AN EXCITING MOUNTAIN RIDE, A Woman's FExperiemve in the Roeky Monntains, the following from a yin the Rocky Mountains The ne i wonderful adventure of th dashing rider was to take part 1h 2 rand cattle hunt, in y Evans had el her to a hand. The cattle were to be driven fifteen mie at a height of 6,500 feet. On all sides moun- tains rose to an altitude of from 11,000 to 15,000 feet, thei Ww ith vitch-pine forests, and scarred by deey anvons wooded houider strewn Two thousand head of hall wild fexan cattle were seattered in through out the canvon. living on or les suspicious terms with the other inhabi tants of the lonely and romantic region. On this occasion the herds were driven down in a body fora We SN “Lady's ena oo] shagey skirts ang adi herds more OSs muster, and fn the purpose of Branding the calves, After a 6.30 breakfast this moming, we started, the party being composed of my host, a hunter from the Snowy rang: two stockimen from the plains, one ol whom rode a violent buck gop, and was said hy his comrade to be the ** best vider in North Amer ov. and myseit We were all mounted on Mexioan sad dles, rode, he { is, with light snafile bridles, leather guards over our feet. and broad wooden stirrups, and each carried his lunch ina poue h siang on the lassping hom of Lis saddie. Four hig, badly trained dogs accompanied us It was a ride of nearly thirty and of many hours, one of the most splendid I ever took. We never got off our horses except to tighten the girths, we ate our lunch with our bridles knotted over our saddlehorns. started over the Jevel ata full gallop, leapt over trunks of trees, dashed madly down hill rug with rocks or strewn with great stones, forded deep, rapid ams, saw lovely iakes and views of sur} pass ng magnifi- oenee, started a herd of elk with uth heads and monstrous ant and in the chase, which for some distance was wm successful, rode the very Long's Peak. over 14.000 where the bright waters of affluents of the Platte burst eternal snows through a canyon of inde, soribable mai was but at a height of the feet the air was frosty, the enjoyment of riding a good under such exhilarating ecireu was extreme. In one wild part of the ride we'had to come down a steep hil thickly wy ooded with pitch pines, leap over the fallen timber, and steer be- tween the dead and being “snagged, heavy dead branch by an unwary touch Emerging from this, Wi si ht of a thousand Texan cattle fe edirg ina valley below. The leaders scented us, and, taking frig san to move off in the direction of the open “park.” while we were about om and above them. ‘Head them off, shouted: “all aboard, h: with something of the I tally-ho in the morning!” away we all went a hand-galiop down hill. 1 could not hold my excited animal; down hill, hill, leaping over 3 nd timber faster every mome » STOW, and still the leader } Mm and the horses speed. 1 till my keeping of the grea * finest rider in I was dizzied anc at which we ly than it close to and t of the surge of cat- tle. The rine wave rere a grand sight; aped like buffaloes, bellowed y with oxen i CR.IVES, galloped like lope d alongsi ie of th headed ] 80 d as 1€ ¥V¢ al await ing the as still s iM as i cusiom miles, i 3 sides ged {ITY ANE Ors, hase hi Eh feel one of from the 3 M|Ly. i Over « V9 TE © =un hi hot » yasanda and horse mstances 0 Oey | IOAVOLIQ ging down a living tre " or hriy be 3 4 Ban nile f a mile fr ieader 3 our ) ' rk away!” and fn Alf i at up passing sms pace ranense st Hides ridde n by th y cay,’ resth’ess hy the pace i A shorter sual us nd it br great and and we gal and short y time were Hi i them, and In no SEDLINGLS across th @ Hid ty ine ani v i of seemed *k of caval y. Si excited Orsi wid qusailed as the = came when it got close! Ly comrades 1 fearf dashed forward beliowi ing roaring r and t i , the wave rec eded a8 if came. rode up to our leader, who with much innghter. ood “catt! man,’ AR WE RiMOost on, tie. otten that a SAW timber me and thers.’ hours after this busin ess of driving began wl t mnge my thor- » horse, t Was not that thie real aad I was obli oughbred fora wel a hroncho, whic! hare, and not expect LEE ind. I had dt ike an vahnero, but so it was, and Haw: In eXpe eri "ne e was very useful We hunted the var ous canyons and known ** cs ing the herds out we bad secu Sule hours afterward, we s al RAW each other to speuk to. Our first diffi- cuity was with a herd which got some swampy ground, when a which afterward gave me an infir trouble, remained at bay for nearly an hour, tossing the dog three times, and resisting all efforts to dislodge. She Lad a8 large yearling. calf with her, and Evans told me that the attachment of a cow to her first caif 1s sometime great that she will Xill her second that the first may have hier milk. I gota herd of over a hundred out of the canyon by myself, and drove them down to the river with the aid of one badiy-broken dog, which gave me more troubie than the cattle, The getting was most troublesome: a few took to the water readily and went but others smelt it, and then doubling back ran in various directions; while some attacked the dog as he was swimming, and others after crossing headed back in search of some favorite companion which had been behind, and one specially vicious cow attacked my horse over and over again. It took an hour and a haif of time and much patience to gather them ail on the other side. It was growing : the day, and a snow storm pending, before I was joined by thi drive rs and herds, and as former had diminished to three, it was very difh- cult to keep the cattle t = You drive them as gently 80 us not to frighten them side and then on the other to guide them; and, if they deliberately go in a wrong direction, you galiop in front and head them off. The itement is when one breaks away the herd and gallops ma up down hil, and you gallop after him anywhere, over and among rocks and trees, doub- ing when he d ubles, and heading Lin till you get back agai... The bulls were quite easily manuzed, but the cows with calfs, old and young. were most trouble- some. By accident I rode between one cow and Ler calf in a narrow pl: : the cow rushed at me and was | i ting her big horns under the horse when he reared. and sprung dextrously sside, This kind of thing happened continu ally. Tie was one very han red cow 20 ! TOU work my th 38, ' COITHI nto COW, of Lid 30 m aver ACTOS, a Wil was r ig Lait Ogi ther, as £0 38 wil yo , riding first on one the Zreat exc from 1 ana wlich became quite mad. She had a calf with her nearly hier own size, and thought every one its enemy, and though its horns were well developed, and it was quite able to take care of itself. she insisted on*protecting it from all fancied dangers. One of the dogs. a young foolish thing, seeing that the cow was excited, took n foolish pleasure in barking at her, and she was evidentiy quite infuriated. She turned to bay forty times at least; tore up the ground with her liorns, tossed the great hunting dogs, tossed and killed the calves of two other cows, and finally became so dan- gerous to the rest of the herd that just as the drive was ending, Evans drew his revolver and shot her, and the calf for which she had fought so blindly Ia- wented her piteously. She rushed at me several times, mad with rage, but these trained eattie horses keep perfectly cool, and nearly without will on my art. mine jumpe? aside at the right moment, and foiled the assailant. Just +, dusk we reached the corral-—an acre 0 grass enclosed by stout post and rail fences seven feet high. and by much patien nee and some subtlety, lodged the whole herd within its shelter without a hlow, a shout, or even a crack of a whip, wild as the cattle were, It was fearfully cold. We galloped the last mile and a half in four and a half minutes, reached the cabin just assnow began to fall, and found strong, hot tea ready. I — A tramp asked for'a meal at a resi- dence in Yolumbus, O. The head of the family said, Get along, or I'll set the dog on you.” Then the tramp bet that within five minutes he would be invited to eat the best that the house afforded. He won, too, because he proved that he was a wandering son returned. Longevity Notes. John Battle died in Montreal the other day, aged 112, Robert Kidd, 105 oldest man in Texas, Mary Fernay died in N. Y., at the age of 105, Samuel Losey recently died township, Pa. aged 107 Margaret McMahon died in Durham, England, in her 113th year, Aunt Sarah Hicks, in the county hos pital in Flatbush, I, 1, is 14 Clara Claires, of New Orleans, was burned to death at the age of 103, Luke Courville, 102 vears old, hanged vimself in a pig-pen on a poor farm ‘huriow Wead saw the first steam boat and rode in the first steam raliway train, A years old, is the Little Valley, Pike Carsonville (Ga) She Is 8 pupil in the living more than a century, a man committed suicide nN After Michigan hanging. Andrew Jung, of Columbia, a., Napoleon, Lucy Kurney, Ive yoars | save years free, Rouns Kemp, ninoty-six years old, Galloway, Ky., married Mary Bridges, Ag d sixteen Over a century ago Paris, Ky., was born Washington. Diana Dorsey, of 8 was supposed to be when she died. Mary Donohue, wi died in his 191st year, New York aged 113, of Ms He ind ninety-three years old, served under the first of Lansing, Mich., was and over sixty Of Coll remem Ann She ins, WS pringtield, Florida, 115 years of age 1088 SYR tfathey recently died in i$ ninety a Uni ane, Py oR Sprague, i was years old, and bi Statas Senator in ited sy ¥y. N\ ns Somerset count i, was sold James Smith, J., now 10% noe slave thirty vears ago for fifty cents Fhomas Howe, of Barrington, N. H a made a marriage proposal to a eighty-five years and fitteen junior. negro died not long age in New Haven, Conn., leaving a family of orphans from sixty to eighty years oid. The father was 108, The eleven daughters of the late Robert Johnson, of Middletown, Conn, are alive, the voungest over fifty years old, the oldest ghiy. Armstrong Porter, Lazerne, last month sged ninety-eight. He voted for Thomas Jefferson for Presi- and for Samuel J. Tilden for the 1 office . ol i lately indy years his A id ol 1 over ei ; >, of I A., 3, 3 - aed aent, same Although bert, who Baltimore, remembers Mecienry. Once. A North Carolina couple, who ar each over ninety years of age, desire to hour. They have com- outfit even to thei 1 live in 103 is living at years of age. Jane Gil- 26 Vine street, is in excellent health. Sh he bombardment of Fort and saw George Washington die at the same pleted their funeral tombe wtones. They rede coun Sir Y Moses Montefiore, eminent Jewish banker, is in his ninety-.seventh pr served as shenfl of London x in 1837, the year ths jueen’s accession to thet and was k nighted by her majesty that year. snap —— Gladstone's Hat, aQusing tel phen ie meide nt is re- { as having happened during Mr late campaigning tour in Whi eH distinguished statesman was addre ssing an immens: audience at the Corn Exchange, in Edinburg, the multitude who wanted to hear him bein proportion to the size of the S thought ad- Ha * the 1108¢€ of An { OT fed ladstone’s Scotland. O jis no § ng out of HE it Wa use the t send the speaker's rium. Now hall, at some distance, tinct y the introduetion by Lord Rosebery, the hear, hear,” the applause of the erowd an crash of the band; then nothing more save from time to time an indis- Hn murmur. Now and then a few oken sentences, apparently uttered by r, (+ladstone, were distinguishable— came only unintelligible the meeting was over, wh lephone would not work save in a dis- jointed kind of way, was oxpiained The ex-premier has a peculiar affection for his hat, which bit of head farniture always plays an important part in the right honorable gentleman's speeches This hat is invariably set straight be. fore him, brim downward, and on th top are ced his notes, which memo- uflles with oce asionally dur- te course of his speech. Unfortu- : the hat was piaced right in front the tel ephone sound-receiver. Ocea ally, wnen Mr. Gladstone would nove the hat his voice would reach the instrument amd be transmitted. The moral all this is, that if public men wish their oratory to be distributed over wide areas, they much be coached as te the position ot the telephone. How much the attitude of some modern De. mosthenes might be cramped by the necessities of talking at a telephone, re mains seen. But if a public speaker uses the instrumen wiilt he ave to talk at the telephone, and to it address his most fiery eloquence, his best rounded periods, Photograph ic art might now be used to advantage to show a speaker's gestures. As the various sepaiate movements of the dorse and dog are given when trotting or running, by means of instantaneous photograp hy, a series of pictures might be taken of an orator, from the moment of inertia or repose until, with arms be ating the air hike wind mills, he WAS hurling anathemas on his political foes. ele phone, words in another the people in the heard quite of the speaker cries of **} Q sO anyed it SALE dis. th we nose v thi ye da he sl} . 2h of to be Single Song Singers, The Christian at Work publishes a ist of names saved from oblivion by single poems : Thomas Gray, 1716-1771. * Elegy written in a Country Churchyard.” “Had Gray written nothing but his Elegy, high as he stands, I am not sure that he would not stand higher; itis the corner-stone of his glory."— Lord Byron. William Falconer, 1730-1769, *‘ The Shipwreck.” 3. James Beattie, “The Minstrel.” 4. Augustus Montague Toplady, 1740- 1778. * Rock of Ages.’ Robert Bloomfield, 1766-1823, “The Farmer's Boy.” 6. Charles Wolfe, 1791-1823. “Ode on the Death of Sir John Moore.” Pro- nounced by Lord Byron ** the most pere fect ode in the language.” Joseph Rodman Drake, 1795-1820, “ Culprit Fay.” 8. Fitz-Greene Bozzaris.” 9. Samuel Woodworth, “ld Oaken Bucket.” 10. {seorge ¥’. Morris, Spare that Tree.” 11. Charles Shakespeare.” 12. Richard Henry Wilde, 1847. Lifeis Like a Summer Rose,” 13. Edward C. Pinkney Cup to One Made Up,” ete. i. Richard Henry Dana, * Buccaneer,” Francis $cott Key, * Star-Spangled Banner.” 16. Rouget de Lisle. ‘La Marseillaise.’ Jolin Howard Payne, .17 na, Hiome, Sweet Home.” . David Everett, 1769-1813. You’ d Se 5 ¢ Expect One of My Age.” 19. Reginald Heber, 1783-1826, ‘From Greenland’s Tey Mountains,” Julisn Ward Howe, 1819, Hymn of the Republic.” 21. William Allen Butler. ing to Wear.” 22. Bret Harte. Emma Willard. Cradle of the Deep.” 2 W. W. Story. ‘Cleopatra.’ H. il. Brownell. * River Fight.” 26 Thomas Dunn English, * Ren Bolt,” 27. Clement C. Santa Claus.” 28. Joseph Hopkinson, 1770-1842 ‘ Hail Columbia! happy land!” 1735-1803. Hallock. ** Marco 17R5- 1842, “ Woodman, “Ode Sprague. on “ My “1 Fill 780-1879, a 1700-1843, Jattle ‘“* Noth- “ Heathen Chinee.” ““Rock’d in the oo Moore. ** The visit of field Hall, his home near Birmingham, is still kept as he left it—even to the dead embers in the Franklin stove, correspondent of the Record, of Phila- tem throughout the room. All boxes, ete., are labeled, even to that containing each is nicely wrapped in paper or laid in traps. On the copying machine in course of preparation is a small bust not more than an inch in diameter—a perfect copy of an original machine. This was the great engineer's last hobby, pursued | brought him a competency. COINS. Interesting Facts Money. Robert Morris, LL. D., writing upon the suhjeet of coins and the ir collection, SAYS 80 many errors prevail among those whose opportunities are limited that he gives a few notes to remove false im pressions, He. continues: All hough Some About Metal study as mere hobbies, yet thousands of persons, even in this country, are en gaged in it in all civilized countries people are fond of following a particulay pursuit for mental occupation, The over-wronpcht mind must have reliel and what subject worthier of leisure hours than the coins which afforded mediums of trade to nations now van ished! 1 am acquainted with most of those who, in the United States, devote themselves, with more or less geal, te fascinating pursuit, and am of opinion that the study of historical coins (numismatios) trains the faculties, enlarges the scope of knowledge and CROONMIes a sound taste for the useful and the beautiful In this paper 1 propose, in a desul tory way, to offer some corrections of errors some suggestions upon the right basis of numismatic study A few weeks since you gave a para graph from a country journal, describe ing a dollar of 1T™8 There were no dol soln for several years after that Lier amateur in coins boasts of possessing *' one of the coins ever made—over 1,700 years old hat is not to be reckoned as a very old coin. It would only be a coin of Marcus Aurelius, who was the seventeenth of the series of Roman emperors, coms mencing with Julius Cwsar, B. C. 44 But we have coins 800 years older than Julius Cwsar, and nearly 1,000 years older than Marcus Aurelius. Frequent mention is made in the press American pennies, but pennies have never been struck by the United States. Cur government strikes cents, not pen. t would be as proper to call our cents {epla or «as pennies, (ireat Britain is the only country that strikes pennies It has been ela Confederate coins, dime the and "ars Anot tale i oldest th of ¥ Ee sesfer mea recently that the government struck silver and somebody in Alabama has a supposed to be a Confederate coin. This is not a coin; it is a medal. A coin is always struck bv a sovereign power; a me dal (token, medaller) by an individual. The Confederate govern- ment never ordered a mintage of coins. Had her independence been achieved, she would hav e¢ done SO. ‘he striking of coin in gan, it is believed, at Boston, Mass, in 1652, when the home sovernment granted the colonial authorities leave to make a certain amount. The first were of the vaine of twelve pence, six pence and three pence Fhe small letter upon our silver money refers to the p.ace where struck. C denotes Charlot e; D, Dahlonega; O, New Orl i 8, San Francisco, ele. [hose having no letter were minted at Philacleiphia, which is the mother manu- factory of all. Turkish coins, which are very com- mon in this country, are dated like our own, except that stead of A. D. they use A. H,—that is, the year of the flight of Mohammed, called the Heg girn. Visitors Philadelphia at the cen. tennis al were advised to zo to the mint ‘hestnut street, and see ‘the only the widow's mite in this country.” The statement is a double error. There are hundreds of genuine { the leplon (or * widow's mite”) day. On the other ecimen at Philadelphia is a Greek coin and not He- brew. for it has the Greek letter vy upon it, which is never seen on the gen- i Hebrew mit A N¢ York nouns discovery Of Roman silver coins struck by Romulus But the first sil- and BR us, B. C. 753. the ver money struck by the Romans was in B. C. five centuries later than the tw in founders of Rome. I'he me “E Pluribus Unum" first seen pon a copper medal struck in 1786. This was six years before the es- tablishment of the government mint, and was struck, it ved, at New. burg, NX. Y.. where was a private mint at the time. I'he beautiful copper Kentucky anda to com Ww America be. Enns ad io ont Spe imen of copies Q in this country hand the 81 most geiy tO ne paper recently a package { sd ia (4 SHH. some is is belie there coin, styled ** the was struck in Eng- memorate the introduction of Kentucky (1792) into the American Union. It is tound in many collections, being not a very rare piece, : But few persons nave any idea of the cumbrous ns of specie +» ESPEC inl ly and copper. When the British government remitted specie to Boston to repay their colonies for their disburse. ments in tie Louisburg campaign, the bullion was brought in a ship of war and weighed twenty tons; the copper ten tons, The aggregate value was £153,700 (about £900,000.) It filled 215 chests, and required thirty-five two- horse wagons to transport it from the lock to the treasury. A Pennsylvania paper save in a late issue that one Boyd has dug out of J en a Spanish coin dsted A. D. 529, and therefore 1.350 years oid. There are two ohjections to this statement; first, he ut there was no Spanish govern- men D. 529; second, that coins were not od A.D." at that period. To which the thipd objection may perhaps apply that there is no such man as Boyd, and the whole story isn yafn, A Cincinnati paper has a correspondent w ho claims possession of a coin date AD #26. Impossible. Coins with dates re- ferming to Anno Domini eannot be found earlier than the fourteenth cen- tury. There is one dated in Roman numerals MCCCLXXIV. (1374), and one in Arabic numerals dated 1401. The first English coin referringto A. DD, 1s that of Edward VI, with MDXLIV. (1544) The date of coins struck earlier than the fourteenth century may be known by referring to the king in whose reign they wire minted. It ee neraly supposed bronze cents and the nickel pieces are worth intrinsically marked upon their faces. from it. Reckoning nickel at 82 per pound, the five-cent piece is worth eent and a quarter, It weigis seventy- seven grains and a fraction. The pro- portions in the composition of it are seventy-five per cent. of copper and twenty-five per cent, of nickel, is reckoned at forty-three cents per pound. If, then, a nickel five-cent piece 18 lost, the government clears three and one-halt cents on the issue. The word penny in the Scriptures and | token © LOREEN, + i ure siiver gard i + hie 3 is all that the five-cent the value Very far is worth, by weight, about fifteen cents. always applied to a copper coin, mistakes upon this subject are common in the hs pulpit and in the Sunday-school room. A Discontented Baby’s Diary. 1. January--Just born. Here's a lark! ‘apa does not scem very pleased, hough. 1. February-- f Every night pa walks up FOR THE FAIR SEX. A Miss? touch Fhat's a Kiss in the abstmet. 1t does » ol seem much; Hut whore is the language onan rightly: express it? What letters can sound it to help you to guess it? What simile suggest, or what taney raveal he mysterious bliss it can cause one to feel ? Here nature assuredly won a diploma For hhagmuooe of flavor and perfect arama A kiss is electrical That ting n And GOES with a siart lew a delicate shiek to the heart, sols the eves twinkling with mpturous delight, Like aware in the sky of a ¢ When oar frosty night, tis over the eostacy olings to you yet; Lis a joy to remember and never forget All pleasure condensed in an instant of bliss what's contained Can but partly describe kiss, Na Greorge Bir dseye tashion Notes. Flowers reappear as dress bonnets. trimming for Cashmere colors are more used, and chiefly as relief vets and cloths. A great deal velveteen satin and si I'he latest boots for ladies have a broad projecting sole, and button on the out. side of the foot instead of over the instep, as formerly Wide rit chinte with tinted dre Re. The new fur-lined circulars are with a deep collar of fur instead of the hood of last wiauter, and all a trifk shorter, to enable them to be worn with the short costumes, sparing! Ly to plain Vis of figured and stamped used inexpensively with IK in street costumes ia yhons with dark borders and or palms in the center, are used striking effect with delicately musiins and satins for evening eading com- No (Garnet and pink are the bination of colors for eve ning dress shades are more inviting in to the complexion A great filmy white lace or gauze de dispensable with such young uo adies It is averred by that ladies who own fine diamonds purchase and wear numbers of paste stones in hand. some settings, to enchance the splendor of their display. The white topaz, found in Arizona and Idaho, is frequently set with real diamonds to make a show, Princess dresses for evening have the front slashed in deep points from below the hips, edged with feathery iringe, fall over satin of deeper shade, An Oriental scarf, which « omb ines the shade of the with brilliant, subdue d embroideries, in gold and colors, is draped round t} deal is in- for sO costumes dealers ing un dress yet he hips. The broad brimmed hats of far felt wrongly called beaver, are in request by Indies wishing a change of millinery, who cut off part of the rim, and bend he hat into close, hecoming shapes Broad satin loops and a feather or wing are the proper trimmipg for such hats which are rather more styli » dressy turbans 14 sh abroad than the are worn with evening taoliets A bouquet is tucked of the ow, or on the Grecian beértha in front In ot! designs, ier knots are worn as epaulets, and a rose heads the lacing in tl back of the cuirass basque, a dozen graduated sizes form a cordon from the {oft shoulder across the bosom “hii ularly rich, with black CURES, A festoon of roses of the apron, with SIGE, OF A Spire 4 of srried down the new and elegant ¥ HOWUrs in every fashion in the lace at rigl corsage, rectiy y rouna di. it is |e Of OSes is parti tin dr ile = P Je Hing at headed by flowers is hack of the dress, in a fashi i in ench News and Notes for Women, There are now students of Corn A Philade Iphi iar gest colored | America. The empress of Austria h riding her 4 i training Firs among ersiLy. Ail iy iy in woman iam ond ever 1 owns i brought to as hed to watch the selrool atta fy vicious horses, Miss Eckhardt, a She Ooves farmer's daughter, of * tate Centre, Ohio, pitched ** eighty acres of wheat from wagon to stack.” and was married a few hours afterward A celebrated French beauty in the i of Napoleon Bonaparte, Mme. Lucerne, has just reached her your. She was the friend and rival in beauty of Mme. Recamier. Miss Gabriella Stickney has been ap- pointed postmistress at Collyer, Kansas, She was a type-setter on the Chicago Legal News four years ago, but went West to grow up with the country. Miss Mary Ripley has charge of the boys' department of the high school, at Buffalo, N. Y., where there are over 200 voung men, whose ages range as high as twenty-five years, Few men who have preceded her in the work have beer ahle lo it acceptably. Her influence is such as to make not only law-abiding, uut enthusiastic students. A pretty miss of eighteen, who be. longs to a good family in Union City, Ind., and has been well educated, has recently been released trom jail, where she was awaiting trial for kieptomania. The most influential people in the county united in a appeal for tt the dismissal of the indictment, and the court acquiesced in a nolle prosequi. 18 tO EE ——————— Sliding Down a Moantain. trail leading to the Metamoras is both steep and narrow, and The mine larly for a distance of 200 er 300 feet, oeing pushed off at these points, but no accident has ever happened to the hardy miner and prospector who pass over it until recently, and this fortunately was not a fatal one. The snowfall had almost obliterated the pathway, making it peculiarly dangerous, and when James Ahearn attempted to make the ascent he was forced to gnope his way blindly, trusting to his knowledge of the route to'carry him over safely. It was not however, for when about half way up he slipped from the icy crust was traveling down the side of the mountain at arate of speed only equaled by a meteor. While 4he snow was the immediate cause of Ahearn's disaster it squeal. I always squeal. I must do something. March—Nurse is a spiteful thing— she sticks pins into a fellow on pur- pose, April—Afterall one of the bottle. 1. May I'd bite nurse. 1. June—W hat a nuisance it is to have relations who keep on saying “Ketchetty, ketehetty,” and dig in your ribs with their forefingers. When I grow up I'll do it to them, and see how they'll like it July—There are three babies next door got the measles. I zet nothing. It's awfully dull. 1. August One of the babies from I heard ma say, ** He hasn't got the meas es now?” “No.” said the babe's ma. There's a greedy sneak for you. Left "em at home! 1. September — Nurse drinks thing out of a blac 'k bottle. 1've caught her at it. It isn't the same that is in my bottle, either. If I were a bit bigger I'd change ‘em. 1. Uctober—i go, neither. gee ma and pa, uncle, and gave me to him to kiss. some: Messed if this ain't a nice him to nurse, and he pinched me. November—This is worse Why, here's another baby 1 than now, ouse; and they're not going %o send him away. Don’t even know how to feed himself out of the bottle, Well, of all-—never mind. 1. December—Got tosleep in thesame crib with him now! Wait till he goes to sleep ; I'll give him such aoner! * * Here's a beast of a baby! He won't go to sleep, and not a soul in the same crib ever. rocks as he plunged down, but received place, some 250 feet from the departure. As it was his eloting rere rent and torn, so was his skin in sun. dry places, and while no bones were broken there were aggregate bruises that will painfully remind him of his experience for some days to come,— c——— She Renewed. One of the sanitary police was the other day wandering over a box full of dead eats in an alley off Seventh street, when he heard yells and the sounds of conflict in n house near by. As he en- tered the yard a man and woman burst steps in a heap, kicking and clawing with right good will. “What 18 the trouble here?” asked the officer as he pulled them apart. “There, I'm glad you happened along!” exclaimed the man as he jumped up. a dispu‘e for the last ten or fifteen years as to when Christopher Columbus dis- covered A me rica, Maybe you know?" “It was in 1492,” replied the officer. ‘Just what 1 said—just the date I had! eried the husband as he danced “Now then, old woman, will you give up?” “Never! “You won't? “Not an inch! I said 1490, and I had your neck across the edge of the step. We agreed not to bite nor scratch, and | take a stranger's figures! Come into the house!” The officer waited at the gate until he heard two chairs smashed down and a dozen yells, and he resumed his rounds with a growing conviction that Colum- bus would uitimately be two years ahead in that house.— Detroit Free Press, I" Blenk, chilly Mure hh and November are the two worst months of the © ear for those suffer. ing with pulmonary disen-es. Keep Dre. Ball's danger. Price 25 ceats. Eastern and Middle States. the 20th the Republican members of the Maine legislature, in session at the capitol in Augusta, passed a motion offered by | 1 pane to established, members took their seats. When the sale in the secretary's offlos was wprened by maehinists it was found returns had been abs! reacted I'he Fusionist legislature met in and commis toon appointed to recommend a future course of in favor of submitting another ol questions 0 the supreme in be fully Union hall, sotion reported salon ort, A syndicate of New York bankers and rail Bok, buying 50,000 with the Central Paoific railroad st shares at seventy-two ($3 600,000), oft taking 80,000 ix months at slghty ($4,000,000), Daniel Searles, a negro, was hanged a lew days ago at Owego, N. Y., for the murder, lust June, of Eldridge Roway, an old bachelor ion of I'welve counteriellers were captured at Oswego, N. Y,, in the sot of coining money. By a collision between two heavy freight trains on "the Pluladelphin and Erie railroad, near Cameron, Pa., Engineer Dean, of the | train'going west, and the fireman and brake. man on the train going east were killed, while | three other train hands were fatally injured, | Two locomotives and twenly cars were to tally wrecked After the body of the colored man Searles, hanged at Oswego, N. Y., was cut down i was sold by his father to two doetors tor $18, Inking it home they severed the head trom the trunk, removed the brain, found that ut weighed lorty-six ounces, and then placed it which was alterward hermeli- This done they filled the town iB gina jar, ) y oally sealed, night on the nature and construetion of mur- derers’ brains in general and Searles’ brain in partionlar I'hey further proposed to carry the headless corpse through the country and deliver anatomical lectures in connection with men was going down Eighth avenue on the Klovated railroad in New York, it was thrown from the track and fell to the ground. Seven men were injured, two or three fatally. On the 24th the Fusionist wing of the Maine legislature ordered a number of to be submitted to the supreme court. The y d a body of milivia blicans having plas i a Gatling gun usionist governor, Smith, issued a prociama. tion denouncing this action and denying that his followers contemplated a resort 10 foros. A heavy fall in prices for grain esused great excitement in the New York Produce Exchange, and temporarily broker. All grades of wheat fell three to five cents a bushel in one day, and during the week prices fell from seven 10 nine cents. I'he walking mania has caused the death at Newburg, N. Y., of two themselves in thelr efforis to big scores and were taken down with consumption Aloss of § 100.000 was by fire of Stephen F large confectionery establishment over-exerted 3 MAK incurred by the de. Whitman & soelion i in The Rev. H. H at New Haven uard resulted Hayden, whose long trial for the murder of Mary Stan. in a disagreement of the jury, bas been released from jail on a bond of $5. DOO. On account of the dissgreement ol the rv Mr. Hayden says he will not go back to ministry, although the wardens of his have asked him to return to them, nt ho wiSte an iis life whic autoh 0 in confineme wis of skirts of Sao a few days ago, convicts and saployees time, but no lives were on bullding, stock and to the Bay Siate Shoe , 18 estimated at $260, inthe b wt t total loss machinery belos and Leather Compan 0.0. Western and Southern States. A report just made to the Kentucky by a committer shows s deplorable affairs at the State penitentiary in rt I'he committees frds that there eight convicts confined there who eannot wer than afew months, There are at { filty others, some of whom are confined bods, who ger than the two hundred others who are te of derility and weakness, practically un. fitting them for duty or work. The remainder of the convicts do not present a healthy ap- pearance, and seem affected by the injurious influences which have prostrated the others, Nad drainage, the overcrowded condition of the prison, general unoleanliness, poor venti ent quantity of whole. logis. of 3 fd about on and an insufMe some food have led to this state of affairs. Some 200 heirs to the famous Springer involving the site of the eity of Wil. wington, Del, and & large amount of money deposited in the Bank of Sweden, met in St Lovie a lew days ago, coming trom all parts o untry. Their objet was to consult as to the best means of obtaining possession of the estate. The Maryland legislature has elected Arthar P. Gorman 10 the United States Senate, as soos cossor to Senator Whyte, whose tern expires Maroh 4, 1881, On the legmiative ted Mr Inti oslo, the ¢ the Democratic Jackson, Miss., nomi. to succend B, K. Broce as ited States Senator [rom Mississippi; and New Orleans Genoral RK. LL. Gibson was the second ballot by the Demo. eratic legislative cavcus to succeed United States Senator Kellogg, whose term expires in 1883 At abe annual forty-ninth ballot enneus sl George at choren on meciing of the New York State Agricaltural Soviety, held in Albany the presi Hormlio Seymour, delivered an ‘The confliol bedwoon Ameri. pean agriculture.” ent, on TORS up 3 ean and Kur By the explosion of a sugar boiler on a plantation st Baratario, La., the engineer and men were killed and thirteen others wounded At a fire in Cherryvale, Kansas, the Globe rinting office was destroyed, and E. 8. Hen derson, loreman, and William Me Lain, another printer, were burned 10 death. Oa the mime day a fire at Alton, Ill. destroyed the alter. noon T'edegroph and other property, causing a loss of $110,000. Au explosion in the boller-room of the Veuch con! mine st Brazil, Ind, ki in the owner of the mine, and fatally William Elder sod a Jones Messrs. J. C. Georgoand R. Democratic candidates, have United States Senators by the Mississippi and Louisiana legislatures respectively. A material train on the Virginia Midland mn und at Rook fish Station, Va., ran off the track an emimnkment of ity fost. Con. ductor Dabney Wilson and two brakemen were killed, Captain H. D. Lucket and six road hands seriously injured and six oars com. pletely wreeked. All the prisoners (sixteen in number) in the Greensburg (Ind) jail made their escape through a hole in the floor of the upper cells and leit for parts unknown. A New Orleans dispateh saya the steamboat | Charmer, totally destroyed fire fifteen miles above the month of the Red river. Kight lives were lost—two chamberionids, two oooks, two enbin boys, one fireman and one deck hand, The boat and cargo were valued at $130,000. two ealore i led R blacksmith I. Gilson, the been elected own by From Washington. There have been fifty-six cases of smallpox in Washington daring the last fow weeks. Nine of the cases proved jatal. I'he National Woman Suflrage convention met nt Washingion a few days ago, Among the resolutions offered was one by Mrs. Sama Jd. Spencer maintaining that General Grant won his first victory through the military plan and genius otf Anna Ella Carroll, of Maryland. I'he House committees on centennial oelehration hans instructed a sub. 000 tor a monument at Yorktown. The Senate bas confirmed the nominations of James Russell Lowell, of Massachusetts, for minister to Great Beitaing of Indinna, for minister to Russia; Lucios Fairchild, of Wisconsin, for minister to Spain; Philip H. Morgan, of Louisiana, for minister to Mexico, and Lewia Richmond, of Rhode [aland, for eonsul at Beliast, Forelgn News News has been received of a disastrous con. fingration ip Tokio, the eapital ol Japan, the third in seven years—the first in 1872 and the socond in 1876, Nearly 15,000 homes have been destroyed and 50,000 persons rendered destitute. The netual pecuniary loss is still undetermined, but it is not 80 great as it would be in Western countries, owing to the | chenp construction of a majority of the houses, The loss of lite is put down at about one hnn- | dred. The number, however, is quite uncer. tain, many in the rapid progress of the flames having been overtaken and destroyed, and of whom no vestige remains, In several in. stances numerous unrecognizable bodies and fragments thereol wera found among the runing, and many died from exposure to the cold, the night succeeding the fire being ex- | coptionally severe, A considerable portion of | the district inhabited by loreigners was de. stroyed, including several missionary estab. | | lishments, one church and the ofMee of the | foreign newspnper—the Tokio Times. The! United States lawation esoaped the flames. | rine Dublin Mansion House committees have waned a numerously and strongly signed np al to America for the reliet of the incrous. ing distress in Ireland. The appeal says that the distress is daily increasing in area and in | intensity, and that it seems almost impossible | to nvert until the next harvest an absojute famine in many places. A Mr. Foster, of lialinst, has published a lotter addressed to Mr. Parpell, the Irish | ngitntor now in the United States. offering to give §75.000 to assist Irish emigration to | Canada and the Western States. | Jules Favre, the eminent Krench statesman and republican inember of the senate, and | also a member of the French academy, is dead in his seventy-second year. About seventy lives have boen lost by a | eolliery explosion at Newoastle-under-Tyne, | England. The explosion is attributed to the gaseous nature of the son! seam. Shortly | after it occurred thirty corpses wore brought : out, a majority of them being so disfigured as to be unrecognimble. After the explosion a fire suged in the pit with great violence, hin. all hopes of any ol the vietims belog reson ive. fio Janeiro, Brazil, has been the scene of {a bloody riot, brought about by public opposi. tion to the imposition of a tax, per passenger, on the street oar trae. A mob which destroyed the oars and tracks of the company was charged upon by a body of troops. Three persons were killed sand thirty wounded, ln. cladding some pollesmen and soldiers, before shocks of earthquake are reported from Salva. dor, and that it is generally supposed that the capital, San Salvador, has been Jon od to the ground, By a vote of 230 to 10 the Spanish senate { has passed a bill providing for the abolishment of - ary in Cuba. Serious inundationsand damage to properly | are reported jn Holland and Poland, Floods in the Cauca valley, Central Amerion, have caused & Joss exceeding $1,000,000. Several villages were totally destroyed and of lives lost. Cocos frmers who haciondas in boats, | | number visited their | themselves against the immense snakes that of the water General Grant was cordially received by the Spanish ofMcisls on his arrival at Havana, | at his disposal, On the day after his arcival a grand oMoial reception was held and a ban. | guet given in bis honor, Terrib e distress prevails at Adrianople, Turkey. Fifteen persons were found dead | from hunger there in one day. In sowe cases pieces of wood were found in the mouths of the eorpses. On the twenty. fiith anniversary of the Cear's | mocession to the imperial throne of Kussia the their numerous suits, All the German regi- | mander will send deputations to St. Peters. burg. The event, which takes place March 2, is to be made the oconsion of an extraordinary celebration throughout Russia. Havana and created great alarm. At San Christobal all the public buildings were laid in rains and seventeen members of the eivil guard were injured by falling walls, | South Atrican dispatches report that three hundred lives were lost at Lima, Peru, dur. ing the revolution, which resulted in the over. throw of the government and Pirola’s becom. ing dictator. i he Lord Mayor of Dublin has telegraphed to an American banker that the needs of the famine stricken of Ireland grow every day | more pressing, A eable dispatch says the strength of the British forees on the Afghan frontier has been greatly weakened by losses in battle and | trom sickness: The Car of Russia will create a ministry of | commerce, and has finally resolved to reor. ganize the police, placing it also under a separate ministry, CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY. Beonate. Mr, Kernan presented another citizens of New York in favor of the joint resolution for the withdrawal legal tender quality of greenbacks; also a pe tid the same purpose signed by Alex. ander Hamilton and others; also one signed by John Kelly and others. The Senate took up and passed the House bill to admit free of duty articles for exhibi. tion a! the millers’ convention at Cincinnati, Mr. Beek has made a speech in opposition to Mr. Hayard's joint resalution for the with. drawal of the legal-tender power of green. tmeoks Mr. M« adopted i ition of | Bayard | of on for rgan offered a resolution, which was formmiion remain incomplete by oes 10 comply with the | I extent g& for railroad land gre » the jal forieiture, and wes he hewn 5 Ye w, 88 to what le chines inlion Is necessRcy Lo secure 10 such persons their rights Mr. Coke spoke pgainst Mr, Bayard's joint | resolution 10 withdmw the legal-tender power | of greenbmeks, saying that were the most ular money the people over had. Mr. Morrill, PY from the committee on eduea. tion and labor ported favorably bill incorporating a national education asso. eiation Ww investigate and report upon any eda. oatiosal subject, called upon by any department of the govern ment 10 do so. Mr. Garland from the commities on the ju. diciary, reported adversely on the Senate hill to provide that all persons sentenced to imprisonment United States courts shall be confined fn the prison of the State wherein they were tried and convictad Mr. Gordon bas introduced a bill to repay to the State of Georgian 827.175, money ad. vanoed by said State for frontier agninet the Indians from 1795 to 1818 Mr. Buller has introduced a bill to suthorise the secretary of war to adic sccounta between the State of South Caroline and the United States government. House, fe without hy the i Mr. Chittenden made a long spooeh In favor of the bill requiring the national banks to re. Rin halt their resorve in coin. Mr Lonusbary, speaking on the bill, denied that resumption been brought about financial management of the administmtion, amd announced that he would offer an amend. ment to the nll, pesling those sections of the utes which make Usited Sinton ironsury notes a legal tender Mr. Loring has introdoos | the following constimijonal amendment: “ That the richt of sultrage shall be based on citizenship, and the right of eltizens to vole shall not be de States, or any Stale, on account of sex, or for any remson not equally applicable to all eit gens of the United States.’ Mr. Culberson has introdoced a_hill for the discontinuance of the system of national banking. Mr $500,000 for the relief of the suffering people | of Ireland, Mr. MeMahon, from the commities on ap- propriations, reported the bill making an ap- propriation for the payment shales and deputy marshals tor the fisoal year ending June 30, 15850. Ordered to be prinjed and recommitbed. Majority and wminosity Topora of the com. mittee on military affairs on the bill lor the reli! of General Fite submitted, of huadd 14 Revised Sint notes and on the mation sdop ted, Alter Messrs. Gillette, Weaver, Keifer and commissioner of agriculture for relative 10 the sugar beet, ball of their reserve in coin, a vote was taken refused to make the order—thus killing the bill, Mr quest) to incorporate Colonization and General Improvement rean in the United States, | ates Thurlow Weed, twenty-eight others, bu. Cardinal McCloskey and as such bureau. The $1,000,000, and may ba increased | object of which is to be the encouraging, pro. overcrewded oitier and other districts of the United States, and from Great Britain and Territories of the United States needing emigrants, and tor other humane and com. mahal purposes, i . Kelloy’s motion to suspend the rules and oR, the res lution deolarin ig the nego- tinting by the President of a oommersial | highest prerogative of the House, was carried by a vote of 175 yeas to 62 nays—the necessary two-thirds, Mr. Manning has introduead a hill to reor. ganige the supreme comrt. The hill for the inorense ol justices of the supreme conrt to twenty.one. Mr. Hoss has introduced s bill appointing Goneral George B. McClellan maneger of the National Soldiers’ Home for Disabled Volun. teers. Mr, Urner has introdooed a bill for a monn. ment to ¥, 8. Key, author of the * Star Spangled Banner.” I 0 WATS ——— — Tohy Hughes was not considered of much consequence in San Francisco, where he was a hroker's clerk. He quietly bought 10.600 shares of Chal. lenge mining stock at 81 ashare, which was all that it wns worth, Through a he went through the form of daily selling some of the stock at an ad- vinee, being always himself the pur clnsir. In a month he got the quotas tin up to $3 50, though there had been no ren) sales, Then he left with several brokers bogus orders from Flood, the bonanza king, to buy it at $3. They [ thereupon purchased Tohy's 10,000 and he, with the $20,000 pro fit, hastily juitted the city. Challenge droppe « back to $1. i In the “Savannah river, about two miles above Bewman’s terry, is a regu- an hored in the middle of the river. 1 is kept by a reached hy the owner's Dbatteau, which somes to either bank in answer to a shout. es ————— The mania continues. Years hence our children will speak with pride of their Pinaforefathers.— Bradford Era. | EDISON'S LIFE, ——— Sketeh of the Houtine Labor of the tirvent Inventer, There are probably but few persons in [the world outside the crowned heads [Whose probable length of life Is cnn | yassed by the publio at large with more Fn than that of Thomas Alva Edi- | son. foundation although only in his thirty-second year | he has made more inventions than any man living. In the patent office at Edison,” where his numerous inven. | the least of the curiosities of that insti- tution, Nearly 250 patents are placed foe the description ven of 1 the patent office hot with his steps. | Ib is io wonder, then, that the frequent | exelamation is made by those who re. | | lecton the tremendous amount of labor | involved in such a record, ** Oh, Edison | can't last much longer; he is working | himsell to death!" The prophecy is nh sregnrd Nupoleon, iv is $ inventor's well-known nature's requirements. related, did not average foutr hours | conquerable. His rest was in the saddle, | and his recreation in the battle field, | The same is true of Edison in his sphere {of life. His only pleasure is in the laboratory, where Lie can be found day and night from one end of the year to the other, with scarcely an intermission. He seldom seeks rest in bed. A bench or cot among chinery form his couch six nights out of the seven. Not that there is any real necessity, perhaps, for such self-inflicted hardship, b wat * roughing it" light. Life in the Menlo Park laboratory | partakes more of the character of a samp pitched near the battiefield than of | i Tt else. An average dally routine | | of the scientist, beginning al & time | when he has actually Aw, work and is | at home is as follows: At 10 Ao, Mm. where for about two bours he is in- | tensely occ up secretary to t | of over 200 letters a day. After disposing me to a perusal of the numerous papers, pamphlets, documents and { books scientific and otherwise, that | come to him from all parts ofthe world. with astonishing thoroughness, as days | has been over. By 2 Pr. | experiments and work of his assistants | with Mr. Batchelor, his chief assistant, | next occupy him for a considerable time. | reciial of the experiments he daily tries, | | he offers would seem exaggerated wereil | | laboratory Inbor attests the same with Mahnpens hs | ble accuracy. The majority of | hard labor of the inventor, however, | begins after dark. The work of the | day 1s more of a preliminary charmoter— | & getting ready. for the here ulean efforts | that one by one grow and develop, until they finally reach as a whole a perfect | | invention. The midnight lunch is a striking | ! feature of the laboratory life. At twelve o'clock every night two men and a de enter the laboratory aden down with baskets of edibles from a Reigiiborin caterer. The dog, a huge Newfound} ring inys as important a part in the per- ormance as his biped companions, for with a lighted lantern hanging from his { mouth he leads the way from over the rafiroad track and across the fields to | the nhode of the Wizard, He also as sists at times by having strapped to his back a basket or can contsining some { of the lunch. The repast without the | dog to participate would be barren. He ! seems to know his standing, and he is | always to be found at his post of duty. | Around the lunch table gather the in~ i i { good things disappear hey discuss the | day's work, tell stories and gossip gen. erally. A freer or gayer set could scarcely be found. The jovial good nature of the chief spreads to all, wnd fun and fancy reign supreme. After luneli once more begins the work of science, and continues until, one by one, the aiistanis drop off to sleep. A few retire to their homes; the larger num- ber, howev er, leader and utilize their benches tor beds. Edison himself gives in generally about | | 4 A. M_, selecting some unoccupied spot, | ! where, with his cost for a pillow, he | sleeps soundly sometimes until ten o'clock, other times until xix, for his! time of rising varies, This mote of life continually re. peated, ealeglated to wear out | Ost men, thrive. | pieture of good health. His height is | | five feet ten inches, and his weight 185 | pounds. — New York Herald while i C—O ——s Scientists may Differ About the DS — of rheumatism, its origin | and whether it be hereditary, but irrefmagable Choked to Death With Food. Choked to death—slowly while sitting at the dinner tab and chatting familiarly one alana the next a ghastly, livid corpse, | was the Pp of Capt. Charles 1. Pierce, | a well-known attorney of Erle, Pa. who met his death at the Farmers’ hotel b | swallowing a huge piece of beef whi | stuck in his throat and killed him in less than three minutes. The Erie Dis- | patch, describing the accident, says: i he unfortunate man had nol been in | the house ten minutes, in | and asked to be supplied with a meal, A plate was laid lore hits and a liberal supply of roast bee tables was served, It wa notion tha | he attacked and devoured Juthar than | began to eat dinner. In a few seconds a lull in the captain's lively conversa. tion caused Mr. Cummins 0) look up, and, to his great surprise, Mr, Pierce | was lying back in a chnir with his oe | distended and a terrible look Is face, He hastily ealled his wi and | the pair tried to discover the cause of the captain's trouble, Medical ald was | sent for, and the chief of police, who | was passing the door, was ly |ealled in by Mrs. Cummins. In the meanwhile the unfortunate man was ebbing away, His face had nid red and black by turns, and when Mr, Crowley entered he was nearly There was just a faint puisation, w ich disappeared in a fow seconds. , Rob- bins and Silliman arrived in a few min- | utes, but the vial spark had fad. the heart Lad ceased to best and C Plerce was dead. His body was laid u the dining, | rosm table, and Dr. Robbins € { the unmasticated piece of at yp | the gullet. Tt was over two inches long and weighed about two ounces, its ap- | pearance being as if it had only been yitten twice, Every effort was made to | resuscitate him. Artificial respiration Was tried, but all in vain. A Massac busetts Woman has invented “hygiene suit” for women which she halls the * Emancipation Garment.” This is a pew name. Emancipation garments in days wars sinerally called divorcee suits. — Mc Kea THE MARKETS. ¥EW YORK os Hate BRAB ERR ARR orn ed Ip B ogt—Lid ¥en coves ronsed . coe res Fioar— Ex. State, good to taney... i“ Western, to faney... ... | Whest—Ne, 1 ARESRES Sus + SHRINE White PAE ARERERRR RIAN ES | BR Bi Oora—~Ungraded Western . Bouthers Yellow, (coves cise ns Arne sERane AEE REESE SERRE 0 EE t $ i ul srsazExa S238 CEIRRERRR 3s2s9 FUFEEBENEBRANEISI2I 0 RAL RANGE EerERE NRE EES ssesieline 883 rE ASAE EERE ENE cHeane sre per OWL, suennsine EE srsssnns i Mess, inn essa sannnnut srl | Lard City BIosin, «eons vorsnssses ess sonatps ssl Wool —State and ed aguges en @os Butier—State Creamery. coovecssssee PIBEY css snessssnse sors ho FRERARE RENE Chepse—Biate FROLOrY... coiveisnnsan BRINE, onsrsnsonness Western. ..... SERRE CBRN | Egee-Btate aid POR. cone. crvsine Potatoes, Early Rose, State, Bhi... 1 PUFFALO FMour--Otty Ground, Neo, § Spring... 6 Whoeat— Bed Winter, coves cosssmrosns 3 { Dotp—~Now WOSlors. .....onnsensees | ORE B88, coves csrvss savers s sessen wod Barly —~Two-r¢ A _. = z er0ee REARS Ere POFTOR, Beet Cattlo-Live weight seuss sanage Bhotd...sssnranss HORS. 0s res. VOERENE OREN avs Bhan | Fipar-Wisconsin and Misa Pst... Corg~Mixed and Yellow, usee sears | Oats~Extre White, ,.. Ry o—Slate, couse ovens isnabog sn Wool Wasted Combing & Delsnie., raionzos (uae) curria mange Boel Cattle, live weight «w BLO. cesns sans senmEsne s Law PERERA BEEREE PERE E REE a. SSEZZ28ER 8s > ; rx FLRREERE ERRRES PHILADSLPEIA, Flour-—Penn, oholos and fancy ....., § 80 Wheat—-Peun, Bol, ossnnsrrescrinses Amber. coven sonanns. sansin } Ryo—Btato... conven sos Oa State Yellow, cons savestessss Oste~Mixed, oo one.. FRASER Buital--Ohansil SEITE. Lcprnn ann nn New York ee san RsrsR es BeZTex = x espa enana®T BOTH wipal,g ] Father is Gelting Well. ) My daughters say * How much better father is since he used Hop Bitters.” He is getting well after his long suffering froma io, declared is lob suffering areso glad that he aed your 3 led iy lady ot Rochester, N. X ~~ Ultion Herald. “lam all Plased Out” is a common complaint. If you feel so, get a package of Kidney- Wort, and take it and you will at once feel its tonic power. It renews the health the Kidneys, Bowels and Liver, and thus restores the natural life and strength to the weary body. Get a box and use it at ance. i develops itself, Hostelter's Stomach Bitters is | ease are decidedly objectionuble from the dan. | effectual, the best, the safest check is the Bit. | ters. This very obstinate malady, the more { effectually to overcome it, shoald be grappled with at the outset. terrible, what ceaseless pain it oan inflict Why then, should this atrocious, often fatal | | complaint be allowed to gain headway through | | indifference to its earliest symptoms, when s | | safe, long tested and strongly recommended medicine prosents itself. In addition to sug- | gesting this a means of relief it seems not in. | appropriate to caution the rheumatio sgrinst | expos ure. i The Best Rubber “Boot. i #0 exasperating as a bad one, { among manuiacturers has led to such a cheap. | thing to find & rubber boot really worth the | money asked for it. The Candee Rubber Co. | oi New Haven, Ct., however, has intely put on the market a boot designed to meet the eal) for a real good, it is called the * 85 Per Cent. Sterling Boot.” { It is made, on honor, as pire as can be made | and is warranted three months. By an inge. nious contrivance a space is provided at the | sale, by punching holes in the sprees pro. | vided-like a milroad ticket—so that there | { may be no trouble abou. the warrant. The | | upper and leg of the “95” doubled, and the soles are one-halt inch thiek, { of solid rubber from toe to heel. Ordinary | rubber boots ure barely a quarter inch thick { in the thickest part, and only one-eighth at | the shank. { pany; or the “85” boots ean be tound at most of the stores. [ Dr. C.K. Shoemaker, ol Reading, Pa. i= the | only auralsurgeon in the United States who | devotes all his time to the treatment of deat. | ness and diseases of the ear and oatarrh; es | pecially ranning ear. Nearly twenty years ex. | perience. Thousands testity to has skill, Con. | sult him by mail or otherwise. Pamphlet free. | VeerTiNE.—When the blood besomes life. | less and stagnant, either from change of weather or of climate, want of exercise, irreg ular diet, or from any other oanse, the Vee. TINE will renew the blood, oarry off the putrid humors, cleanse the stomach, regulate the bowels, and impart a tone of vigor to the | whole body. For one cent purchase a postal eard and send your address to Dr. Santord, 162 Broad. way, New York, and receive pamphlets by roturn mail, from which you can learn whether your liver is out of order, and it out of order, or in any way diseased, what is the best thing in the world to take tor it. Judge for Yourself, By sending thirty-five cents, with age height, color of eyes and hair, you will receive by re- ture mail a correct photograph of your future husband or wife, with name and date of mar. ringe. Address W. Fox, P. O. Drawer 81, irultonville, N, XY. Sherman & oo.’ vn, Mich., want an agent in this county at once, at a salary of $100 per fronth and expenses paid. For full particulars address as above. Correct your habits of crooked w walking by using Lyon's Patent Mctallic Heel Stiffeners, Why is good advice like P’iso’s Cure tor Con. sumption? Because everybody ought to takeit. C. Gilbert's Pat. Gioss Starch for laces, eto. ughre ves and} Da MARCHISCS ray Wives CATH iGO wi tively ore Female Weakness, such as Falllog © the Womb, 3 bites, Ghivhic Inflammation or Ulceration the y ental Hemorrhage or F Su and Irregular Menshuation, &c. An Painful rel ible remedy, Send postal card Jal a pam bist. with treatment, cures and oo a from nics, N t, Bi brat to HOWARTH & BALLARD, al) Driggisia 8150 per bottle. 'GAPONIFIE R= | Is the 0:4 Reliable Comventrated Lye, FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. : Directions accompany each Can for making Herd, Soft and Tollet Soap guickiy. IT IS PULL WEIGEY AND STRENGTR re market is Sooded with (so-calied) Concentrated which is adulterated with salt and rosin, and went op ! SAVE NONET, AND BUY THR SAPONIFIER MADE BY THE Pennsylvania Salt Manul'g Co. PRILADELFHIA, RAILROAD ‘Stocks and Bonds ADDRESS | ! W.B. TAYLOR & CO., Members of the New York Stock Exchange, No. 8 Wall Street, New York. ON 30 DAYS TRIAL plianoes shoes wha trial for 8 days 0 and wil viens diovan of a nadwre, Al sa ol the the Liver, Ki gn Warshall, Mich. win, BC. A mov Address ola Belt Cox) Aaa len Send ten three STRIKE OIL =F to: x wf the Qi Business. from first we rise amd progress, amd how role fe and can make vast fortunes, with little or by Operating and 8 spevuting m Lands, a yi Of | BY Bare nis, calls and los. TUNA ru ISHING vO, ford, Pa, A BAYS we will end by Express 1e any per wn send ing In a & Recomumed- dation Letter and Wi 10 pay expenses, Watches, Jewelry, Guns, » 40 Worth of our New Goods, Hevolverneto. at 8Q pet cent discount, and give days pan... n the remal > ug SBN. Send bid in Aslilres ORNE & ¢ : + soariet, one Cactus Roots, 8. 25. ox scatiel, one d _Slooming BN janis, mailed and re with directions how to Ww, baanting! Fi lower 8 Fare pew species and | elegant. your orders early, Address WW. BRIGGS & Or Cerbat, Mohave Co AAT Ona; (ham this paper.) wofits on 30 dary investment of $1425 ' y ~in Rrie R. R., October 18 — $100 Pro oe ia mal Tetum every went oa Stock ¢ of $30, ox Val aa. ors and Ci Ri re . POTTER WIGHT & CO, LE SL, N.Y. ANY EWTISERS b Bureau, 10 Spruce Street, N learn ints d exact cost of any proposed Pri of ADVERTISING in American Rewspape rt 05-pare | Pamphlet, 100.68 Josh's Trunk Full of Pus. wm. AL FU N 1: the volt Stories, NL 20 Comic Engravings, Ng free. J. L. PATTEN & CO, 47 Barclay St, New York. New York. young GC MEN Ee month, Every Radaine guatan paying etn ton. Address K. Valentine, Manager, Javesville, lots! WANTED =2.0%0 ia Far Ee wins Profit ood Outht free FEO! S TEA A CO. Tex 5088, Be. Low's, Ma. ED: Inteiigens ew Te sell i Know w ANTED © a Brides Butane, 80 Lose, Ma. Morohine ¥abli Cured in 19 i days. No pay till Cared Bio. J. BTRPHENS, Lebanon, Ohle { 3 flevolvers. Catalogue free Addren | g bs Great Western Gun Works, P Acre « Farm for Sale. EK thle Jouation, Price Tem. accommo ating. 11 ne Tt in your own town. Terms d free. Address H., Hawxrr & Co, A YEAR +% expenses 10 agents, Address P. AL Auguste, » B77 buiree.” Wells, 1 Eisen YT a Gives Butter the glit-edzed color Thousands of Dairymen, tay IT A WEEK. $12 a day at home = B72 5 Outfit a Truz & Oo. iy a Month and ex Whites to is Syenis. Dairy wT tree. Outtit free. SH PERFEC "BI t costs, Who uses it, where to get | { WiLL, une nd Culde, Di Rbeumatiem, in the Side, 1 have medicine for 35 years, he Sihvunation, 3 Wh» sii This alr Greenies ad basins pact of ddde Sor Begr 4 ade heap. The © 5 cont . aout 170 nas FRANK RAINKY, Austin, Texas \inimetiouse Retablished A803, 4 Thousands of Soldiers and hetry IT Care or Gee Po BOE E. LENO! 24, = 8 BRIS Roads, § set [ent \ TCAKLETON'S HOUSEHOLS : cnovoLonoi One Pa ls in one vol Jock Miltary In Onn aw ,_Factory Address Land Co, Se cARLE IX & 00. Phe 1.1. 0. JE person $19.000 BE rd FAT ie AT. May we a lamp or burner. dripping and beatings a Tor iT 5 of your la . Newton's Co., ow York Lam 13 West Br oY. and Office, Binghamton, N TRUTH 18 picHTY ; pUCHTYL hg of your Puture hue enSail A40 acres of holon HE He BE LOWER phiet with ratanith Wie te. ymour, Baylor oo Co Tea Sane, Containing to or % 30,000 Norns, Ly e-Col the RAFREE a and Bat twe BER eas ASL whit ie, oh.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers