed liim by the thrt at acd plunged a knife into hit heart, At wlMfnri | o'clock the four mlured men. with rope# aaoanit their uscka, were i-t out upon the square, tin ' der a locust tree, w hen the rope# were thrown over the limb* of the tree, and all four of 'hem bung Although identified by the wuutcn, they denied their guilt. Nine convict# dug through the wall of the pnann at Koaotno, Ind., and escaped to the ' woods. ' During the progress ef a mart.***- at a solurwd llaptisl church tu Lrnchburg, Va. eoroc f the ceding jdastentig felb and tn immense ■Towd at once t>ecsine par.i - sir! ken. man* m :he gfillertoa Jumping Dom the Singowa gf Uw •era 4-4 and third atone*. wfule others threw th<-niwive# headlong down the stairway oa the ; surging people below, There was-only one door <>t nit down stairs, and through this men aud women crowded frantically ■•' of the j killed br .ag UUWally crn-hed to death. Ten • omen'sar- kt lei three more fatally Injured, vn-l about U.irty persons iivoirtvl wound* mure i or U>sga<*re. FivfiiiHrit lia til lanes were recently destroyed I in one day in Pnt-iam county, Teua., by United States revenue officer*, i Oft ul returns from Ohio gins I Mm**, j !>o ' oaii candidate fur ■*•: tarjr of -lata, a ' plurality of 3, lot. lh<- California rvn*utwtiou*l oou visit urn adnt- •1 a resolution to roetaora.hte the Prewi duut and the United States Senate to so tuodifv tlx- I ir ogaicc treaty a- tuprwtubit - hi pass httea%iaiiMi. Five people wire droartied near Sand ford, in i faiua-evwaitv. ff.a., a s<• d*vw ape. rwv •aerti lafln-s named Ifugfiey, and tW6 were childriMi of Calvin Martin. The fifth was a man named Mclvea. They were in a wagon rn rowi* for honiu from a cauip turwhug and drove into a tlorphale at ttiw lake side. A sixth person waa rswelled after -tsfi-libg up in the wagon for several hour* with tho water up to hia chin. George T. Nelson, while climbing a fence rear Renuedwidv, Md., waa aoctdetifally killed bv the discharge of hia gun. When the new# of the acciteu reached hia mother, six hours after, she waa eo overcome that she died ; of grwt From Washington. I At a recent meeting of the cebinet the ques tion whether tho military should be called up on to proceed against fortified distiller* In Arkauaaa wan discussed. It was decided not J to use tho military until the civil power had eibaneted all rat-ana to enforce the law against the illicit distUleriea. Tho opening session of the United States supreme Court was held a few day a ago. The post-office authorities throughout the country are now registering third-class mail ' matter upon the receipt of thertyrnlar postage, and ail additional fee of b n cents for registra tion. Since the eyeten of letter registration i wen* into effect, this la the meet Important in novation that has been made in the postal service. Third class mail matter consists of pamphlets, occasional puhliuanons, transient newspapers, magar.inrs, handbill*, posters, un sealed circulars, prospectuses, books, maun script*, proof-hrot*. maps, engraving*, blanks, tli xihle pattern*, article" of merchandise, sam I pie cards, phonographic paper, letter en velopes and wrappers, plain and ornamental pa|ier. photographic representations of dif ferent types, -ceil*, cuttings, bulbs, root*, and I all matter which may bo declared mailable bv law, in package* nut exceeding four pounds in weight. [ The ruorrit'lcriMoa in the internal revenue i Mtraan that ] -#**o who sell certain patent medicines known as " bhter*." either by the drink ir in broken package*, are liquor donlcr*. a h| *ru liable to *|>erial taxes a* such, will take effect from and after January 1, 187*. as here t fore ordered. Foreign News. At a performance in a variety theater and dance h'Ul in Lin rpool a fight nnder the gal |iry * followed by a pane-, some one having rati-fiil the #rv of ffrx Eke jveople rnhed for Ilia floor, wil l vlWring the ternhlo atruagle that followed thirty-five men and boys and two woman w- re suffocated, while many {icraona weM ff-vurdly U^tircd. The Uuited State* ootistl! at St. Thomas bdegrat'bs to the department of State, oon csnuny the inmirri ction at St. Croix, in llie islkiid 6f Santa Crux : "The planters are s> arching the oonntry for rioter*. One English yefiaal i* at Fre, ami, M they thought, to gave their Uvea. I'eople from the galleries who had slid down liv the pillars fell (iff into the pit ami orchestra alalia, seriously wounding and In VJUIV caeca Ailing the uufutlnnate wretches |*euiHM] up below, who were wanting to rush out of (he place m masse. The scene that mamd baffles description. I'rayeia, ctiraea, sobbing were heald ou all aides. It waa lm (Hiaalble for any of the crowd to make tbelr out till they fougnt witb do|*erate energy to reach the street All dtscipllno and system on the part of (be ofttivra of (be tbeator were at an end. Tha building waa originally * I'ultarlan chapel The only entrance and ent waa a divided staircase leading Into lbs street On the slatrs a frightful struggle to k place. Men. forgetting all their manbuod, trampled over helpless women and children The erreawlug of women and the lwvpnscalli.ua made an uu earthiy chorus, as of lost souls boon a mast of qulveriug arid dying hit nan dcah waa (go led tu a heap at the bead of tha stairs struggling for life. They weie aoou suffocated, while others fell on them Others who had passed this point were met by a barrier planed a tattle beyond H"* stairway, where dead and wuauxUd acre i*a*'knd up In a |>tle antu six or awveb feet deep Tbe Art men ruatted In k try and aavo life, but It waa some time beforw the panic bait at all subaldad aud |>eople would again listen ,to reason At laal the theater Was ei|>tlad. and the pois*e and bteUMU mails thrlr way til and removed the dead, the dying and wuUuuod. Two of the dead were woutru, three were boys, and thirty-two were strong, ahte-budled man of the laboring class. Three-fourth of the town on the west end > of the island of Hants (Vila waa burned and pblaged by the ibaurraeUouiato i and oat uf seventy sir sugar eatalra only niue remain, the rent having been deatro'ed Tbe Emperor Eraneia Joaeph has ordered the formation of a new Australian nabinet. t'oaut Von Hisiuarck, a nephew of the tier man citanooUor, tv>minittod aan-lle in Venice, white labortug under physical Buffering. The failure of the Hank of (ilasgow was followed .by the suspension of ssvermi large (iiaagow firm*, and a feeling uf insecurity amounting to a panic prevailed throughout the business circle# of the city. A large number of failures In Loudon are also announced. The H >tii*cliil la have agriwxl to raise a loan of 8S ',000,000 tor Lgjpt. Tbe urs Canadian caUmet haa been formed, with Sir John Mk-IS-'UaJd as planner and lulu is tor uf the interior. A Luu-lon diepah-h aara the offldal rejxirt of the luveatlgahita Into ttie affairs uf the CU; uf (i league batik. JUt laellod, la worse thkli tbe niuW xlouluT lun-U.Jii,ga. 'I be loes abowu in the balance sheet la Bzs,t/5t SIS. Tbla lose, with Ule addition of #6,000.000 rauttal. tbe shaiehuldeta will have- to make guud. Hun dreds of the shareholder, are persons in hiuuble rirruQiatanene, who have Invested Ltuu liUle aavtnga to the b.nk a stock . aud aooordiug to tbe laws of tbe country Uw r will Lave to suffer f,*r ttie frauds of those in whom the; trusted implicitly. I'he official re port abuse the prac.ice of svatetuatlc dt*cep tion. Thus, since the commencement of the year, the weekly returns of the amount of huiuuu to hand, which the uauk was obliged to make to the government, at* as to show that ita fluid# were maintkined iu due proportion to lie note leene. have been fabuAnd I'V adding thereto imaginary auius varying from •duo.ooo to •l.auo.UOO The director* reports to shareholders alec overstated the amounts of securities and bnlhou held in reserve by #,- 63S.KJ0 and #1 000,000 respectively, and under stated the loans they grautad by ♦5,655,X10. The directors furtharmore have beau lu the habit of treating tn the balance aherts #3C,- 72A 7**.S of bad debts (over half of which la due by four debtors) as an available del* The 1 rlters fever Vssrs. A dispatch from Baton Bouge. La., aavs there are man* new cases there, aud U ia evident that ttuhtae cold weather conies the disease will pursue its march. As each ''ay rolls by the aitnatieu becomes wars*. The Howards are oooipelled to fnrr.isb beds and bedding for numcruus pour, wbo are found dying three or four together on the same court,. The number of sick is m> great and ts so constantly larreastog thai the meet active efforts have to be tuade to give ttie ueoo*ary attentions to tho victims of the fever. The physicians her*, aided by good hurauig, are acorn,pUshlng good results. Home of the dis'rw-sing incidents that fol low utuc the heels of the tomble aOuurge are recorded in special dispatches from New Or leans. one of which aavs " Not a day paaaee that 1 do not hoar of some interesting incident connected with the scourge which la now sweeping over us. Hornet.a,as uis of atroag men, sometimes of ]byaclan Tbe rxpenae of tbe stcknoat however, was htwry, and he waa obliged to sell, plea* by piece, all of bis little furniture. At last when the man waa taken sick htrnwif au order eacie to paint some headboards. Ilr got up from his sick bed and painted Uiem. The Inlie money received for this was soon ex pruded in a relapse which followed. When at last relief calm-, through tiie apphcetioa of aome of the netghLwa. it was found that all th* nourishment that the ebol* family had reor.vcd id the courae of two days was tbe half of a loaf of bread- Anothe incident was told of a ladv of refinement and deheately brought up who had been obliged to pawe evscyih.ng, even to a rtng taken from the hand of a daughter who had Just diwd, in ordir to bay food; A Terrible |)ixlcr, WodnomLy 'nornuiN the jxieaetiger train aouth on tbe Kouknk iliriaion waa lifting itself rißtit off tbe rail*. Hue waa running an fart the noiae of the wheel* waa rattling* along aliout two hnndnsl Tarda behind the Train, doing ita level i*ert to keep m aiffiit, bat loetng ground every jump. Suddonly the train etoppwd, •way out between stat iona; no cattle on tlx* track, no water tank tn Mjrht, noth ing apparently to atop for. Bbe palled ap eo cloac to an orchard that tbe farmer came ont and out on the fence with a gnu in bia band and a ouuulu of bold, bad doga, looking deceitfully pleaaaut, tag ging along at hie btela. He evidently ilidli't care about "aetting np" the apple*. Tbe paaarjgera w.*re alarmod, not at the determined neutrality of tbe farmer, bat at tbe andden stoppage of the train. They knew Burnetiiuig Berioua had hap jiened. Preaentiy the fireman came walking dowu along Ute aide of the track, looking carefully, a* tliough be had dropped his diamond ont of the cab window, *' What ia it ?" aakod the flrat paaaen g**. " What ia the matter ?" aakod the sec ond pa*aengiT. " What haa happened ?" aaked the third jvaaaenger. "What broke?" aaked the fourth passenger. " Why did we atop ?" aaketl the fifth paanetiger. " What's ap ?" asked tbe sixth paaaen ger. " What's broke loose?" aakod the sev enth pasasvnger. "What done it?" asked the eighth I*aenger. " Broke spring hunger," gravely replied tbe fireman, and penned on, and all tbe questioning passengers drew their liesd* back and oinaeit their win dows, and with great gravity was re fieatsvl the fireman's statement to the other passengers who had not been able to get to n window m Lime to aak the fireman anything : " Broke a spring hammer." " Broke a sling li si tier." " Broke a screen hanger." " Broke s string hammer." " Broke a sting ander. " Broke a MX*ne banner." •' Broke a steam lmuimer." " Broko a swing Langer." And if Bunjaiuin F. Franklin aud i Christopher 0. Oolnmhns had been in that coach, tbey couldn't have looked wiser nor been more thoroughly ignor ant of the nature of the accident, than the awe-struck paHci-ngers who impart ed aud received this information and tried to look as though they weren't wondering whnt it won. There should lie a law compel ling railroad people to apeak United Btates wlieti impartiug in formation relative to the nature of ne oidonta to the inquiring passengers. There wasn't a passenger in that coach that ever expected to see goo,! Dave Hlackboru er the engineer alive again. We all supjMised that when a spring hanger broke, it jnst tore the engine all to pieces, stood it oa end mid rammed it into the ground, and then ran on ahead, tore up the track, set flre to a bridge mid blew up a culvert. The average Eiasaengar lias au idea that a spring langer OWDB about tho whole engine, that it is one of those, things that can even swear at a brakeman and walk np to a baggageman and call him a " wood en headed, flat-backed, trnuk-liftin' hnr rioane of wrath," aud consequently when a passenger is told that tha spring hanger is broke, he ha* tin impression j that it will take every dollar there is on | tbe train to aet the old thing np again, j —Burlinpton Jfawk'iie. Two sculptors nt Home recently fought ■ duel with pistol* and without seconds. Each on* nhot tlx* other in tho log, and they had to In* where they fall till a chance paeser came aloug and offered assistance. IrcM Aral* la I braalr 1* tha essjr stage in caaa* of al*. A • light attack of Imllgaation, e|w*cullv wiwni tiutra is ■ printlapoaiUori u> dig native waakaaaa of tho atomsab. must Mwawllty .niliuiusla la tha nora ohatinata firm of U>a dlaaaaa. It la wall, Uatrafnra, to aOopt prvvanUvs maaanraa aarty. Although Hoatattara Htoosch Blttara over comes, if imratalwl in, oasns f dyspepsia of kmg aUiHltiig, It la ohvWmslv tha part of wllum to uaa it ara Ilia malady aaaamaa a cl>rmoo pfaaaa Ttua is |artlniluly trus, ba csuan #• dyaprpsl* advtnosa, It aogaodarr other IhmliW arils, such an iiiaotd malaallea ara IxHh pravantad ami rt-uiadlad by tba liltlera , bat bow much batter to rli'ai thafu In tbatr ontaat with tha graal altaraUaa, man to wait until the; aatab l.ali a firmer foothold Ul tha system rtoraly tha ad* taabilK; of this must ba apparent Havre* Tills. However varied may is the opwtmiS coo ewrmng ths validity of Hayea' tills to the prwM deiMvy, there is not a qimetlon in the mlnda at etlbor Hemoorwu ur lieuubltoana upon one in j. .riaui pomt, via.: The unquestionable ngUt <*f Ih. f'rrae's Family Medialbes to Use lute of the Hlsodard Itomediee of tha aga. Ltaten to the vutos of the sovereign pawpte . New Du nn June 10th, I*7. lbs. 11 V Fnuirm, Huffato, N Y.; / tat- tour Fleeaanl I'nrgaUve PeUeta eeeau to bo (•rtu-ularly adapted to the wants of the paoplw m gins warm climate, wbers bilsouv • Unctions an particularly prevalent. I regard ibem as the best cathartic I have ewer tried. Yonrw truly, JOBS 0. Hr*ineoe. B single strands to perfect and give ethiaeoc* to walla and fence* of old construction. It will turn the breachiact steer, and la as useful in the home mcloeorwa as In the outlying fields. Perfect purity ia reotorwd to the ctreolaUoo when outitaruliialed, if KoorlU'e blood and liver syrup is taken. Scrofulous. BvphitlUc and mercurial disorders are completely vanquished by It : persistence w the use of tbe remedv be ing alone required to acoompbah a core. Erup tions of ah kinds, soraa, chronic rbeamatlam. gout, liver complaint and goitre yield to Its remedial action, and it not only purifies the blood bat viulmee the system. Hold by all druggists. Familiarity with the writings of the great poets is a usoeeaity to any oue who wtahee Ck appear well is company Fur 10c. we will send a book of 160 selections from the hsentlfal met odies of Moora, the grai/d poems of Brroo and the unequal**! songa of Herns, and S6 popular sung a. Lwemoud A Co.. lt tiace ah, itula. Tha Ms aon A Hamiim Orgaa Co haa takao the big host hauors at ah lbs world's sxhlbWaiua fur more than twelve vaars, via . At Tana, IMI7 ; Vienna, DCS . Hantiagxi. 1876 ; Philadel phia, 1876. and l*arts, 1878 ; and they are the only American maker* who have taken suah at any. t irnpw arda or Piny years Mrs WIJPHLGW® tsuOTHINO HYKIT* has been used for children •nth never-failing s'icmwaa. It corrects acidity uf the stomach, relieves wind eobc, rwgnlalee the bowels, cores dyseotery aud diarrho*, whether anniig from teething or other caaaee. An old and wwh-tned remedy. SA eta. a bottle. CHEW Tha tWhrated "MarfHijcaa" Wood lag Plug Twiwa Tax I'iuxta Tusaoco (Vwrtxr. New York. Boston, and Chioaffo last winter w warned our reader* against buying the large packs of worthies* horse and cat lis I* wdri a. and as U ia now tune to begin to use them, we again urge then not te throe • way tbeir money. Knendan'a Powder* are strictly pure, but we know of DO others that are. A cough or cold taken between now and Christmas frequently last* ail winter. This is certainly the case with jveople who have weak lungs. The most convenient, tenable and in expensive remedy it Johnson a Anodyne Lini ment. It is to be used internally and eitemailT. Coughs and ouida are often overlooked. A continuance of any length of time causes irri tation of the lungs or some chrome throat die ease. " lirovru'i Bronchial Trochee " are aa effectual cough remedy. 25 oetita. If you fail to find Pike Bait K' - nm Halve in your city or village, and will send a# the adirees of your be- - , druggist, we will put him in away to supply - ou. J. J. Pia* A Co .'O.elaea, Mass. Hon. C. R. I'arson*, mayor of Uocbeater, waa radically cured of Height • Disease by Craig a Kidney Cure. Depot 42 University PL. N i To cioanee and whiteo lbs teeth, to aweetao the breath, nee Brown • Camphorated Bapooa aeoua Dentifrice. Twenty-five cents a battle Chew Jackson * Beet Hweet Navy Tobaooa IviPfMiTAhT DOTirR.-Pwtv.ssew. Pwml besasd UUvnaui psraasasse Umili ayssl te D*. TXIBI#B' VIKCTItI LIXIMKXT tar U care <8 (.kxlsrs, IHarrtitwa. th-ssnlaey, lima i vj asfi Ass iidaas. tskm >Blerasltr~iU •* pwtcvitr barmtses ; •. nctll arc- -mcanf-.n* eseS holl. aa* sxxarsaltr tar fbranvr Kbenmaiiasi. UasAasbs, Tsorbasils. Sort Throat Can. Barsa. Svllii4, Bralssa, Maaotlk Httas. ->■ : bans. )'* n* is Uaibs. Bsc# satf t'bs i Tbs VEXKTI AN Us IMF NT wsa latrvtabesd a IST. asC ssssssbo baa wad It bat aasuamn* Is fis sv aaaal sisiin*. II waa Two Uolsra a ins da lbs* vsosM mat tw wvlhoul IX TbaaaanS* ad Owttvßsalwa saa bs awas at Ibw Dwpol. •nalurrtiu swoOsrta: carattsa |iy un ssj b tba Dvscawwsi OrU Dvm fig Uartar.WL Sse York lOr itxnn>. Www X. WW. lissf DatUr halivr .... -h if Issba and Charckaa. (* <# tfi ■Yileh con • 10fi iW-V .c Bag*: Livs. ... -ffhM M Dr*s**>.■ ... .... 0* fit tfi >**, d1ifty,,,.M,........M,M0.,,.M MYfi fi S Ufik.M..-w.Mw-.e 0* S Cot ton : MUM hug 10 fill % rieor • WsetSTD Oood to Cbetoa. 10} tfi 10 ffteta lair to Choice.. . 4A3 ca cIS vThset: K*iv> ... M # *lfi White Stale. 1 (fi tfi 1 til Br* : Sta-.f W 0 to liarlsy : Stale lid fi 1 Barley Mall 1U 0 1 10 (lata- M'ted i'h# U Oorn: Mlaefi Wasters Pnrraded. 4C 0 } !tay. p*r cwl. * 1 tfi Kirovs, per cwt tc fit 40 Bore W'a—r,s fffilfi Pork : Family Mtwa •50 a II hart) ! Vlly auaa . Mo# .(MO Flab : Maokarsl, Ho. 1, new It-Si fill* Ko. 1. wv-.mm. .]r e I 010 (0 Dry Oofi, per cwt ... 11l fill Herriuir, Haalafi. par b0*.... 14 fit !• Patrrlewis : Orafia „CT tMk BSoe1 Dvlry I • 1 Partory , MM . ........ 0* 0 1} Oheaa ; rttats Faciory I# tfi MM d' ate Kktsmed Ufi fi* (• U ##l.-11...... ............ 04 0 (h F(r eutr and ranrsyirista. .. Vlffi 11 ivmxs. Firnr. IN • 4 IH W-inal-—Nu. 1 Own—MlXfi - *OM 41 owta *> • m Kys 55 45 45 rtarlwy...... n,, Ito tfi 110 Bxrlay Malt 1 00 # 1(4 vuit.ADeurwxa. Flour—pwnnsylvsma Extra 450 fi 410 "hit—h-Walters *7 0 101 (lye . * • • Cera -VeHcs 4M# 41M Rati M1X.n1...... 49 0 49M (tata—M ixefi fil H ff ra,tur.i—Lrsda oSMfifiteH tkeftwsfi, IfiS Wool—Colorado 1- dk * Tvxar Ifi S *0 CaKfcna'a.,......... fit fil Ifi woe-row. BaetOattl* - M 0 M Baser. - WR llpa-a - M 0 MM Floor—Wtaccnrtn sc.; Mlnnsaota.. • Tfi tfi 1 fit Corn-Mixed II tfi M data- " B fi II Wool—OStoand Penravlvanla XX. M tfi IT Oaliforola Hpnnjt.lo 4 k •aiaatos, WaAS. c.ae.'Cait.a. MM# MM Beer Ofi 0 Ufi basils U> 0 10M Bwt oikfi 50* vary avows. Sana BaafOsttla—Poor to Ohcloa OOM# tN Hha* < * 4t|M o* lira • 04fit* MM tin in riiir n wrsatsd ID Wall M, Stooka makaa lu siUull '"toil## rrary month. Hook test frse aaplatsioa avwi aahtaa. Addrwsa PAXTKK A CO.. Raskera. 17 Wallet, ,V. Per Measly sf Pwilsh, Nwelnw lskar, rlewq- i hcrs%. DNiWlli|y *Okraseta l aeaaaW. MOBHE BBOtk, Prop rs. two ton. It BBS j CELEBRATED SALVE A M'IUC RELIEF FOR TUB BITTERER. nA jastfiHSparite fcsr AS J*m' Army. Tbrouah iu awwrr ha cwad Uwm aukdi f ilia ml **"•*>• aura* aad w.nmda ibat iMßlrd tba Ml. I rfttl MM MIIKMI lilllilwi of hu dar, *l*l a* irtii-'M by all wlu baaw IDa a* a palate bwwfactor. m*M, ■MU*. (iHOA VMXnA "MA *AD CUNML •mil' mhM, asnUA ranrui. ***, ma. niA* tmtm itdlUA at •>*• uiiua auaa, tu'im i>UMta| • <* Iranibaad.sd hW KimaM • .jftii'.r h*a 4rr*>>* U- wlm, By aad tltri Uaau. ■■ 111 ii, irw futtaui* ftuut4. uai>uu tb A*a, U.r Rtß* aad 11* aar. witb aaa nbfbll. *r fi" V li..,tiUuu Ta* t>**t I—it aa Ll.* ,*o)ae*. Ma mm at oatf 0 rwata Aott b* all RrwiHi riJMt. or aJoiaa* llono. lt*j. Daaarlta t L|4. Tba La*rata* Übrar). t hieaxa < atai<<%* fraa P AGENTS WANTED EON THE ICTORIAL HISTORY-ftxeWORLD It >jai* .BT * Ba* Nawrird .'.**rla aad IMO I- r. / S.- Jm PAKIriEXPOKITIOM, ..m aatiu ■■*.ai.n iwu , u. .n .u aw ls ff rn at* *u* t*n*n mm. m* a w*a Jr m ■.>. l* ■•>< . n*aa*a* .* / ) . * . . (..<> itw*. / i ibftjraraatat*Qi aarrw \ ■ uxaftMr \"i a' r*r**.t arai>twae*ax*AaßaA V/ b una ■., m iißßtsßi. M. ■ Y ■ w car* tm utiapmi . tftaa- APft.x *j: ki pul.t* >c* alaaooltc bcaora aad bal'u* *r Ib* anw *ft* Alter a Sebaarb. ar mar lat ratfirrair tadr laraor. a alaal* Ira>> aaa - fal win rratrr all wratai aaa abraftral 4a> rrr*.i*o. I ata* cm* *r*cr kftad of firn. Dra rtru *ad Toartpirr or INI Ursa Said be aB draanat* •! par ft ottia. PampHrt aa "Aiaaftkul Ma Mkru aa ta* baa*a bodf. aad iMiaiwaw u a Daw." *w< ftrw PiTsaa Maiww narntMl aMb M**t-rju-rr*lli Co.. SB Bood St. K*a Taftfi. . ~ < Iftll.UtTIOM'M >YI7FjTftX * 1 f••■** i. a >ni(*w /I If_ Ii \ j M UiitHf btd DejXtt A f t .'.(rf /1/ hT' L 1 ! Mil tot BMMW-.f#8 MMW-.f# ll*- rmm I r ■fel' ft ft ' •'* °wa tar* t* ta . roaawt I 1 ' Ki * I frVtoa •I. AM •a* ■>- V HI /1 n* Maabla* d*a'r Bp mil \ WF / | u'nltia ft*c aacb bind *f \ / I aacbtaa. la ordana*. aaat* _y\ft y Itba atdib* AxwDaatdad. afißCjS - Tat IKTI9 TUKSQBFT. Dvily aad Weekly. Quarto. Boaton, Maa*. Tfr Laa*t.OhaipaM aad Raw PaeUr WaaNpap* b Raw Kaxtaad. EdJtad witb tpaa 1 rMaraaoa >a tb* •anad laatw aa.l rag air aw ait* ot tba bflwa atralb. At thaforawa aad kwa] baaa pablubad plawt*l| JJOpw wa M t. dnw °" P !ZX^ *?-**> • SEND FOR SAMPLE COPT THE SMITH QR6IN CO. First Established ! Moat ■■nioefori TREIE ITBTKCMKJfTB have ataadan value In all tk* LEADING MARKETS OP THE WORLD! Everywhere recognised as lb* FINEST IN TONS. OVER 80,000 Mad* and la us. Few Dttlm MMfiMfitV* Beat work aad lowest poeea tOr Send for a ikuhfw. Iwcßt 3L, op?. Maa SL Bocta, Xis. QAPONIFIEP Is the Old Bali able Concentrated Lye FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. Diraettoaa Honfunu aaak aaa let maAtac Uart, tort and Tetto Roar eeteatv. IT IS rVLL WFI9RT AKH vTKMNNIM. 11* market ta Sototo with (so sailed) OoeaacitruU. Ito. whieh la toalteralwl wtlt tall aad raata. aad aaa' "*■ MOUNT, AND MPT tIIN Saponifieß MADB BT THE Panneylwßnia Salt Masufg Cc. t Pit it a owt rut a J. ESTET& CO. BRATTLEBORO, VT, iT Sesd for Illaslrated laUlorof L For Singing Schools and Choirs. L O Kweosoß'a ONWARD!.to.tookto Rinctn* School*, fulljr aqoal to *□, aver tomad, ia laady (oral* dt pace* of inalrjolkona. Of pac** of Uleaa, sod Bl pagea ol Sacred Music. I&oaota; BI.&O par doaan. iM(wi Church Offering, im (or Übotra, eoniain. a large and admirSbla eotlaettea cd Aatbama. which fit p*r(cUj to the Bptowpal bar vice, but are of Ibe be* qualitr (or anr aarvioa. Also a large number at floe Obauta tl.lt: or g I * per doaan. !.*•. Sacred Quartettes,, ... book (TT f la*rlrtn Ch-i-a nn n mtal m-mn] nollaalum of now i-wooa by the most popular auUwra, aad pro vidao about on* now on* f.>r every Rabbath in the rear. Boards gB.UO; Ototh B.M. Ooos'a Festival Chorus Book • I.IM has a fin* sal vol ion id eboroaau. W O rxaatur KLU U ILM Is a new aad aour.event cvoileotwi aad taeu tor Fuaaral ooessltuw Prto* Ml oanta Rand tor aalaloguM contaiutag tha toaaripdpma of many other naoadant books foe Uhoira or Wtmm* day Baa* melted paai fr—far Jletad Nrira. OLIVER DITSON & CO.. Boatco. C. H, DITSON A CO., MS Broadway, New Y ark. J. E. UITMON A CO., Blflt Cheatwat fib, PBUn. S3 A ttz Qmßsm tvw;, •* Tr*.a**—* I? CPFAMA *elOM m ix-Msg,?;^"rgeuafe S3soiawaßfflP nSiJr** IffS'.LSr 1 BaSVwf^lSlwi?"" W* _!_.• <> vtr'srtt*. AMMNbfC--' Something New for Agents t?. —H< Hi mn (llliii.iMimi N lU, Rn ti Biaß^r^A^ A 0000 WILL ■— da? wllb wr 4 foal WALL AI ttKR. Am * naoh ire*. w. mm. ba.laafta, a..* ■ OPIUM 2i^r^%ri.2w t* imawb.Qwaei.nDt rtDOfWS PASTILLES. HJS^ ■jjggppjggjgggggggp W IwWiinwß, MaA* YOUNG MEN Z~', .Iriha'lß"" 1 9iiipis wg^-.-y2Ka'r .Mil Wr,:.: JlOf SZSS. Outfit Free 2-X- Z * VffCW^.fc232=.Er~ HeabftbSad aaartf qh wmm. ACENTB. READ THIS! W* wul par >a*n a *lu d fib* bar •*•*' —* OT UM a i**a aam ft* w..r mm aad 111 iilalil im"■""■■ • !*•• *"** "* m *' '-"SUmSnTZ. ■*.. *.*.... I"*^ YOUR PHOTOCRAFH AND NAME (MASON 0 HAMLIN CABINET ORGANS. rail i— taiin KM;EaAta. >AN uuml X£3bss P-ss, 1111! SUS^^p^S Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Sick Headache. l* Omt NMdkMB > THRO. J. HAEfcACH, Muaica! Marre!. ( Mi rSbm Sft., ItuUda . Fjw iia* I>-aM it* u tafta iwtMwUxn"f a*.t. aad ul RfJwu rn W 11 Mw Eaftwawwe aaa ia* uwt aad p*.rlm <• r>i>r* Mrsmi. Dr. ftta.aa d* iD tba* 7>w*nn Tba ami IU I ami ID*. fttiaama bo* ■ W ,l£J' L ffisr^i.tKiS.'Wr' WATERS' PIAHOS AHD ORGANS tr> U M mto onwaaled for . eto will to •M tar. at mtm tfc to lower Km 1M ul Moe sraa*., fmSSr F CURED FREE! As wtaiMU* totot uuimU T i**d| tor film I- pti< to* "F ► ~m< a mrhHM ""■ W a 'iwediaal rfe*- ito \sjsae^g{.'^ I I U ••* ijWi ■ ■ %r' r m iif B*piw Da. M. fl BOOT, 9mm Tmt rsaa.wisMSa2 eMMitty rdm* ar.d. AW* •rnws"w**fw _^att^K^M^,'!KSys: PENSIONS AU PAlsq utfilu itohlad.ia line A o* <,.!, bt tmM'M ■ Mkrrwto. A */ * xSe&ISZht ut Jm J5f itrritAcu mm RKorabiro! Vh AH rwu Um At **J of An. |'li to rnio*, MCVTT ArafKll r CLAia*. ■ !■ to ito> tmr!■ ■ curator*. wa. r. naanrn a c*-. MJI a & ct aim att mo fatskt Ajrtm ■RI _ _ Ito* MO. Wa.*l*|Mn. D. C. Wli* MIKE HENS LAY. A* bto Vtomsto* tor*** to GhSUfcfi m m thin wmn. atfi ibal **t at the Bora, •to t to*to IV* too Mil mh* mra wonfclaae tm A kin •to* that Utodu't Ooeduioa Poadao am •bnthWj torn nto wutok valaabt*. Nntbiu. am earth eUJ uU ton* toy lit a (UmtuUii'i tVndltioo V *d*r 1V can n*nntol ta ama pin) (into SaU !■■•>>>■ *r •*! S Ml! Cm- •#•' bM Hum. C a JOMyi A 00. THE LIC H T RUNNING NEW HOME la to Knl. Luteal iMprarrl, but moot Tkni. •* u* bI ( oa.tranrd Sewing Machine rw la.rito. II >• MOINKI.K**, to to ■*• POINTH af EX. 1 KI.LkX K lb** *U other Mackum* aumbuoad IVAURNTA WANTED ta iMaMwrtm " arm But rapraaauted JOHNSON. CLARK & CO., SO Union Square. New York, Ol* aet% ♦•**., I'lit.bur*, Pa., Iklrua 111 , at. leela. Ma. BMaeeMeeaMEEEMto Established ISM. ivtß.oi^A.3snrss Gargling Oil Liniment Yellow Wrapper for Animal and \Vhlte lot Human Fleih. n 0000 roe Burns and Scalds, Sprains and Brumes. Chilblains, Frost Bitrc,.Strinch.ilt, Windfall*. Scratches or Grease, Foot Rot ia Sharp. Chapped Hands, Foundered Feet, Flesh W ..lands, Roup in Poultry, External Poisons, Cracked ijeels. Sand Cracks, Epic*- die. Galls ofSii kinds, Lame Back, Silfast, Ringbone, Hemorrhoids oa Mka. Poll Evil, Toothache, Swelling, Tamors. Rheumatism, Garget in Cows, Spavin*, Sweeney, Cracked Teats, Fistula, Mange, Callous, Lameness, Caked Breasts, Horn Distemper. Sore Jj ipplcs, trwwneeah, Qu ttor, Curb, Ola Scree. Foul Ulcers. Farcy, Corns, Whi-.u wa, • Abccaa of the Udder, Cramps. Boil' Swelled Legs, Weakntsol At 'elmn Thrusi, ~ Contract,ano; Hx i* Serckaaf. GanrUar OH V the Canda.r Liniment df the T'nitrd 9*s>f Larg' rse. As; medium, jpc; small, aac. Smail star rOT sra &*3*Jfrs!s&i age?. JOHN BODGE. toe>.