When an Apache brave concludes to marry, says the San Francisco Post, gither a first or any subsequent wife, che manner of his courtship is the same. He makes no effort to become agreeable to his intended bride— indeed, rarely if ever notices hier or speaks to her, except in answer to questions she may put to hin. Ile pays more attention, however, to her male relatives, particularly her hrothers, if she has any. Finnlly, if he becomes satisfied that a declaration will not be rejected, then the whole affair is accomplished in a few hours, and gener ally in this fashion: At night he takes the presents intended for the girls parents, who alone are entitled to re- ceive any, and places them near the lodge in which she lives, Ifthe presents are horses they have their trappings also. and are tied with macate neal the lodge; if a cow is to be given, a singie straw or a cow's horn, which signifies the intention, is tied to the lodge. If the presents are accepted, which al most always happens, the girl} goes in the morning and builds a new lodge or hut for herselt and husband, and puts the straw in it for their bed, If the man is rich there iz some ceremony about the marriage; if poor, very lis le or none. When the parties are of con- sequence one of the orators of the tribe is employed by the bridegreom to piace the presents near the lodge and make a speech to the bride's family for him. The orator stands at a distance of sev- eral vards, and in his best style makes the declaration for his principal. In this he dilates on his client's qualities—-his courage, his skill in hunting, or any- thing in which he isdistinguished. The orator confines himself strictly to the truth in his speech, and promises that his principal will maintain and defend his bride, but the same time informs her family that he may at some future time take another wife, and even may be. come tired of her and send her home— all of which are the necessary incidents of Apache married life. Healso tells them that while she should remain I only wife, he would be faithful to her, and should expect fidelity, obedience and service from her. When he re turned from huating, foray or play he wanted his food prepared as soon as possible, and he should expect her al ways to have a store of food on hand. On his part he would bring her game and spoils of the enemy whenever he could. Her relatives make presents to the parents or family of the husband, and is all that generally is done. Among these Indians it is considered a great indecency for a man to look at his ther-in-law’s face, and still more so to speak to her. If by chance they hap- pen to come close together, one runs in one direction and the other in an oppo- site one until they are several yards apart. » hia tins mot mrs Strange Feed. Some score or so of contributors to a French sporting journal dined one day upon the ham and heart of a lion, killed by Constant Cheret in Algeria. The he lion was found to be particu- larly firm and close-grained, like that of a horse, but although pronounced palatable, it only achieved what is termed a § d'estime, while the heart, skillfully prepared with truflles, was unanimously voted tough and indi- gestible. In fact the French journalists were not much better pleased with their fare than was Bruce, the traveler, when the guest of the Arab tribe of Welled Sidi Boojanim, ** the sons of the fathers of the flocks,” bound by vow to eat lion's flesh once every day; for the traveler found male lion meat lean, tough and musky in flavor, lioness meat a trifle fatter and more palatabie, and whelp flesh the nastiest of the three. Mindful that an unlocked for pleasure is thrice welcome, Frank Buckland did not advise his guests on a certain ocea- sion that they were about to enlarge their gastronomic experiences, but when the soup had been disposed of asked a famous gourmand sitting near him how he liked it. * Very well indeed,” was the answer. Ionly Lil flesh of t 8; &8 “Turtle, is it not? ask because I did not find any green fat.” Buckland shook his head. “I fancied liar but not at all unpleasant,” re. marked his neighbor. “All alligators * replied the host, ‘the cayman especially—the fellow 1 dissected this morning, and which you have just been discussing.” Half a dozen of the sud- denly enlightened diners suddenly started to their feet, two or three slunk from the room, and the rest of the meal was enjoyed by only a portion of the original company. ‘See what imagi- is,” said Buckland. *‘Had 1 told them it was turtle, or terrapin, or hird’s-nest soup. or the gluten of a fish from the maw of a sea-bird, they would have pronounced it excellent, and their aigestion would have been none the warse, tell ghem that it is alligator up, ana their Torges rise at as good a dish as ever a man need have!” Forewarned, ard therefore forearmed, were the gentlemen who lunched on topus at the Brighton aquarium, try- nariaon 3 RAtION Is, 0 o ing it in turn boiled, broiled and cold. They found it excellent eating, resem- bling skate, but not so tender as might + till more favorable had the octo- pus been boiled first and then roasted, monster is esteemed a great delicacy.— Chambers’ Journal, I 3 Bismarck’s Country Home. Am ple scres, and all the appurtenances of es ian mansion of the chancellor. stables shelter many thoroughbreds, the kennels are crowded with Bismarck’s favorite dogs. The conservatories teem with rare fruits and flowers; snd in all these things the master takes a keen and watchful interest. But he is most often found at Varzin, as at Berlin, in his study. This is a six-sided apartment, furnished with rugged simplicity. An fill in one of the corners; on either side of which rises a column bearing a coat- of-arms or «n emhlazoned shield. Bis- cestry. After the French war, he added td Lis coat-of-arms the banners of Alsace and Lorraine, nnd chose as his motto, trinity."—an old family device. “And,” sureested a friend, ** it may also signify “That was what 1 meant.” A bust of the emperor surmunts the chimney; while before it are placed two stiff, high- backed chairs. The walls are adorned. a: Bismarck everywhere there are Tunisian sabers and Japanese swords, Russian hunting knives and braces of pistols, military caps and the room comprises sofas, divans, and the chancellor's writing-desk eovered white porcelain inkstand and a two- armed student lamp: ona small table at one =n ia u large Bible, evidently much used ; substantia, like Bismarek himself. Such a one leads from a corridor “The castle case. into unknown regions. the door. said Bismarck: and he went on to ex- plain that it led to a path in the woods, whither the great man was fain incon- tinently to retreat when threatened by a raid of unwelcome guests.—Good Com- pany. Leap-Year Difficulties. He was a nice young man, with cane, eceasionaily twirling the waxed ends of his moustache. He was acrosted by a stout woman with a florid com- plexion. “Top of the mornin’ to ye, Mister Charley.” said she. “ Good morning, Mrs. McGuinness,” said the nice young man. * Me dariint boy, would ye—" and she hestowed a bewitching smile upon him. He dodged out of her reach. The recollection that it was leap-vear rushed upon him. ile answered: * Madame—realiy—I can’t—I am very sorry it I cause you pain—but my affec- tions have already another—and, madame—I can’t—I can't marry you.” She gazed at him in astonishment, kid ye to marry me! The idea of the likes to marry me. for that dollar for washin'.” He sighed and gave her a doilar, and walked sadly away.--New York Sun. . ‘ FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEROLD. Farm Notes, Dark stables are injurious to the eyes of horses, No other animals should be tolerated in a yard with she Pp for it will only re. sult in vexation and loss. A bag of hops as large as thetwo fists, placed in a bin or store of grain, will, it is sald. kill or eradicate all grubs and in. sects from the grain. The a Ones can be removed by fanning. Shelter is one of the first objects in wintering sheep successfully. Farmers often condemn barns and sheds as un healthy places for sheep, when it is a want of ventilation that doves the injury Milk paint for fences or barns is made by mixing water lime with skim milk te a proper consistency to apply with a brush. It will adhere well to wood whether smooth or rough, to brick, mor tar or stone, where oil has been previ ously used, A farmer in Bangor, Me, observing that wheat was being picked from the seeds of standing grain, and seeing at the same time flocks of yellow birds flying about, shot some ot them, On opening their crops he found only three grains of wheat, and by actual count 350 weevils, Particular care should be used in cleaning milk pans and cans. Many cases are on record of diseases in fami lies from using milk infected with nox- jous germs from foul milk cans. Milk. men upon again receiving the cans should cleanse them with boiling ho water. Cattle like a change of diet occasion. ally. as men do. Keeping oattle on hay or straw alone is a little like living on bread or potatoes, or meat alone, with wothing except that one dish, Therefore feed some roots, as well as hay and meal or shorts. If vou haven't the roots on hand, pe sure and have a supply next winter, Cabbage has a superior value for feed - ing purposes, English cattle feeders as- sert that their beasts progress faster on cabbage, mixed with plenty of fine-eut wheat straw and cotton cake, than with any other vegetable, Cabbage contains one part flesh-forming substance to three of heat producing, while in potatoes, the flesh~forming is only one to twenty Cabbage is also rich in mineral matter How to Sweep a Hoom, To sweep and dust a room properly is an art. and like all fine arts has a right method. Well done it renovates the! entire room, and the occupant takes possession feeling that “‘all things have become new.” It is not merely a per- formance to be done by the hands, buta work into which taste and judgment, in other words, brains, must enter. Are these closets opening into the room to be swept? Arrange the shelves, draw- ers or clothing preparatory te sweeping day; then let this be the first to be swept. Cover the bed with soiled ysheets, as also all heavy articles that "cannot be removed; first, however, | having carefully dusted and brushed them. Remove all the furniture that can easily be set in hall or adjoining room. having first dusted it; then, tak. ing a step-ladder, begin to sweep or brush or wipe the cornice and picture cords and pictures. Draw the shades | to the top of the window or, if there are inside blinds, dust them earefully. Open the windows. All the dust left in the room now is in the carpet or air, and the current of the windows will soon settle it. Now begin to sweep, not toward a door or corner, but from the outer edges of the room toward the center, where the dust will be taken up with a small brush and dust-pan. Go over the room once more—this time with a dsmpened broom; that removes the last bit of dust and gives the carpet a new, bright appearance. Replace the articies of furniture as soon as the air is entirely free from dust, uncover the rest and the room is new and clean. All this seems an easy thing to do, but there isnot one in a hundred will follow out the details. Some will sweep the dust into the hall, or from one room to another, and then wonder why their house is so soon dusty again. Others forget cor- nice and pletures, and thus leave a seed of future annoyance; while a third class will do all but usisg the damp broom, which is as the finishing touches to »n picture. — Chicago Alliance. Household Hints. Soft soap should be kept in a dry vlace in a cellar, and shou 4 not be used Je three waonths after it is made. A French chemist asserts that if tea | be ground like coffee immediately be- fore hot water is poured upon it. it will yield nearly double the amount of its exhilarating qualities. . To preserve the aroma of coffee, add the white of one egg to every pound of coffee just before it is quite why Stir it thorovghiy into the mass, so tha every berry will be wet with it. To clean lamp chimneys, hold them over the nose of the teakettle when the kettle is boiling furiously. One or two repetitions of this process will make them beautifully clear. Of course they must be wiped upon a clean cloth. Table cloths should be but slightly starched, and folded lengthwise, after ironing quite dry on the right side, first | down the middle, then putting each sel- vage edge to the center, pressing them down on the right side; next placing ! the two double parts; thus folded. to- | | gether, and then doubling the other way { in the same manner. To wash a black and white cotton dress, have a tub partly filled with hot water, add one large tablespoonful of powdered borax; wet only one partof the dress ata time, the basque first; use very ligjle soap, and only on the most soiled pisces; wash quickly, rinse in warm water containing a tablespoonful of table salt; starch on the wrong side, wring very dry, shake out well, han where it will dry quickly; next wash the overskirt and then the under-skirt in the same way. Henlth Hints. Glycerineis excellent to rub on cha fes burns or chapped hands or sun scalds. Olive or sweet oil mixed with warm milk and water, and drank plentiful un- | til it acts as an emetic, is an antidote to poisons in general Laws of Life says simple remedies are { frequentiy the best for headache. A cup of sour mi'k spread upon a thin | eloth and applied to the head will many times give relief. Or, a mild mustard plaster on the back of the neck will | pften ease th. pain, or drinking a cup of | i het water. Temporary relief from a painful sere | corn may, says an exchange, readily be obtained by applying strong carbolic ! acid. Take the cork out of a small bot- tie of earbolic and apply it (the cork) to the corn. Relief hy Coil at once, and you will be able to walk with compara- | tive comfort till you can find time to remove the corn with a knife, How to Make Cows Give Milk, If you desire to get a large yield of | rich milk, give your cow every day water | slightly warmed and slightly salted in which bran has been stirred at the rate of one quart te two gallons of water. You will find if you have not tried this practice that your cow will give twenty- five per cent. more milk immediately under the effects of it; and she will be. come €o attached to the diet as to refuse to drink clear water unless very thirsty. But this mess she will drink almost any time, and ask for more. The amount ot this drink necessary is an ordinary water pailful at a time, morning, noon and night. Extraordinary Growth ef Hair. The ordinary length of the hair of the heado f a woman varies from twenty inches to a yard, in some instances even usual oceurrence--its weight from five ounces to ten ounces. Ascontemporary relates an instance where the hair on a lady's head attained the measurement of But its proper length for texture and strength should not exceed twenty-four inches, and its vaiue as Jong hisir is much depreciated It has been calculated by Withef that the beard grows at the rate of a line and a half per week, which gives a length of vear, while for » wan of eighty years of | before the razor. The beard of the forgotten to fold up the same, he ne upon it as he ascended to the central thrown down and killed. In this moist and variable climate colds are ‘he rule rather than the exception. Dr. bull's | Cough Syrup is just the remedy for every one | to take when suffering trom a cough, cold or any throat trouble. Nihilists on the Scaffold. The Odessa journals report that, in governor general and commander-n- | chief of the troops, General Totleben, | preparations were neade early in the morning ior the execution of the three Nihilists lately sentenced to death by the Odessa court-martinl, The houge of detention, in which the condemned men were confined, was surrounded by four regiments of infantry and one regi= | ment of Cossacks. Punctually at eleven | o'clock in the morning the gates leading | into the courtyard of the house of des tention opened and gave passage to a black wagon drawn by two horses, in | which the three condemned men were seated, with their hands firmly tied be- | hind them and again bound to a bar affixed to each side of the vehicle, The nobleman. Victor Alexejeft Malinka, a young man of twenty-six years ol age and & volunteer in the One Hundrad and Thirty-second battalion of the infantry Josefofll Maidanski, military f Hus. and ' eserves | surgeon of the Seventh regiment o sars, twenty-five years of age, Ivan Wassilewitsoh Drobiaskin, twenty. eight vears of age, the son of a priest, were all enveloped in the custoninry long white garment From around che neck of each of the prisoners was sm” pended a large black pinoard bearing the inscription, *f gossudarstwennyi ) presupnik " (traitor to the State). Dur- | ing the whole ride from the prison to the place of execution the three pris oners did their utmost to make their voices heard by the dense crowds which lined the way. The wagon was escorted by the Thirteenth battalion of Chas- seurs. which bears the name of the Prince of Bulgaria, and by a hundred Cossacks. In addition to this escort the wagon was guarded by five gen. darmes, who rode by its sides with drawn swords. As Drobiaskin would not heed the reiterated command to cease addressing the people, but on the con. trary shouted to them at the top of his voice, one of the gendarmes struck him so severe a blow on the head with the flat of his sword that it stunned him. ‘pon this one of his fellow prisoners oried out: ** Do not hew us down, un- fortunate minion of the Czar,” but the gendarme, threatening him also with his sword, only answered by the injunc- tion “ Moltschi, sobaka!" (siience hound). Very shortly after this pain- ful incident the place of execution was The three condemned men were unbound from their seats in the wagon and led to the gallows, Their sentence being read by Captain Nester- enko., Malinka was deprived of his rank as nobleman. After this ceremony had been completed Malinka was at once delivered over to°the hangman. He, | however, demanded permission to ad- dress the people, which was refused him by the commander of the town, Major- General Baron Heinz, who inquired it he would like to confer with the priest. Malinka, after scornfully glancing at him, turned to the hangman and said “Now, servile wretch, do your work.” Drobiaskin was the next to be placed under the rope. When in this position a priest approached him with a crucinx, but was repulsed with the words: ** Let me alone, brother. [I do not want any of that humbug." When the last pris- oner, Maidanski, was placed in the exe- cutioner's hands, he shouted out to the rabbi: ** Get out of my sight; let me not set eyes upon you." At 11:30 o'clock all three were hanged, and at twelve o'clock the bodies were cut down and cast into the graves which had been dug on the spot. The earth was thrown upon them and stamped down. Major. Genera! Krok then gave the word of command and the troops, marching off the ground with their band playing, passed over the graves and trod down the earth much tighter, — London Standard. i A Pet Dog's Fatal Bite, A recent dispatch from Wilmington, Del, a New York paper, says Richard G. Alexander, 8 well-tode citizen of Delaware City, was bitten by a dog supposed to be mad one day last montli. As he was sitting in his door- way, holding a pet dog in his lap, the animal sprang upon him and sank its fangs deep in his cheek and upper lip. It then dashed away through the neigh borhood, and before it was killed bit about twenty other dogs. Since he was bitten, Alexander hos been fearful of the hydrophobia, and took many different remedies. On Monday morning last he first felt wliat are believed to have been symptoms of the disease; he complained of a pain in the back and a palpitation of the heart, but attributed them both to torpidity of the liver. On Thursday morning, when he went to wash, he found that he experienced an aversion to water that he could not overcome, He ate a hearty breakfast, but could drink nothing, and stuutly maintained that nothing sailed him. His fortitude in re- sisting the dread malady is character. ized by the physicians as one of the most remarkable things they have met with in their practice. He refused to have a doctor called in until he had a spasm, and when medical aid was finally called, he composed himself with great effort, The doctor at that time was not con~ vinced that Alexander had the hydro- phobia until he remarked that he felt that he wanted to sneeze all the time and could not. The fangs of the dog had tora the cartilage of the nose, and the first symptoms of the disease in such cases is a morbid feeling in the wound, Soon after this the spasms became vio- lent, and, to soothe the patient, strong opiates were presented, but he could not swallow. Toward evening he became very violent, but after the spasm begged to be killed, and pleaded with those present to leave the room, or he might unknowingly bite them. The spasms grew more pronounced and frequent, | and finally it required the united force ! of six men to hold him. He died in| last night about eleven | o'clock, just forty-five days after being | first bitten. A general outbreak of | hydrophobia is feared in the neighoor- hood, as many dogs were bitten Ey the to not killed. John Milton and His Daughters. And surely it is his simplicity alone that can excuse his conduct to his daughters. Milton's Oriental views of the function of woman led him not only to neglect, but to positively prevent, the education of nis daughters. They were sent Lo no school at ail, but were handed over to a schoolmistress in the house. | He would not allow them to learn any | language, saying, with a sneer, that * for a woman one tcngue was enough.” The | Nemesis, however, that follows selfish sacrifice of others is so sure of stroke that there needs no future world of pun- ishment to adjust the balance. The | time came when Milton would have given worlds that his daughters had | learned the tongues. He was blind, | and could only get at his precious books | ~could only give expression to his pre- cious verses—through the eyes and | hands of others. Whose hands and | whose eyes so proper for this as his | daughters’? He proceeded to train them to read to him, parrot-like, in five orsix languages, which he (the schoolmaster) | could at one time have easily taught | them, but of which they could not now | understand a word. He (urned kis daughters into reading machines, It is appalling to think of such a task, That | Mary should revolt, and at last, after repeated contests with her taskmaster, learn to bate her father—that she ghould, when some one spoke in her presence of her father’s approaching marriage, make | the dreadful speech that “it was no news to hear of his wedding, but if she could hear of his death, that were some. thing" is unutterably painful, but not surprising. Atheneum, a —————— A Female Bandit, The district of Saranzaro, in Southera Italy, has recently been overrun by n horde of bandits, under the leadership | of a lovely damsel, Maria Croci. This | adventuress. whose personal attractions | are reported to be little short of soul- | subduing by those who have been for. tunate enough to escape from her | clutches, was formerly the bride of a mountaineer, who occupied a distin- guished position in the band at present | commanded hy her. This fellow met | with his death by the rifle of a carabin- jere, whereupon his afilicted betrothed vicked up his gun, raised it toward veaven. and vowed to avenge his cruel fate. Elected captain of the association by her departed’s comrades, she has be- where she has earned a reputation for ubiquitousness, by the rapidity of her movements. She burns a farmbouse one day, plunders a church the same night, and carries a nunnery by assault before she retires to her et re- pose. Troops are out after her in half a dozen directions, but she has hitherto managed to evade ‘hem. FOR TIE FAIR SEK. Fas iton Notes. Jot lace is ver y fashionable, White is very fashionable for full even. young girls. new kid gloves. Curls drooping from the back of coil fures are revived, Black gauze gowns set off jewelry bet ter than any others, Real acorns nicely varnished are sold to ornament haskets Tulle is the fashionable diaphanous Costumes of Lyons satin and cameis’ hair ave pretty and elegant Creamy white bonnets are more worn than any ethers for full dress, Rows of pled ¢ brooade stitched with gold thiead are worn in the hair. Jersey waists and fur skirts are wern for skating costumes in England Sicilienne wears better than pure silk, not being likely to become shiny Young ladies who dance wear short dresses escaping the floor all round. Smoking jackets are lined with one bright color and faced with another Jersey webbing in navy blue and myr. Long Branch scollops are stiff little curves of hair that look ns false Hs they ale, like gentlemen's hats, are worn a great deal. Loops of braids at the back of the head are giving place to loose fluffy ouris. Ruches, neck are more ool lars, Young ladies wear their corsage bgu- gquets on one side of the neck, near the shoulder. Walking suits are now made of the richest velvet brocade, combined with Lyons satin, White jet and white Spanish lace ap- pear to be favorite decorations ot white dress bonnets, the linen ruffles, and fraises in fashionable than and soft, and feels likg ordinary cash- mere doubled. Anything may be worn that is pretty or becoming without putting the wearer out of fashion. There never war a season when so great a variety was seen in the style of dressing the hair, signs of white Spanish laces appear on late impaortations, White silk and white gauze form the composition of many elegant evening dresses this season. Spanish slippers have the heel and sole made in one piece, and increase the height considerably, Satin sunflowers are worn im the hair, They are made in Paris, and their price is something astounding Small Japanese funs with long handles ese fans with short handles, Young girls wear waistcoats of some bright silk and wool mixture with gray or brown or drab beige suits. A fancy dress ball held at York, fng- land, the other day, was the first that has been held in that city since 1835, Dahlias of variegeted colors will be worn as sprirg advances, both as bonnet decorations and corsage flowers, Silk fans are made up over pastebonrd, decorated with painted flowers and fin. ished on the sdge with plaited ribbon or AR0e, Tidies of colored cotton flannel with norders of a lighter tint, and corner. pieces of a contrasting color, are pretty and cheap. Tulle dresses looped with sprays of apple blossoms, rosebuds or daisies, make the most effective ball dresses for young giris. A small bonnet and a Inrge tie are the : o fashion. for street wear, Some of the ties are twelve inches wide, and nearly cover the chin, White satin duchesse and white satin antique, which is only another name for white bonnets, Large scoop front Directoire bonnets peed lesslv older. able material for little boys' suits. Mixed cassimeres and Scotch cloths are the next in favor. Fur turbans are worn by young Iadies, trimmed with when fur bands are used, with a wing or fancy feather on one side, are in pale shades of blue and rose, and doe or Valenciennes Inces, The novelty destined to the greatest colored pine patterns over a light ground. Snoods, simple ribbons passed through the hair and knotted at the side with pendant ends, are revived, ut the ends with gold fringe or tassels, News and Notes for Women, There are 25,000 English women in India. New York ladies are developing an exceeding fondness for the violin. One female cook 1n a Wiseonsin lum- cides, one stabbing affray and fifty- three fichts. the death of another woman. Miss Drever, a young lady belonging to fashionable society in San Francisco, has shocked her friends by announcing her betrothal to a Chinaman. whose name is widely known as the author of ** Old Grimes is Dead.” the * Industries of Indiana” ana is the work of women. An American editor adds: never give her up=no, never.” Henry W. Benchley, who was lieutenant governor of Massachusetts shortly be. ore the war, died recently in New York her skeleton, after dissection, woman's medical college. A lady of Evansville, Ind., who had been grossly insulted several times in to the hatchet and sunk it in the cheek of the ingulter, cutting through to the bene, Marie Louise, the second wife of the great Napoleon, was in the habit amusing the ladies of her court at their private soirees by turning almost completely round, and in a man- said to have ploit not u little, to 8 good family in Utiea City, Ind., educated, has recently ! awaiting trial tor kleptomania. most influential people in the country quiesced in a nolle prosequi. The enormous quantity of so-called amount of leather afforded by the skins of all the young goats annually killed to There has been quite atrade carried on in Paris by the gamins in rat skins, who have much mouths of the great drains ot the city. Real kid skins come from Switzerland and Tuscany. A One hundred years ago, during the winter of 1780, the weather was se cold that some of the harbors along the coast were frozen over for nearly six weeks. In Marblehead harbor several vessels were frozen in from the last of Decem- ber to the middle of February. UMMARY OF NEWS. Eastern and Middle States, Governor Van Zandt in his annuul message to the Rhode Island general assembly recom. vote on sohool questions, and a prohibitory in. i stead of the prevailing liquor law Mrs. Mary B. Lindermior, a robust woinan of forty-seven, living in Philadelphia, died the other day in great agony from hydrophiobia, ARO he he Maine Fusionist legislature, after a pro. longed secret session, held on the day after the adverse decision of the supreme court was published, adjourned until the first Wednesday in August Regarding the supreme court de- eision and his future movements, the Fusion. ist contestant tor governor, Major Smith, said 0 a eorrespondent that it was po more than he expected; that as law abiding citizens we must subinit and go to our homes,” snd that he should never re-enter politics, Concerning the future moveraents of members of the Fu. slonist legislature, a dispatch says that ** many of thew will go howe Bot to return to Augusta betore August and others will take their seats | sounted-in members will go home, while | others will contest the seats of their rivals in the capitol.” The story of the child inmates of the Shep herd's Fold in New York, as told during the proceedings pending belore the supreme oourt, reveals a terrible story of cruelty and privation. The little ones testified that they were insufficiently led, made to do the hardest weated. Their emaciated appesianoe boi e oul their tale of suffering. Charles Freeman, the Second Adventist { who killed his five-year-old daughter in Pocus. | set, Mass, last May, has been adjudged 8 hinatie asylum | asserting that the sacrifice of his child was a just and proper sot, snd was demanded of him in a vision, It will be remembered that, aud told her that be had seln God in a vision, who had required of bim that, as Abralam had obeyed the eall tn sacrifice lsane. #0 a human sacrifice. Then, afier both had prayed, the mother went back to her bed and Freeman sought a sharp kaife. The five. year-old daughter slept in the next room. i Bending over her as she slept, Freeman drove the knue through her heart, eyes and, as the father afterward freely related the circumstances, oried out, fesbly *‘ Oh, Papa!” and died, Freeman lay down beside morning. He confidently expected that the child would rise from the dead on the third { dy. was disclosed. There is an epidemic of measies in New York eity, the nomber of cases having in- creased from 122 the first week in December Ww about 400 the last week in January, Boston proposes 10 bold a national oat | show in Meroh, During 1879, says a New York paper, §& ocean steamers in various parts of the world and 876 other vessels running to or from American ports were lost st sea, involving » total money loss of nearly $15,000,000 Oo the steamers which were lost 34 were British, § American, 4 Spanish, 1 Egyptian, 1 Swedish 1 Russian, 1 Holland, 1 German and 3 an known, ‘The total number of lives lost on these steamers was 511. The third trial of Mrs. Smith and Covert D Bennett, tor the murder of the lonmer's hus. band, a policeman of Jersey City, N. J, re sulted in an seqguittal by the jury, and the ao. finement eighteen months. The New York Republican State committe: Utiea, February 25, for the purpose of elect ing delegates to the national donvention which will nomioate s& candidate jor President at Chicago, June 3. Henry Gmnt and George Addis were fatally mjured snd William Rhodes was severely | burt while riding in & carriage which was struck by an express train at Chester, Pa. William Allen, an old peddier, awaiting trial in the New York Tombs for stealing s coat from a minisier, committed salcide by hanging himself in his cell. He leit a lotlor sisting that he had made way with hinwell because his prosecutor had refused to forgive him The heaviest snowstorms of the winter visited New York city and vicinity a few days age, making the streets nearly impassable and greatly impeding tmvelers and Uraffio death in their house st Easton, Mass., pre- sumably by the upsetting of a kerosene lamp. Western and Southers States, A dispateh froma St. Louis says that 700 eol. sarod emigrants trom Loulsisua and Missi. pippl, on their way to the West, anived in that city during the past lew days. Three hundred colored ewnigrants were in MN at last scoounts, awaiting aid 10 enable Wow Ww wove on. Majors E. A. Burke and H. J Heursey well-known New Orleans journalists, fought a duel with pistols pear that city a fow days ago; but alter two roands had been fired friends interposed and the matter was amicably settiod without any barm baving been done Dering a ft of jssanity Charles Ponder, New Albany, lod, committed suicide by bang ing himeell Serious trouble is reported from Shenan tion of colored for white men by the propre tors of Colombia Furnace, near Edinburg, in that county. Their works bave beretolore been almost entirely run by white men, and when colored men were brought fromm other Several persons were injaved, and Governor 11 liday ordered a company of miliua to the John H. Soper, a welltodo farmer, who lived near Frederick, Md., delibermtely com by placing himsell in front of a freight train, Colonel Nelson Trusler, United States dis- triet attorney, teil dead a lew nights ago in the Indianapolis opera house from apoplexy. At Taylorsville, N. C., Joseph Gillespie (eolored ) was hung for complicity in the mur. Fowler, s merchant of Mooresville. Gillespie's acenm. plice, another colored man named Davidson, the orume. A boiler in Moloy's saw mill near Fort Charley Taing, a Chinaman, was hanged at From Washington. The nomination of El H. Murmy, of Ken. A Washington dispatoh says that daily ad. from our minster to { i | i { | { trionds of M. de Lesseps ridicule the probalile efforts of this government to iuterise wilh his Panama canal project in any way, and de. ean governments, is determined to own and construct the canal, Among the patents issued at the patent office a few days ago was one to Thomas A Edison for his electric light. The mujority report of the subcommittee null and void, snd proposes a new election The report is signed by three Demoorats ‘he statistician of the treasury department reports that the balance of trade for 1879 in favor of the United States was §2061,350,477. There was an excess of imports ol specie amounting to $67,400,000 during the year, leaving a net balance of trade amounting to Secretary Sehurs has summarily removed E. A. Hayt, commissioner of Indian affairs | William 1, Sherman, general of the army, lor “ ponduet unbecoming an offer and a gentle. trict, which define and punish the orime of | slander.” The trouble originated some yenrs ago, when General Sherman's hook of memoirs was sharply eriticised by Boynton. There Recently it was revived again, General Sherman asserting in an interview that Boynton would slander Ina letter written to Boyne ton General Sherman eharged thut the corres he was capable of slandering his own mother for pay. Hence Boynton's eompinint to the The House committee has sgreed upon the Indian appropriation hill. It appropriates in During last month 104 postmasters were commissioned, which is the greatest number ever commissioned during a like period. The payments made from the treasury by warrants during the month of January, 1880, cellaneous, 85,382,574 60; navy, $1.350,055,. Total, »11,180.713.77. Mr. Parnell, the Irish agitator, spoke in th Honse of Representatives a few nights ago on the Irish lanl guestion. The galleries were erowded, and most of the members seats wore occupied by ladies. gold picces worth $7.1 67,600; 2,450, 00 silver worth During January the national debt was de- On February 1 the total debt, less cash in the treasury, was $2,:00,784,24 1.92. Foreign News. The Lord Mayor of Dublin has telegraphed to an American banker that the needs of the famine-stricken of Ireland grow every day more pressing. —— ' | The Knglish wiry wg at Constantinople | bas boon suspendiud by the Turkish authori | ties, tor eritiolsing recent honors bestowed | upon he Turkish minister of police, Francisco Gonsales, the would-be assassin of King Alfonso, of Italy, has been adjadged iusane by physicians appoioted to examine | hla. General Garibaldi has just been married to Donua Fravoesco at Unproem., Large petroleuin wells have been discovered in Hanover, and a dispatoh says the existence there of a basin as large and rich as the one in Pennsylvania is regarded as beyond doubt by wining experts. Six interoationaliste have been arrested at tionary papers have been seized, At Ottawa, Ont, a gentleman who had been taken to a hospital, stricken down with pared, | to lower the coffin into the grave a groan was heard, and the coMa lid being opened it was found that the patient had revived. He was taken back to the hospital and in the evening was 0 a fair way ol recovery. Protessor James De Mille, the well-known povelist, died at Halitnx, N. 8, a few days sinoe, aged about forty-eight years, | About a dozen persons were killed or | wounded by su explosion in & colliery at elasen, Saxony The lake of Zurich in Switserland is frozen over for the lourth Ume in the present century. Three deaths from starvation have ococurved in one week in the neighborhood of Parsons. town, county of Louth, Ireland. | Lawrence at Montreal. Terrible sccounts have reached Candahar | from without the British lines in Afghanistan, It is reported that nearly two thousand tami. lies have been exterminated by the Ghilzias, | and that seven of the villages of the latter were afterward captured by the Hazaras and every soul in them slain, A terrible epidemic prevails in the Naples district, Italy he population of seventeen communes especially flected numbers 92,382 | persons, of whom §1,340 had been attacked by fever and 5.028 had died up to the middle of Inst December {| A rich landowner near Barcelona, Spain, his wile, | female servants have all been iound murdered | in their beds. | have been arrested charged with the crime. | herd’s Fold in New York, was arrested and | locked up in detsuit of $12,500 bail in twenty. | five indictments charging him with ill-treating the children under his charge. Four hupdred bandits atiscked Jasuaria, in | Brazil, expelled the authorities, burned twenty. two houses and sacked the town The steamer Bengove, laden with coal, from Penarth for Gibralter, foundered at sea, and of the nineteen persons on board thirteen were drowned. Russias bas decided to incremse her peace and war forces the latter by 150,000 men. intelligence trom St. Petersburg sanouncos Mat 8 new revolutionary proclamation is eir- culated by the students of the high schools. The stadents draw a terrible picture of their condition, and declare that they will fight the great Moloch called the Russian government to the end, even though the best of them per- ish. The proclamation is considered to be im. portant, as showing tbe formation of a new party against the government. ! police having proved so very ineMcient in the pamber of German police have been sum. pire. Princess 1 Lorne, governor-genera!l of Canada, arrived at Halifax, N. 8, Loria engineer ized the electrie light long belore Edison. A ———————————————————. * CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY. —— Senmte. Mr. Bayard made a long spesoh in favor of bis jolat resolution withdmwiog the legal. tender power of the greenbncks. The reso. lation has been reported adversely trom the pominilios ou fnance, and Mr. Bayard spok in support of the views of the minonily © that commilies, Petitions of ex-soldiers and sailors for the { passage of the Weaver bill 10 pay such per. sons the backs sud gold, were prosented by Mesas. Pendleton, Ingalls and Caineron. Majority and minority commillee reports ont ali t of Gevoral Filz-John Porter have boon presented On the day set apart lor the delivery of com nentaries on the lite and chamcter of the late ator Chandler eulogies on the dead Sena LO: Were Messrs. Ferry, An he all for the re » 4 deliverad by Cameron and Baldwin, Mr. Gordon submitted a resolution that a committee of mine Senaters be appointed to tke into consideration the subject of the cone stynction of a canal 10 connect the Atiantie and Pacific oceans, and that all papers, doeu- wents and information relating 10 said sab ject be refered d committee, and that it be asuithorisd to sot eopourrently with any similar comm iilee of the House of Reprosen- tatives, and be authorised to employ a clerk. Petitions have boen presented of elaimnnis to the unappropristed bulance of the Geneva award: of exsoldiers against the passage of the Senate hill Jor examinalion in pension cases, and of the vessel owners and captains’ 10 a8 in the navigation laws Mr. Kernan introdoced a bill 10 provide for celebmting the hasdredth anniversary of the treaty of peace and resognition of Awerican independence by an exhibition of the arts and manufactures and the products of mines, to be held in New York in 1883. Mr. Allison, from the committee on appro. the House bill making appropriations for forti. postions and other works of deionse. Orn dered printed and placed on the calendar. Mr. Bayard, from the committee finanee, reported with amendments the bill Placed on the calendar, Voorhees introdooed a oill to amend banks Mr ing milroads right of way through public lauds of the Unned States. Mr, Jonas presented the eredentinls of Mr. Randall Lee Gitwon, elected to be a Senator tren Lowsiena for six years from March 4, 1883, which were read Mouse, A bill appropriating $100,000 for the ereo: - on dora Mr. Thompson inte wuond a bill providing that the scoounting offi ers of the government shall not disallow any o'mims of a citizen whose Sate did not go into robellign on secount of disloyalty, unless such p us will eonviet the claimant of treason ahall be made against the olaim, Mr. Browne introdused a bill sosing a constitutional amendment providing that the House of Mepresentatives shall be composed of 308 members, to be mpportionsd smong the several States as provided in section 2 of article 14 of the amendments to the Constitution, ing $100,000 for the relief of the poor of Ireland. ———————————— ———— An Avalanche of Feat, When the brief statesnent first ap- eared, a few months ago, that a town un the Falkland Islands had narrowly escaped destruction by a flood of peat, the story seemed incredible. Authen- tie details however, have late] England which leave no doubt of the fact, The phenomenon is believed to be unprecedented, and has served to at islands which Darwin explored nearly Linlf & century ago, tute Great Britain's nisl possessions, three hundred miles from the eastern entrance to the strait of Magellan, Two of the islands, known as East and West Falkland, are much larger than the peculiarly favorable to the production of peat, for, says Mr. Dawin, * almost every kind ot plant, even the coarse of the land, becomes converted into this its muh as twelve feet thick, and the lower will hardly burn.” Thus, it derstood, a peaty sol! is characteristic of the whole country. Just back of the town of Starley, and heights which are surmounted plateau, upon which rests a d of peat. deposits of pant in the Falk on the hillsides or hilltops. In other places the peat seldom exceeds a few feet in depth. The subsoil is a dense yellow clay impenetrable by water, and in the Stanley bog already mentioned this is between twenty-four and thirty feet below the surface, On Nov. 26, 1878, a southeasterly storm a been two inches. Then the peat bog on the heights above settlement gave way. writes a naval officer to the royal with a momentum which neither the iron stanchions around thereservoir nor It broke through the backs of wooden houses, inundated the rooms, and obliged sleep, to flee for safety; a few pigs and ible stream, but fortunate! stream was not noted at first, but in the pended, it was still moving into the sea Dy. John Mulvany. staff surgeon in the British navy, was an eye-witness of | action of the heavy fall of rain upon the peat, He estimates that over 500.000 gallons of water fell into the bog on the our days preceding the, avalanche, The impermeable yellow clay under neath would not permit it to sink through, aud finally this enormous quan: tity of water, mingling with the peat, burst the weakest side of the bog and | rolled down the seaward slope of the able torrent we have described, A Farmer Poet, A farmer poet has blossomed into song in England and publishes under the title of “Wet Days” a series of | poems, which give effective and graphic pictures of nature in language at onoe simple and eloquent. In ** The Camp on the Hill" he writes: There's something better than keep there; tor once on that mossy od You leave the world behind you and are ince to foe with God. There's a pool by the cairn on the top, where the wild ducks used to be, And a lark from the Roman camp used to sing and soar over me; | 1 thought him the bill's own spirit it would i have been shame to kill; ! the top of the bill. » . . . * » the Exchange, As well as the hill snd the moor, wherever mortal can range; | But ah! the pure sky yonder, no i , Souring the blue! Man's not the same in the city, and God may be different, 100. smoke ob. This is from another poem, called | “* Birds’ Songs:"” Birds are the only happy things; They sing through rain or sun content. Our songs are prayers, not thanksgivings, Fear, hope or envy's fiiul vent, Impertinent regrets lor wings We conld not use, for riches spent, For chances given and thrown away, Or something whnting night and day. poems : more than rhyme and rhythm; they are instinct with humanity, $20,000 10 enable the committee on the York. town cclebrsiion to make all the necessary arrangements for soch a celebration of the town as shail bofit the historical significanos of the oconsion, was reported by Mr. Goode and passed Mr. Urner has introdooced a bill for a mona. ment to F. 8. Key, author of the ‘‘Star | Spangled Banner.” propriating $75,100 for the purchase of a new i degree of longitude west of Greenwich. Eunlogies on the late 8 delivered by Messrs, Hubbell, Crapo, Brewer, Robeson, Burrows, lawley, Dunnell, Stone, Keiler, Briggs, Barber, Willits and Garfield. | tion of & monument to General Herkimer, of ! revolutionary fame, has been passed. Mr. Warner, trom the committee on coinage, weights and measures, reported back, with amendments, the bill to stop paper infiation, mitted, | ways post roads was passed by 134 yeas to 97 nays. Mr. political disabilities of William B. Tallialerro, of Virginia The instead of as the ** war of the 1ebellion.” toy BY nove, Mr. Shallenberger has introduced a bill directing the commissioners ol agriculture to attend in person or by deputy the Interna. Philadelphis in September next. OC, Semmes, of Virginia, the appointment of a commission of military, port upon the routes of interooeanio oconmunis cation. It authorizes the President to appoint i navy, and one from civil lite, who shall inform themselves in relation to the surveys of the | canal routes known as the Nicaragua and the Panama canal routes, and obtain such infor | mation as may enable them to roperly ex- amine those routes. They shall then proceed | to Nicaragua to make reconnoissance of the region lying between the harbor of Greytown | and the river Sau Francisco, and also to ex- | amine the Lajos river route. They shall then | proceed to fanama and make personal inspec. | tion of such surveys as they may deem ex- | pedient. They shall take into consideration | the relative and positive merits of the two routes, the probable cost of construction, eto., and submit their report to the President at the | earliest moment possible. Mr. Bland introduced a bill for the free | coinage of the standard silver dollar, It pro- | be free nnd open to the coinage of the standard | silver dollar on the same terms and conditions as now or may hereaiter be provided for the | coinage of gold bullion, Sait silver dollar shall have the same legal-tender capacity and certificates shall issue thereupon in the same manner as now provided for by the act of i February 28, 1878. | of any particular school. - ut SE Near-sightedness in children should | pe early detected and corrected. not because poor sight retards their mental | development and deprives them of the enjoyments which are so keenly appre- ciated by children. —Dr. Foole's Health | Monthly. i a ——EE— A Wonder! In most of the papers may be seen an an. the Candee Rubber Co., of New Haven, Ct | ‘This notable boot marks a new em in the manufacture of rubber goods. The boot is its high quality, and is covered by no les | then seven patents, all owned by the Candee One of the boots split to show its exact shows an article of genuine service, that is soemingly indestructable, The company war. rants these boots three months, although there is abundant testimony that the boots The ¢ Candee ” is the largest rubber goods One of the patents referred to covers a binding for the top of the leg, in which are engraved spaces for every day and month in the year, so that the storekeeper oan posed out the date of sale, snd so fix he. yond dispute the duration of the three months’ warrant. Altogether, it is the most wonder. ful boot that has yet appeared, Judge for Yourself. By sending thirty-five cents, with age, heigng, color of eves and hair, you will receive by re. turm mail a correct photograph of your future husband er wits, with nsme and date of mar. riage. Address W. Fox, P. O. Drawer 31, rultonville, N. ¥. For one cent purchase a postal card and send your address to Dr. Santord, 162 Broad. way, New York, und receive phamplets by return mail, from which you can lesrn whether your liver is out ol order, and if out ot order, or is any way diseased, what is the best thing in the world to take for it. Wanted. Sherman & Co., Marshall, Mich., want an agent in this county at once, at a salary ol $100 per month and expenses paid. For full particulars address as above. ~~ THOUSANDS SPEAK. — VEGETINE is acknow]. odged and recommended by physicians and apothecaries to be the best purifier and cleanser of the blood yet discovered, and thousands speak in its praise who have been restored to health. ll We call the attention of all lovers of the violin to the advertisement in this paper of the Patent Violin Company, New York. ‘The habit of running over boots or shoes corrected with Lyon's Patent Heel Stiffeners, An old Jhysician, retired from tice, having in his hands by an Nasi India missionar formals of a simple vegetable remedy for the a rmanent cure for Consumption, Brom Oatarrh, Asthma, and all Throat and Lang Aftec having tested its ara Ph eons felt! uty wo © it known 8 ollows, A od By this motive 1 will send free oi e Ra Re this recipe in Herman. French, or glial with full directions for Jrepasing and tng. One hundred thousand needles are stamped and bored in a day of ten hours o a new machine just perfected in estphalia, Conn. fee! Oattio— Mad, Natives, live wi, Onlves— State BIE. cores sorsnnr iin Shas serine ron ses sanrsessstonsan re Lam FERRER AS REND Bere RNRENR RRENRS iy Hoge-Ldve. one SRREEE PT RERRRN. D saan Floar— Ex, ftate, good bo fanoy, .. Western, to fanoy..... Wheat No, 1 er i White BLale. .. ..ovesenssnsns i Bye BALE, op ounurustns sss sassne nes | Barley ~Two-Howsd Bate. ......... Oorn—Ungraded Western Mixed, Bouthers Yellow. .covsnrersss Opts White $1818. 0 00es ‘ Mixed Western, A Shiels Lex sans i wo-long per td : Hops—siats, 0 AEE REARE ERAS fo FEAR EA RA ERRERR ass * 5 5 1 1 SSESURESES x 2 « x - Eevaze fe z Li eZee | suEuges: ERRARE SEEARE aan fzlusEsanzesnegar t Mons, ... . | Lard-City Bless Petroleuin ways: | Wool-—Sitate and Pean, XX Butier—ttate Dia Western | FERRERS SENNA | OheesoBtate PRotory...oomceisssses i BRIE, .onnernsrenns SERIE KEENE HARERR ERERES sa SRAEN sinenasny " FERERRIARENNE PH cunsonssssansnnes | Bgue—Biate | Potatoes, Barly Rose, Fiour—Oity Ground, No. ) Spring Wheat—ited WHRISE, ves. sasems ss | Corp—New Weslers. .....coovee 00. : Outstate O-rOWSH BALE, x sere sss se BOSTON, Beef Oattie—Live wolght. eosin. .oom FOE RRERRE ET BREARELE Ss SERRE BOBS, cvsunsess sures snssnnonsossrns Flour Wisconsin snd Miso. Pet... ¥ : Oorg—Mized and Yellow, uses +... Shia—Rutm White re PARERAEE ox ad EEESETuURuE - *« EZREBER 8&2 ®_ nad EEE LE EE id ad dd 1] BORE. . oo vevnnossnsssassennss stots PEILADELPELA, Wheat—Penn. Bol. ossenssrivoivnnis ADEE, oy vuusssnsnnns ores Bye—iate. ... oom + Oorn-—8late Yellow, ouues sassnnssiss Onte—~MIX08, cones... sosnenssusns ss a Foolory..ovnses of amy sessEnann | Otisess— New ¥ | Did youever know any | ill, without inaction of | liver or kidneys, or did you ever know | one who was well when either was ob- | structed or inactive; and did you ever | know or hear of sny case of | that Hop Bitters would not cure ? ————————— One Box or Rix Boitles, If you are suffering from a combina- tion of liver or ki diseases, and constipation, do not fail to use the cele- eres g Kidney-Wort., Itiss dry com- | pound, as easily p as a cup of coffee, and in one pac is as much medicine as can be t in six dollar | hottles of other kinds. [S LUNGB i will positively eure Feonale Weakness such as Fall ng of the Womb, Whites, Chronte [pfiasmmation or I Ulow fation of the Wotsh, Incidental He otha on i Fioole Painlal, Suppressed and [rreguisr Ne &e, An old and reiishie remedy, Bend pos w a pamphiet, 1h reatment, cures and fra pho siolans and Jat'ey wd, Ulica, 2%. Bid By ¥ EX 3 # Be \ & R © @ J.EsTey & Co. I . <t BRATTLEBORD VT. EVERYWHERE KNOWN AND PRIZED ‘THE WEEKLY SUN. L large eight-page paper of 856 road oulunis will be wat post-paid 10 ary 8d ober year, for ‘ONE DOLLAR. A THE SUN, N. Y.ORy. i FS | B | seem i ' applied to any Vials with | out altering its form of appeatatce Ib the least, giving i | the pows! and sweetness of the old 1alien Violins now slg? ih send Sow Cegant Yome, WT: Beller Bind, i Be impr i iute amy Viedn sent tous for { Satisfaction puarantesd. Fully endorsad by August Wilhelm). Theodore The a. Ir, Leopold, Damrosch, sd 3 Address all grest § Sen r cireniar % . | Patent Vietin Ce. 13 Beaver Street, New York “The Koran. A curiosity to every ove, and a necessity to all students of History or Kellgton: ] { ROBAN OF MOHAMMED: transated frogs the bv George Male. Ponnerty published a1 $333: 0 i beautify] Urpe, neal, clolh-bound edition: pre 25 conte, and 8 cents for postage, Oalnioree of Bass strpaand works, remarkally ow in price, wilt to clois free, Say where You saw this a Axpsacas Book Kxonaxon, 3 St ddress Th haner Hnprovemsil, Palerted in Europe, United States and Canadas. Can be X18 te Be ertisoment. N.Y. for the mohly i justrated, and onl canplete and authentic history of the great tour (RAY A0IND WOR Dosory i Ouriositios, Wealth and Wonders of the Indies, Japan, ote. §9 A million people want i. This §& the best chiamce of yous itfe to make money. Rewars of = catcl-pentiy Dail £3. Send for on work and our exis terms fo Narjuxas Pr mse Cou Philadelphia. Pa. ess CARLETON'S HOUSEHOLD hd most valuable ENCYCLOPZEDIA. oR of knowiedge. ie Boek ever A has never before bees published in ebe vo.Line, so wuch wee formation on every geiiect. Beautifuily liustrated, price $9.50. A Whole Library in Oue Volume. T0 AGENTS Soo to Ll ver Eon, Tern N & CO. Publisbers, N.Y. ONy. VASELINE === Kilver Modal al Pars Exposition, This wonderf! substance is acknowledged by phys dans throughout the world to be the best romady dis aovered for the cure of Wounds, urns, Rheumatism, QLin Diseases, Piles, Cotarrh, Chilbiains, ke. In order (hat every one AY Gy it, itis pot ap in 15 and 85 cent bottles for household use. Obtain it from your 4 sand you will find it superior to anything you have ever “ON 30 DAYS TRIAL We will | our Electro-Voltale Belts and other Kiectric Appliances upon trial for 30 days to those afflicted with Nervous Dedidity and dissases of a h Also of the Liver, Kidneys, Rheumstism, Paralysis de A sure cure guaraniosd or wo pay. Address Voltaic Belts o., Marshall, SMITHS VALVE tame Shan ary shor hr dE Ee A ADVERTISERS ny addressing GEO. P. ROWELL & CO. 10 Spruce Street, New York, can learn the exact cost of any proposed live of ADVERTISING in American Newspapers. #° 100-page mphulet, 10e, YOUNG MAN OR OLD, Mowsiasba, Bow st Philadelphia Exposition Cactus Roots, $1.25. pote en ping handy 3: Sen your orders early. A Cerbat, Mohave Co. y directions how 10 grow; § YOUNG MEN cruistaing ation. Nidrew RV ine, Manager, Janet ile, Wie Mo Vv \ our Economical Cook SAVE i iriaamt 3 5K DRUGGISTS FOR KALATHINE, erie RATATHLVE C0, 39 Nasu St, Newyork GUNS Hersh ot Wika Piso Pa B72 ATR Radia s Gon Kari, ied BTTT AI BFE Swit. Main A CIE sa inevile, Pa. Box 88. Dr. C Vegetine Cured His Daughter, ——— Vegetine. Werked Like a Charm—Cured Ball Rheum and Evysipelas, 1% Covwr Sv, Bowe, ¥, ¥., July 10, 1878. He Mis us year ago last fall my 1itle boy rysiyeins and salt rheum, & breaking out face ote matiered sore of tha worst desarip. Vegetine. PREPARED BY Pi Fina ¥ WE AND SEEVOLS Hu NESSES. Reals. Ji isa dry vepeialie rd gad One parsage will easly gle 4 Ga if of your Drogo od, he vill order & Jor you. Price, G10 TILA DCAD kk 0. Dutmiems, Prrlingion, Vi. Y {hat he bas ot Suit against us, which afalse. We hope to soon bring this roviag Giles, alias Jilz, to justice. Send : FRAZER AXLE BREASE, Chicage. FRAZER ©0.. New York. LY SOAP MAKING. FOR FAMI at Toliet Soup Tah Om to Bast. 3 IT IS FULL WEIGHT AND STRENGTE The market % flooded with (so-called) Concentrated whieh 8 &intersted with sat and rosin, ond wont he. SAVE NONKY, AND BUY THE ITER STEER SAPONIFIER Penusylvania Sait Mavufg Co. MADE BY THE PHILADELPHIA. Warranted to first buyers, 3 3 MT IINTFAIL and most complete Catalogue of TYPE, PRESSES, CUTS, &c., published. LOWEST 2RICES, LARGEST VARIETY, JITIINAL TYRE sommes This Claim-House Established 18635. PENSIONS. sn tp a ant Selistuaul tet entfie Address, with stam ” E EE. SEENON ~ P. 0. Drawer 3235, ashington, PD. © TAR DISEASES. Dr. C. E. Ssommaxzn (the Aural of Reading, his tine to the treatment Deafness the Ear at his office. HE success has piven him a nations 3 bution, Specially on running and Catarrh, Call or send for bis on Ear, ts Diseases he Treatinent— en HOLA WE, 4 ri oa ing, Pa. RTISERS by addressing 1.0. P, LA. Co.'s Newspaper Advertising Bre New York, can learn the line of ADVERTISING in Oe Sion RS — an Stace Porta lee biireng wil saa: Same io ped WW ‘Augusta, Maine. BN ... 4 Maine $662 ‘week In your own town. Terms and , EE H, Haurre & Co.,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers