FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD, Seeding Grass Lands in the Fail, The JEhotice of seeding Iands to grass inthe fall is gaining ground in many seo- tions, especially among the New Eng- land farmers. Arguments in favor of this custom ares The grass is not so liable to be troubled with weeds; the cool weather will incite a. vigorous growth and bring tho fields in better condition for Eng the winter than that seceded in the spring, and last, but by no means least, it admits of the removal of a crop the first year. During August and the first half of the month following, Northern cultiva- tors, who do not favor spring sowing, will seed down lands from which have been harvested small grains, potatoes, fodder crops and the like, and turn over old-sod lands for this purpose. At the South seeding of grass will be delayed until September, The quantity of seed will depend upon the varieties of grasses to he prown and the purposes for which they are de. signed. The extremes of very light weeding, which produces large coarse stalks, and very heavy seeding, which makes exceedingly fine ones, are to be avorded. Pastures call for a variety o asses, to be sown with liberal hand. n selecting a mixture for permanent pasture, it should be borne in mind that the land will be cropped continually throughout the season, and therefore it 13 imperative to have grasses which supplied with a tender and succulent growth. The varieties should also be selected with a view of suiting the soil RELIGIOUS NEWS AND NOTES, ——— The General Baptist assembly of England reports 94,456 members—an in- crease of 452, besides 994 members in the Orissa mission, India. Hon. Thomas Hughes, M. P., author of “ Tom Brown at Rugby,” is to lecture before several associations of the Y. M. >, A. during his visit in the United States. Two Lutheran synods in Illinois and | adjacent States have united in one synod, | to be known aus the Synod of Illinois. The united synod contains twenty-two ministers. Mr. Spurgeon has recently received from the estate of » Indy $195,000 for his orphanage, $300,000 for his pastor's | college, $1,000 for his book fund and | $5,000 for himseif. Pastor Levi Johnson has no horse. | This is why he walks 340 miles a month | churches at Indian Village and Shady Grove, in the State of Louisiana. Rev. C. M. Bingham, of Millburn, tora, Fina. Thisis the most southerly Congregational church in the United Statea, estant Episcopal mission in China, has held the first ordination of natives, Three Chinese were admitted to the office of deacon and one to that of priest. for the Canadian synod makes nine for which they are designed. Clover plays ss, which arrives early and remains ate, 18 also a valuable constituent. This 8 is highly esteemed, especially on ight dry soils; meadow fox-tail, with its early and rapid growth, is another valuable sort, and red-top is also counted among desirable grasses for permanont pastures. A mixture recom. ties for permanent pastures is as fol- tail, five pounds of white clover, six pounds of orchard grass and four pounds each of red clover, rough-stalked meadow grass, rye grass, timothy, blue Ly meadow fescue and red top. For © South, where winter pasture is the object, the following is suggested: One ehard grass and wild rye grass; snd four quarts each blue grass, red clover | isters. Thirty-eight Maoris, of New Zealand, | have been introduced to the ministry ofthe Episcopal missions in that coun- try. They are commended as faithful { men. Six Maoris sit in the local parlia- i ment. The receipts of the eight principal | missionary societies of England during {the past year make an aggregate of {| £3,542.710. The grand total of receipts | for foreign and home missions, Bible | and jeducational socities, ete., $8,6847.- i American residents in London pur- { pose erecting an Episcopal church in | that city at a cost of $75,000. The First Baptist church, Philadel. phia, is proud to number among its | Sunday-school teachers a venerable ———— - Mri TAKING THE CHANCES. How Locomotive Engineers Lose Thelr Nerve. A man taiks as easily at the rate of sixty miles an hour as he does at an or- dinary afternoon dinner pace, and a vot- eran railroad man who sat with his feet cocked on an adjoining chair, on the Ohio and Mississippi fast train, let his recollections and gossip flow entertain: ingly to a Louisville Cowrder-Journal repprier. “Ever ina smash up? asked the vot eran, inconioally. “Never!” “That accounts for your lack of ner- vousness. A ohild never dreads the fire until he is burned, and so it is with every kind of danger, There are two olasses of engineers, who are known on the road as ‘good runners’ and ‘bad runners.” A good runner is always sent out with special trains and in other BRE | 1s an en gineer who know the road and | his engine, and will gauge the speed by | | quality of the track, taking a good many | chances on safety. I know one of these | | fellows, who was regarded as the coolest | | and bravest man in the business. He | | would take a lightning special as safely | through as another would a freight. | One dark night he was hauling the | night express around a ourve like a | | meteor. A tree had been blown across | i the track by a storm, and he ran upon ii | | before it could bo seen. The train Was | smashed and he was badly hurt, He] ot well in time, and took his piace at | passenger train on any road. The aoai- | | hind time. That is the fate of a great many. NOeAriv a : “They are always in danger,” said the reporter, “ Yes: if there is an accident they are | almost sure to be killed, | through life on faith and good luck. One day, several years sgo, a day's hunting in the country, and sent for me at seven o'clock. It came, and, with three of us aboard, started to make the run of twenty-five miles an hour ahead of the regular train. We got out a mile or two and The engine was stopped and the lan. tern was tinkered with, and we started again. We ran a few miles, and had to stop and tinker with the confounded than Christmas. A few grasses are suited to both meadows and pastures, in illustrauon of which may Pe cited orchard grass. Pure meadow grasses are those with tuberow’ roots, which store up in bulbs next, and which require 8 certain time for the maturing of the bulbs. Timothy is 8 representative type of this class of grasses, hence it is highly esteemed in meadows, Other popular meadow grasses are red clover and Hungarian grass. To gain best results it is im- portant that the grasses associated blossom about the same time, therefore the wisdom of sowing early kinds in one mowing field and late sorts in another. Among early grasses suited to meadows are orchard grass, Ken. tucky hive grass, meadow fescue and ail oat grass, to which may be added ftalian rye grass if the land be moist Island bent grasses are numbered with late kinds. The importance of having the ground thoroughiy tilled and enerously manured previous to seeding it to grass, either for pasture or meadow, cannot be too strongly urged.—New York Word. Health Hints. blanc-manges, and various liquids used as cooling drinks are more or less ab- sorbent, and easily take up the impuri- ties which float about a sick room. A glass of milk left uncovered will soon become a room freshly painted. How import- ant then that the poisons of sickness should be carefully kept from ail that is to be eaten, whatever, or hiss fallen into convulsions from having overicaded the stomach, | since it was organized, which is sixty- | five years ago. She was then in the in- | fant class, There are in all eighteen different evangeiioal societies at work in Syria in ! the matter of secular, moral and Chris. tian education, which have together 1,000 communicants, 4,500 average tota- | preachers and teachers and 300 native helpers. Thisis in a total population of 208.000, | Prawing, i ——— a - anging and Quartering. | There appears to be much missppre- | hension existing as to the English pun- ishment ‘or treason, and this may be a | fitting occasion on which to point out | that the sentence of decapitation, pure | and simple, is one unknown to the Eng- lish law (for the innovations of the | Long parliament and commonwealth, of course, iegally go for nothing). The same doom of drawing, hanging, evis- ceration, dismemberment and quarter- ing was passed on peer and peasant alike (of course, I except the fair sex, whose invariable sentence was combus- { tion), but constitutional lawyers held | that, inasmuch as the sovereign could, {in his mercy remit the whole of the | penalty, so he had the power to dis- Thus, usually in | noble families, decapitation was, by the | king's grace, all that was exacted. The | soundness of this theory of the royal | prerogative was doubted by Lord Wil- | iam Russell in the case of Lord Staf- i of Charles II. Tne rather overrated ! husband of Rachel Wriothesiey, with a brutal fanaticism that does not display his character in a favorable light, ent should undergo to the fyll the | degradation and suffering invelved in mon sait, and as n uch ground mustard, stirred rapidly in a teacuptul of water, wari or cold, and swallowed instantly, come up, bringing with it the remain- ing contents of the stomach; and lest there be any remnant of the poison, however small, let the white of an egg or a teaspoonful of strong coffee be swallowed as soon as the stomach is cies nullify a large number of virulent poisons. Iiandies Dalry Stock Kindly, Mr. Parcell, in the report of the New Jersey agricultural society, sys: Itis important that dairy stock. from the treated kindly. If a calf is handled roughly and becomes wild and vicious thereby, when it becomes a cow you may expect the same, but if handled gentle, many cows spoiled by the person hav- ing the care of and milking them, by whipping or frightening them when- ever they come in his way, or if when milking, a cow hoists her fool or kicks such a fellow stops milking and com- mences whipping, or worse, kicking the cow, and she becomes enraged, holds up her milk, kicks back, and is kicking, if she does kick the milk pail out of your hand and sometimes upset and knock you, but be kind and gentle with her, and milk !er out with as lit- tie excitement as possible, and if she gets over her kicking propensity it will Never whip a cow because she kicks, for it will do do good, but will do a great deal.of harm. The Blessing of a Blunder, A good piece of luck was that which fell to Miss Elizabeth Thompson, a lady whose paintings of scenes in military life can now command almost any price. The story goes that the first of her pic- the ** Roll Call”—a picture with which Iady of our readers are doubtless familiar. The purchaser originally paid $600 for it and sent it to the Royal academy. It was accepted, put ia a good place, and on royal day the Prince of Wales, who knows a good bit about pictures , took especial notice of it. “Who is the painter of this?” he in- quired. ‘“‘Miss Elizabeth Thompson, your royal highness,” was the answer, ‘Oh, indeed! I know her very well,” said the prince; “the aa hioy of my old friend, Sir — Thompson,” mistaking one person for another. He was nol corrected, as most of the ple present knew less about Miss Eliz- abeth Thompson than he did. The result was that at the Saturday dinner his royal highness remarked in the . Soursg of his speech thay he Lad ob- r amon e pictures one b Miss Elizabeth Thompson, which ou destined to win much fame for its painter. He thought he was doing a good turn for a fel.ow member of the aristocracy. The speech was published as usual, and ten days afterward Miss Thompson found herself lsmous. Po- licemen were stationed in front of her sell’s own turn came for his share in the | Rye House plot, the king again dis- | played this peculiar form of clemency, | accompanying the remission with the y Lord Russell { shall now experience that 1 do indeed | possess that power which he denied me | in the case of my Lord Stafford.” But i toreturn. The drawing, as every legal | scholar knows, means the drawing of | the criminal to the place of execution- { death. According to Mr. Justice Black, i stone, vel. iv., “drawing” formerly { meant, and formerly actually involved, | dragging the condemuped along the | ground by a rope tied about his legs to i the place of execution; and this torture | the judgment literally ordains. “Bat,” lis allowed, to preserve the offender from the extreme torment of being | dragged on the ground or pavement.” { This quaint view of indulgenze seems of a piece with the same legal sage's i men al'uded to above. The passage {is worth consulting. The last crimi- i nals ** drawn’’ to the gallows, were, 1 believe, Colonel Despard (see ante, page | 371). and hisgang. As they were to be | wore confined, and as the government | insisted that they should be * drawn, {this grimly humorous expedient was | had recourse to. The conventional | tumbril without the wheeis—was intro- | duced into the prison yard, and the con. | denned men entered it in batches of | two at a time (except the colonel who | had the honor of an appearance en seul) | at the door of the staircase leading to | four trips, its miserable passengers were { drawn across the flagged space to the | foot of the stairs a to the tower | on which they were todie. When the vehicle returned, after its third journey, to take up the colonel, that gentleman remarked—and no wonder—* Ha! ha! The late Dr. Doran tells us (** London in the Jacobite Times") that when, during the horrid year that foilowed i the 45, the sledges arrived to receive | their wretched occupants outside toe gates of Newgate, to set out on their ghastly progress to Tyburn or Kenning ton common, the polite keeper of the jail would announce the fact to the moribund in these courteous terms: * Now, gentlemen, if you are quite ready, your carriages are at the door, — Notes and Queries. Words of Wisdom, Reason and virtue alone can bestow liberty. The last man to correct a mistake is— the man who commits it. _ True merit, like a river, the deeper it is the less noise it makes. He who stops to pick a flaw in others knitting work drops many stitches in his own. Let him who regrets the loss of time make proper use of that which is to come in the future, Rich attire is the vest of pride. The worst apparel is nature's garment; the best but folly's garnish. A generous man will place the benefits he confers beneath his feet; those he re- iscovered that the regular train was within five minutes of us, and there was no sidetrack rear. It was as dark as original chaos, not a star out. The engineer started sureraliy. worked the throttle out gradually, and, all inging to the eab for dear of us clingi b life, the race began. For all that we The engine snorted and rolled, and fairly flew along the track, until the welcome light of the home yards fell upon us. J upon pure faith in nine minutes, and the regular train was an nour and forty minutes behind time!" “That was a close shave on luck?" “Yes: I don't want to ride under pressure again.” i —————————— | How Gieneral Simpson Served a Bally. When the allies occupied Paris the with the small sword and equal with opportunity to insult the officers be- longing to the army of occupation, and of Frenchmen, ¥ | had sworn to devote their lives to the killing off one by one of the English officers. There was one Frenchman who boasted of having killed a dozen of English officers, and promised to go on n this work. One evening he swag gered as usual into his cate, and to his astonishment actually saw one of those | hated Anglais occupying his chair; a chair, be it remembered, that no one hitherto had dared to sit upon except himself. did his sword belt, and having paced | his sword on one side began to insult the perfectly inoffensive English officer the English toes, he deprived the Eng- lishman of his candies, he went from turb the other's placidity. | snatched the newspaper out of the Eng- lishman's hand, pa then the Briton slowly rose up, displaying to the aston. ished eves of the Gaul a guardsman some six feet six inches high. : giant, bending across the table, seized hold of the Frenchman's nose with one hand and his chin with the other, and, | wrenching his mouth open, spat down his throat. With a bowl the French. hands, ran out of the room. | his comrades were seen again at that cafe. We may as well add that the English officer who thus made an ex- ample of a bully was the Iate General Sir James Simpson, who for a time com- | manded in the Crimes, and who from the day he joined the service until Lis death was the tallest officer in the Bric ish army. — Colburn's Uniled Service Magazine. North Carolina Mountain Villages. Rebecca Harding Davis has in Hay per's Magazine an article on ** By-Paths in the Mountains,” from which we take | this extract: The awful solitude of the | forests is scarcely broken by them. | Half of their unpainted, weather-beaten houses are always empty, the inmates having apparently died, or gone farther into these sleepy wildernesses and for- | gotten to come back. The roads lead- ing to them are always over break-neck precipices and in scandalous repair, one | generation putting off to another the | mending of them. There is always a | deserted mica mine on a neighboring | height, shining like a fountain of silver | gushing from the rock; there is aiways a stream which ‘would give a power- ful yield of gold, only we folks don't count much on them oncertain ways of makin’ a livin." ! There are always one or two families | of educated, well-bred people. They | have little money, but they feel the need | of it less here than anywhere else in the | States. They live in roomy wooden houses, the walls, ceilings and floors fre- | quently made of a purplish fine-grained | poplar, which no Persian carpet or tap- | estry could rival in beauty; they buy | no new books, but they have used the | old ones until they are live friends; they | never saw a Gerome or a Fortuny, but their windows open on dusky valleys, delicate in beauty as a dream, on rush- ing waterfalls, on rainbew veils of mist floating over dizzy heights; they dress in homespun, and sit on wooden benches, but knowing nothing of fashious or bric- a-brae, their souls sit at ease and are quiet, and they never feel the aching void of an empty pocket. Our travelers were welcomed to many a room where trunks, the spinning-wheel and the cooking stove filled one side, and the bed and a portion of a Revolutionary ancestor the other, where flat-irons and silver goblets, Bhakespeare and the blacking-brushes, amicably keep com- pany on the mantelshelf, but in which the fine quick wit and the grave courtesy of their hosts would have dwarfed the stateliest surroundings. The Twenty-four Leading Citles. We give below the population of the twenty-four leading cities of the United Sisites in 1880, and of the same cities in 0: 1880. 1870. FOR THIE FAIR SEX. Fashion Notes, White is more popular than ever for little folk. Blue-black cloth is the favorite color for English riding habits, Dark blue flannel remains the popular material for seaside suits. Gold filigree is the proper jewelry to wear with grenadine dresses, Grass hats with a trimming of worsted embroidery are worn in the country. Bedtioking, plain and unmistakable, is employed for rowing and bathing suits, Fiohus, which are not so clinging na goarfs, are much worn at the present time, Mechlin and Breton laces have now an important part in millinery trim wing. Archery and angling are the popular outdoor amusements for ladies this summer, Double rows of pearis constitute the fashionable necklace for very young Indies. Yellow kid traveling boots and gar ters to match the dress are among the inte French fancies, Soft sash belts with tasseled ends, and carelessly tied either in front, at theside The shade of hair whioh Sarah Bern- hardt is endeavoring to make fashion- able is a trifle redder than auburn, There exists at present an extraordi- nary demand for bonnets and hats of White kid gloves with white lace in- | sertion in the wrists and stitched with | black are offered for carriage wear. Dainty garden hats are of shirred | mull, the shirring radiating from the center of the crown and from the inner | edge of the brim. A new way of finishing the back of a | basque, is to slash it five or six times, gather the ends into points and add a NEWS OF THE WORLD. OS } Bastern and Middle States. Weneral Nell Dow has written from Port. Mand, Me, his acosptance of the nomination tor President, tendered him by the National Prohibition party. Alter commenting At pome length on the merits of the liquor trafe and the wotability of the prohibitory move ment, he concludes as follows: “1 consider the objeots of the Prohibitlonists of this coun. try to be of supreme lmportance to the fn torests of the nation and the people. Aside from its boaring upon the mops! and relfdous. wellire of the people, 1 consider the suppres ston of the Nguor traffic to be an interest of far groator politioal importance than any other now olabming the attention of the country. My lie has Fh largely devoted to the wee complishinent of that purpose. Perhaps I live to see my dearsst hopes in relation to it realized st least in this, my own, State) but, however that may be, in the future as in the past Jamil keop that objeot in view. While 1 sincerely wish that the oholoe of a candidate by the Cleveland convention had fallen on some other one than mysell, I soogpt the nomination willingly being sure t it wilh prove to be the hum le beginning of #, trium- phat ond.” Portions of New Hampshire have been visltad by an earthquake, which cansied many buildings to tremble considerably, shook down dishes and plotures in several places, and In others gave forth a perceptible sound, An unusually heavy storm did considerable damage in portions of Pewsylwaula. In Nesoopeok township a brick church was de- molished, two barns were blown down, crops destroyed, roads blocked and milroad trains stopped tor hours. There have been heated ghooks of earth. quake (n the island of Luson. Kleven natives have heen killed and sixty-one injured. The earth opened in several places and jets of boiling water and showers of ashes were ejected, General Goneales has been elected president of Mexico by & large majority. Shortly after his election an unsuccessful attempt was made to assassinate him by shooting st him while | Locusts are destroyisg all the crops ia several of the States of Mexico, American marksmen won a large number of individual prizes this year st Wimbledon The Vermont Democrats at their State tassel or ball of int. Novelties pertaining to headdress are and airy effect and are correspondingly | trimmed either with light feathers or | delicate blossoms, Sloping shoulders are not in favor in London just now; the dressmakers lay the tOp & SqUAre appearance, kerchief dresses somewhat after fashion of Madras ginghams, hence handkerchief dresses have received a fresh impetus, News and Notes far Women, children, all girls. In Cincionati there are 432 dross. makers, and the young men of the city | are afraid to marry. make the young men attend. According to the London Truth the | fashionable age just now is from twenty- | of the running. An English writer says that the cos | tume of an English lady in a ballroom | than that of an Indian squaw, | department is the postmistress of Sika, Alaska. She is the fourteen-year-old | daughter of a territorial officer located | at the eaptital of ** our Aretie domain.” The ladies’ brass band, of Albany, | Oregon, is composed ot thirteen mem- bers, the foremost young ladies in the city in social standing and intelligence. : $350, | Mrs. Katherine Kahley, : | seventeen, ended her honeymoon journey | many, and absconded. { away most of her trousseau. One of the chief attractions sia re- | beautiful American, Mrs. Cropper, drew around her large { anxiety to be among her first custom- | ers, members in public state for a day or | funeral, but at the request of the em- { this was omitted in her case. | women who used to | boulevards of Paris | that city. | 8ix years ago, too, when more female | “frotteuses” were to be seen in the streets of the city than * frotteurs.” John Degner was ashiftless San Fran- | cisco shoemaker, The family larder be- | can e entirely empty, and his wife said: {| “1 believe you could get work if you wanted to, and if you don't do it I will | commit suicide. Go out, and if you don't come back by six o'clock to tell me you've got a job, you'll find me dead when you do come.” He returned at seven, and she was dead. BO II IA How the Ladies Fish, There are generall inn bunch, with lig P i hooks and lines among them. As soon as they get to the river, they look tora good place to get down on the bank, and the most venturesome one sticks her boot Lieels in the bank and makes two careful steps down—then suddenly finds herself at the bottom, with both hands | inthe water, and feeling that everybody { in this wide world is looking at her,and she never tells anybody how she got there. The other girls, profiting by Bor ward, Then they seamper over the rifts until they find = shallow place where they can see the fish, and shout: “Oh! I recone!” “Where ?" “There I" “Oh, my ! so he is.” “let's catch him.” “ Who's got the bait P” “You lazy thing; you'resitling on my pole I” All these exclamations are gotten off in a tone that awakens every echo within a mile around, and sends every fish that hears it into galloping hys- terics. Then the girls by DE axertions mauage to get a worm on the Book and throw it in with a splash like the launching of a washtub, and await the resuit. After a while a feeble. minded sunfish contrives to get fastened on the hook of a feeble woman, and she gives vent to her tongue. “Oh, something has got my hook!” “Pull up, you little idiot!” shouts five oroite] voices, and poles and hooks are dropped and they run to the rescue. The oe the bait gives a spasmodic jerk, which sends the unfortunate “sunny” into the air the full length of the line, and comes down on the nearest curly head with a damp flop that sets her to clawing as though there were bumble-bees in her hair. “Oh, murder, take it away! Ugh, take it away, the nasty thing!” Then they hold up their skirts and gather round the fish as it skips over the logs, one all the time holding the line in both hands with her foot on the pole, as though she had an evil dis- vosed goat at theend. Then they talk { over. “ How will it get off?" “Ain't it pretty” “ Wonder if it ain't dry?” * Poor little thing; let's put it back.” convention in Burlington put a full ticket in | the feld with Edward J. Phelps for governor at the head. Hoston bas a population of 363,566, an in- crease of 71,068 is ten years, Sheriff Borland, of Westmoreland county, Pa, arrested sixty.one members of a circus on the charge of abducting and assaulting a young girl, The sixty-one ecireus men, dressed in all manser of costumes, were oO witted to jail at Greensburg. Rhode Island has » population of 276,710, a gain of 59,807 or 37 2 per cent, in ten years. Al a meeting of the Pammany Democratic Bate committee held in Samtogs, N, Y., the presidential electors put in the fleld by th ammany convention at Symouse in Apr last were withdrawn, | General U. 5. Grant has bean elected presi. | dent of the San Pedro and Canon de | company, which owns 40,000 sores of land in New Mexico, including copper aad gold mines and has a oapital of $10,000,000, Boston and New York capitalists are largely interested in the enterprize, Eight large sea lions and two big turtles, comp: ising nearly the whale ol an aguaium on Couey Island, made their escape the other | day aad swam out to sea, 10 the consternation of timid bathers along the beach. A party while out biuefishing in & small yacht, jast outside of New York harbor, onme across an immense school of sharks, about two acres in extent and comprising thousands of the voracious monsters. Western aud Southern States. Hou. Carl Schurz, secretary of the interior, | ppened the political eampaign in Indiana on ‘chal of the Republican party by a speech at wdianapolis, and will make a tour of the State, Fourteen prisoners configed in the Header. on county (lL) jail made their escape by king down the keeper and feelag to the woods. Jacob Brinkerhoff, the suthor of the original draft of the famous Wilmot Proviso, died at Mansfield, Olio, a fow days ago. He was a wpember of the twenty-eighth and twenty. nth Congress, serving trom December 4, 843, to March 3, 1847. Allerward he was | slected a judge of the supreme court of Ohio | EK. B Chambers, editor of the Fargo | (Dakota) Times, was thrown from a lumber wagon and received tatal injaries. The Missouri Democrats at their State con. vention in Jefferson City nominated a ticket headed by Thomas T. Crittenden for governor. | The Ohio Democrats in convention as. sembled at Cleveland nominated a State ticket with Judge William Long for secretary of #tate at the head. The Calitornia Greenbackers at their State | convention in San Francisco nominated W. A. Howe and J. 1). Godirey for Congress, { An excursion steamer oa the Detroit river, | nine miles below Detroit, Mich, ran into a | steam yacht, cutting her in two, so that she sank almost instantaneously. The yacht had on board twenty-four persons, consisting mainly of altar boys of a Catholic church, who wore on their annual exenrsion. Nine altar | boys and seven other persons-—three of them women-—-ware drowned. After a verrific hailstorm at Triangle, N.C, | threo large hallstones were ploked up and found to weigh just two and a ball pounds. ExGovernor B. Grats Brown, candidate for Vice-President wita Horace Greeley in 1872, has anvounced himsel! ss a Democratic candidate before the next legislature of Mis. scuri for the United States Senate. The Mormons of Salt Take oity have just celebrated their first entrance foto the Salt Lake valley, thirty-three yours ago, with usus) elaborateness. A proocssion, representing sootimeonts, ideas, agricultural and hortioul. tural products, trades, industries and manu. factures, was an hour in passing, and was Among the mottoes was *“ The Happy Polyga- mic Family,” carried in a wagou. The cere monies were concluded in the big tabernacle, rad consisted of speeches and music. From Washington. The oMeials of the agricultural burean are very much gratified at the progress of tea. raising in the South. A Mr. Jackson, who has over thirty-five thousand tes-plants on his farm near Savannah, Ga. , recently sent to the commissioner of agriculture a tin box con. ing several samples of the tea mised on his farm. The commissioner subsequently took the samples to New York and went incognito to one of the lasgest tea establish. ments there, representing that he had some ton to sell. An expert was called in to ex. amine the tea and he pronounced it India tea, worth fifty cents per pound. Commis. sioner La Duo then bad diMculty in convine. jug the expert that the tea was grown in this country and could be produced lor one-third the price named. The tea is represented es being very palatable and dificult to distin. nish from the imported article. Provision mving been made by Congress for the estab. lishment of & tea farm, arrangements are now making at the agricultural bureau looking to the selection of a place in South Carolina for the experiment. There are constant applioa- tions to the bureau for tea-plants, and it is expected that in a short time hundreds of thousands of plants will be growing ia this country. The commissioner thinks that it is only a question of a short time when capital. ists will begin to see the immense profits to be real from tea mising, and in a few yosrs ho expects that the United States will be producing as much tea and sugar as may be needed for home consumption, The internal revenue burean has prepared a statement of the collections of internal reve. nue for the fiscal year which ended on the thirtieth of June last. The statement shows a marked increase in the revenue obtained from whisky, cigars, fermented liquors, tobacoo, banks, oto., over the fiscal year 1870, For the fiscal year 1880, the total collections, not including commissions on the sale of adhesive stamps, wore $123,963,134 92. The collections tor the year ending June 30, 1879, wero $113,440,621,38, an increase of §10,518,. 513.54. It is understood that our government will spoodily make a demand upon Spain for an apology and reparation for the outrage com- mitted upon the Ameriean schooners Now- comb and Mertitt, off the coast of Caba. Sev. eral weeks ago a Spanish oruiser fired upon and boarded both vessels, Foreign News. Turkey is actively preparing for a threat~ ened war with Greece. Ninety-eight houses, comprising the village of Romus, in Switzerland, has been destroyed by fire. Goorge Bennett, tho murderer of the Hon, George Brown, editor of the Toronto Globe, was hanged in that city a tow days ago. Manila, the ocapi'al city of the Philippine ielands, has boon partly destroyed by an earth. quake. Not a single public edifice was spared, and a convent which had stood for three centuries was laid in ruins. The ine Terrible Tunnel Tragedy. = Twenty.ono workmen were drowned by the vadden caving in of the approach to the tinned and Now York. ‘There are about one hun dred and fity men ot work on the tunnel, divided into shifts of trom thirty to forty men, 1 Each shift is sobdivided into two gangs, | Work proceeded continuously day and night | At the time the nocldent happened one of i of the morning watch just gone into i the tunnel and the other gang was comb out. Seven men were in the airlock, when they heard the rush of water they hast. sned out of the air chamber, but so quick did the water come in that the cage was partly filled with water before the men could open the door and get into the shalt, They ma u the ladder leading to the bottom of the and i The tunnel had been extended out about three hundred feet trom the working shalt There is a space of about thirty feet trom the working shaft 10 the point in the tunnel whore the permanent work has been built This passage slopes toward the river and has hitherto been protected by a temporary filling. The workmen had been engaged for several days replacing this temporary bulking with permanent work, The iron plating above the root had been placed in position, asd the men wore working their way downward through the silt and debris, putting in the iron plates al the sides. It » sup that some of these plates which were placed next the brick wall of the working shalt were not placed close enough WwW confine the compressed alr supplied to the men working in He shalt by the engine on the surtace, This compresses sir worked its way out, turning the plates backward and allowing the water to flow into the tunnel, It was not the water directly from the river that flowed in, as the place where the break occurred is about fity feet from the bulkhead, but the ground is filled in ground and was much loosened and broken up by the excavation for the working shat. The ground is alled with water, and as soon as 6 current was created, the water from the river rushed in through the bulkhead, Alling the tunel and working through the refuse shaft in the working shaft, fllieg it with flity toot of water and coming within ten or twelve feet of the surtace of the ground. Twenty-one men were overwhelmed by the rushing water and drowned, Thomas Brady, a miner, who was in the sounecting chamber when the accident oe. curred, was found at his home by a reporter, and gave the following description of his struggle for lite, together with his iellow. workmen: * We went on at miduight. There wore twenty-eight of us, The shalt leads down to the sir-dock, We have to pass through the airlock in going into the tunnel and com. ing out. The air-lock is twenty-five fost long and boilershaped. A thick iron door four feet high and about three and a half test wide is at each end. The air is foreed into the connecting chamber and tunnel to support the iron plates on the rool by loree pumps, We go lato the air-ock, close the outer door, turn on the air valves, and when the sir in the look is of the same density as the air within the tunnel we can push the inner door ol the airlock open and pass into the con. necting chamber. Then the inner door is closed. Circular tracks run around the chamber and connect it with the two tunnels running under the river to the eastward. The north tunnel is about five hundred feet long and the plates in the roof are all in position and the brick work around the asides also been finished. Toe south tunnel is Aity lest long; the rool plates are put up, but only a lew feet of the side brick work was completed, The eastern part of the large connecting chamber was completed and the roof plates all over the rool were in position, but only & very iittle of the side brick work in the pars of the chamber nearer the tunnel was com. pleted, and we were al work last night putting the plates near the inside door and buildi the brick work at about the central part, Mod ‘benches ' and wood-work bold up the plates anti] we build the brick work underneath. Braces were uted to keep the plates in posi. tion, and the air which was forced in held them sp. “At four o'clock all but twelve of ns who were at work in the chamber went through the sir-lock and up the shaft for lunch. At shout hall.past four they came back again, and we who had not yet gone stopped work and were ready to go for our lunch. Two or three men were in the air-dock and ten or twelve of us were near the airlock waiting for these men to come out $0 that we could go up. Just as these men wore coming out of the lock a leak cocurred in the mud on the northern side of the chamber, very near the air lock. It did pot frighten ue much, boosuse we had seen leaks of this kind before, and knew what to do in order to stop them. We immediately set 10 work trying to plaster up and the leak with mud. Bat it was no use. [1 in. creased constantly. The air rushed through it at a terrific pace, making a very loud, hissing noise like a steam engine blowing off at high pressure. Io less than a minute we saw that it was no use. We could not stop the leak. We waited for the orders of Night Superintendent Peter Woodland, who bad charge of the gang. He told us to save ourselves, and seven of us succeeded in doing so. I rushed into the airdook with others. It was not two minutes before the whole thing was over. The water began to pour in upon us and was rising fast. A tremendoos pressure closed the airdock door next to the chamber, and poor Olat Anderson, a miner, was jammed in the door. I heard the men inside moaning, and Anderson was crushed to death by the oor. 1 tried 0 help him out, but he was nearly dead in a second. He clutched my wad as if it was his death girp, and I had all [could do to release myself wom his grasp. We thought that we shoald surely be drowned booause the water was rising mst. We attelupted to opon the inside door to let the other workmen out, but Superintendent Woodland, who was in the chamber with the | others, ealled to us to save ourselves and sead | the others help as quickly as we could. We put all our strength to the outside door to oper it. It opened toward us of course. But wo could not start it. Then wo almost gave up hope. But one man had an iron bar with which we broke the two boles in the door, which were filled with very thick glass. This was 10 lot the water out, but they were not large enough to keep the water from rising. Help arrived outside the door, and two men pushed the door while we pulled, and we finally opened it against the foroe of the water, Then wo sorambled up the circular stairs of the large brick shaft and got out. After that Mike Korley, the night watehman, and I went back into the airlock to see it we could got the outside door open, but the roof of the air chamber had fallen in, the water had risen, and we could not budge the door. All then was still. 1 believe the men were drowned by | that time. It was all over in a few min. utes.” James Hayes, one of the survivors, was found by a reporter, to whom he gave the following graphic statement ol the accident and the escape of himself and several others: “1 went down with the gang at twelve o'clock. Myself and a few other men were at work excavating in the tunnel a short distance inside the inner door, , about fiiteen foot apart. Each door is about four feet in diameter. In passing in or out one door is closed before the other is opened. This is necessary to pravent a rush of mir, which would happen if both doors should be open at one time. At about five o'clock, as near as | can judge, we were all working near the air-lock, and we were startled by a noise that indicated a leak, and immediately after. ward there was a loud noise, as it something had been suddenly broken or bursted. All this took place in a minute. I never ex perienced anything that was more sudden. 1he leak was discovered on our leit as we tnoed the door. The water poured in rapidly. We strove to stop the Es by shoving our clothes into it. ¢ worked with might and main. Some of the men removed their trousors and oven their shirts to fll up the terrible gap, but still the leak enlarged and the volume of water increased. The water was soon nearly up to our hips, and we saw that it was uscless to endeaver longer to stop the leak. In the meantime, Anderson, the Swede, who was the last to come through the inside door, had got jammed by the door pressing against him, and some of the men strove to got the door back trom him to allow him to get through. Both doors opened in. wardly. The pressure of the air from within the tunnel baMed all our attempts to release him from his awful position, and we were obliged to leave him. All our energies were given to extricate the poor Swede. We had to get the door shut batore we could open the other. By this time, you see, we were unable to open the outer door, which is the entrance to the shatt. What I am telling you all took place in about a minute. Inside the airJdock wo suffered by the pressure of the air from the tunnel. At last one of the men went to work to break the deadlights on the side of the outer door, Istopped him, I wasaimid if he broke the deadlights that the air-pressure from the tunnel would prevent us from opening the door. Right afterward, as nothing else could bo done, I seized a crowbar and used it to break the deadlights. We then got through Wetting Lead Penells, The aot of putting a lead peneil to the ton ua, to wet i ust before writing, which we notice in so e, 1s one of the oddities of vi Ki hard to give any reason—unless it began in the days when lead pencils were poorer than now, snd was continued by ex- ample into the next generation, A lead pencil should never be wet, It hardens the lead and ruins the pencil. This fact is known to newspaper men and stenographers, But nearly every one else does wet a pencil belore using it. This fact was definitely settled by a newspaper clerk away down-East, Being of a mathematical turn of mind, he ascertained by actual count that of fifty persons who oame into the office to write an advertisement or church notice, forty-nine wet a pencil in their mouth before using it. Now this alerk always uses the best pencils, cherishing a good one with something of the pride a soldier feels in his gun or sword, and it hurts his feelings to have his pencils spoiled. But politeness and business considerations require him to lend his penoll scores of times every day. And often after it has been wet till it was hard and brittle and refused to mark, his feelings would overpower him. Finally, he got some eheap olls and sharpened them to lend. The first person who took up the stock pencil was a man whose breath smelt of onions ! and whisky. He held the point in his mouth and soaked it for several min- utes, while he was torturing himself in the effort to write an ne for a missing bulldog. Then a sweel-looking young came into the office, with kid gloves that buttoned half the length of her arm, She picked up the same old pen- cil and pressed it to her dainty lips pre. paratory to writing an advertisement for a lost bracelet, e clerk would have stayed her hand, even at the risk of a box of the best pencils ever Faber catered, but he was too late, And thus that pencil passed from | mouth to mouth fora week, It was sucked by people of all ranks and stat. ions, and ah deg of ¢ i and uncleanliness, But we forbear. Burely no one who reads this will ever again wel a lead penoil,— AMS is Tribune. The Salamander, One of the most curious animals is the juacholote, or, as it would, perhaps, be called by zoologists, the salamander, The animal abounds in New Mexico, is amphibious, and is generally found in wet places, the beds of creeks, or other such retreats, The creature resembles a lizard strongly, but with the legs and tail of that animal has » fish's body and head, with a tongue which popular superstition supposes to be capable of transformation at the will of its owner into a boring instrument more peéne- trating than a steel gimlet, and which is used to the great suffering of all wood near its habitation. Two long ear-like appendages are attached to the scaly head, the whole animal presenting as repulsive an appearance ascan well be imagined. The juscholote is about a foot in length, but tough stories are told (especially to tendefeet) of the juscholotes down the Rio Grande, which grow to the size of an alligator, which undermine the foundations of houses with the aforesaid gimiet tongue, and have been kuown to catacomb mines in one night, uring the absence of the workmen, as if a diamond drill had been at work there. One of the most valuable ore.bodies was uncov- ered in a Grant county mine recently by the boring of » juacholote that has ever been exposed in New Mexico. Mr, John Murphy, of Santa Fe, some time ago had a pet juacholote which he trained to a high point of intelligence, the animal following him about like a dog, and making his meals entirely from liquorice root and the bark of cinnamon, On this diet he lived for over a year, but finally died from the effects of curi- osity, an rhaps more directly, indi- gestion. ing a bottle of arsenic on the shelf, the hapless pet, while its master was behind the ipti counter, bored with its to! the bottle and swallowed the contents. indy l Sallie Martha Brown Washington King Green Violet Ada Moore Thomp- son, the only daughter of an colored man in the Natural Bridge dis. trict, Virginia, is included in the present United States census. The invalids and strength beyond other remedios hoy Bitters, - A —————— An impecunious man generally desig. nates a ten-doliar note asa William.» because he is not on such terms of famil- inrity with it as would entitle him to call it * BLL" EN ——— Fickle in te, irresolute in subject to App try Malt ind, and Ninety-one cities in the United States have a popuistion of over 8,000,000, or about one-sixth of the whole popula. | tion, and this does not include cities | with less than 30,000 population, i | For all the ailments of small children there | is no better remedy than Dr. Bull's Bab | Syrup. all Draggists sell it. Price only 25 conta. To divert at any time a troublesome fancy, run to thy books; they presently fix thee to them, and drive the other out of thy thoughts. They always re- ceive thee with the same kindness. Dr C. EK. Shoemaker, the well-known aaral surgeon of Roading, Pa., offers to send by mail, free of charge, a valuable litte book on deainess and diseasos of the ear—specially on running ear and eatarrh, and their proper treatment — giving relerecces and testimonials that will sutisiy the most skeptioal. Address asdbove. Are You Not in Good (enith? Ii the Liver is the wource of your trouble, vou ean find un ahscsute remedy in DR. Sax. FORD'S LIVER INVIGORATOR, the only vegeta. | ble cathnrtic witeh sols directly on the Liver. Cures all Billous divases. For Book address Ua daxryonrd, 162 Broadway, New York. VEGETING is not a stimulating bitters which creates a flolitious appetite, but a tle tonie which assists nature to restore stomach to a healthy sotion. The Voltale Belt Co., Marshall, Mich. Will send their Klootro-Voltaic Belts 10 the affliotexd upon 3 days’ trial. Soe their adver. tisermont in this paper headed, ““ On 30 Days’ Fal Prevent crooked boots and blistered by wearing Lyon's Patent Heel Stiffeners. ————— Danghters, Wives an ors Da. MARCHISIS CTRRINE SRI. will post Hvely cure Female Woakoom, sech ms Falling of the Womb, Whites, Clironie Influnmation of {oeration of the Womb, Incidental H or Flooding, and Irregular Memsbustion, 8e. Ap Danial reliable remedy. Send postal cand for a Ee treatinent, cures and oertifh and h X. alos ts, 0 HOWARTH & BALI Bod oy wi Drugriets~$1.50 ber bottle THE MARKETS, Poot Oattio—~Mod, Natives, live wt, Oalves— Common to Extra tere Hoge—Idve,cuine : seEsEE en £¥ “ane Ww Wheat--No, 2 senesnsace cannons 1 18% NY ie Ryo—8tate. coevesves suns Darley—Two-Rowsd State. ar] . Yellow, EENRR sane an 1 SERRE RRNAR A RENEE ne ME BOW. cosnessvnvsmannansll 88 Lard-Olty SERRE A RRR Rane ng Petroleum —Orade sesee. . TNA N Butter—State Creamery BEERS RAR ARAN E nn Diary Western Imitation Faoto aEEeR2IREEINERR -g 83s SersResa vere S8fFs oof # The Electoral V The eles vote of the United 4h entitled in ing is the electoral vote of present . Alabama . . Miasasip 2 os heey ERER AER re Nobraaks .... seed an EERR FARE AES i ; cerenis JO - on Ge 00 Ov ie Now eee Now York...ovovv. 36 Onrolins. SRB ISEB BARN 3 er 0 Island. ... Ere Carolina. .... ae TS TORAE.coi:00 200000 Massachusetts... 13 Vieginia............ 11 Michigan, ........ 11|West Virginis...... § Minnesota ,...... BiWisconsin.......... 10 Total .. ATA IS A Nebraska Sunday-school was on rallrond excursion. A boy leaned of n car window and fired & revolver the same instant that a 1 put head out at another w and bullet killed her. hE: FRSA TRIS RE AFAR IER RRR FREE Se MALY UNFERMENTED WARLAAARRAAA MALT BITTERS TRACE MARK ’ MALT AND 28 ITTER SAPONIFIE Is the = Original * Concentrated Lye and Family ee ee ES, Shei Boa FIER, and PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila. The Koran. A {nth of istors. or Hellion BRE RON Or AE ra tag | Afitie I) Seoms Sale. Formerly published at $2. » s r 7 ¥ por A epeatrn, Phila, fie J, PF. Nile § by al} § mail Wm drag a Tet aah ng PETROLEUM Grand Medal st Philadelphia Exposition. hE ASELING -2:5- a Parts 1% Bot Delt remedy To we Burns, perior to ARyIBiRg Fon have SPE “BEATTY” OF WhSHINGTON, NEW JERSEY, BEIT. 14-Stop ORCANS bee Address DANIEL PF. BEATTY Washington, N. J. N SODA oN A Book & Music, boxed & sh only B8L.C00, Eee ot. LAL J EE PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila. BC EIT tuts 2 hi ih ¥ REMEDY FOR CURING Cog, Cais, Brits, tig, CONSUMPTION, A rem Piven, Gl aod Aicied Foupe. TRARY IT. YOUR REMEDY 13 DLN TOR CO., News. M. WOOLLRY, PIUM | LE yOCO0 Acres This Clatin- House Established 1803. 1 id cory pA or Re those sold tor 8 os. for 30 * Dr farm mail. Address 1 BLEDSOK, P. M o Alvarados Ta wo will we get the hook from t “Pick it up,” says a girl, who backs rapidly out of the circle. “Good gracious, I'm afraid “of it. the openings we made. The Swede could have got ont too if he had got clear of the inner door, From the air-lock we landed on a platform in the shalt, which is about thirty feet down from the surface, and then we were safe. By the time wo reached the surface the TY esesnn concen Cheoso—State Factory... Bkims, Wostortiaeices « and Bessnsenssanases Eggo—State Potatoes, Early Rose, State, bbl old ceives, nearest his heart. We may do a very good action and not be a good man, but we cannot do a very ill one and not be an ill man. picture in the academy to prevent peo- ple from being crowded upon Tofor 11 was on the line—and spoiling it. The engraving dealers were besieging the young lady’s doors, offering Lier fabulous habitants were compelled to camp outside the town. Afghanistan has a new ruler with the formidable name of the Ameer Abdurrahman Khan, He has been formally recognized by New York Philadelphia Brooklyn Chioago Bt. Louis 075,202 674,022 495,000 208,977 310 664 ESS re Texas 0s 083g MONT! AGENTS WANTED 18 $350 5H aie Articles in the world; i, a WW sanpiere Jax Broxsox, Detrott, Mich. Sears nsane serennice New law, Thousends of Soldiers snd heirs entitled. Pensions date back 10 discharge or death. 4“ P.0 Drawer 335, © =. LEMON, - Sees enenen PENSIONS. @ "e or ou 08 18 0 sums for copyrights. She was thence- forth gecure—her fortune was made. A London correspondent states that since that time she has received as much as 3,000 guineas (nearly $16,000) for the right to make and sell an engraving made from a single one of her paintings. The queen heard of the * Roll Call” pic- ture and was anxious to see it. After her curiosity had beep gratified, she sig- nified to the owner her desire to possess it. He said that he did not care about patting with it, but that as the queen rd expressed a wish, he had no choice u t to comply with it. The qeen sent Lim a check for $600, exactly the price which Lie had paid, and this was char- acterized by some daring critics as rather penuricus. The gentleman thus de- rived of his picture, at once gave Miss hompson an order to paint him another one. It you wish to appear agreeable in socicly, you must consent to be taugh many things which you know already. He who truly wishes the happiness of any one, cannot be long without die- fovering some mode of contributing to i It is better to wear out than to rust out. We must not only strike the iron while it is hot, but strike till it is made of. George Beamon, an Englishman, has lately taken from the Cape to Buenos Ayres, 105 African ostriches of the most beautiful species, with the intention to startan ostrich farm in the Argentine Republic. From studies made previous to carrying his ideas into effect, the im- porter entertains no doubt of their thriv- ing in the climate of South America as well as they do in Southern Acfria. joston Baltimore.... ...c....... Cinoinnati .............. San Francisco... ..... . New Orleans. .......... Washington... ..us.00ne Cleveland............... Pittsburg 250,626 167,354 216,239 140,473 191,418 Providenes ............ Albany ........... cernas Roshester .............: Allegheny City ......... Indianapolis... 48,246 ~Prof. H. R. Palmer has recently re- ved the degree of Doctor of Musto from the University of Chicago. There! it's opening its mouth at me." Just then the “sunny” wriggles off the hook and disappears between two logs into the water, and the girls try for another bite. But the sun comes down and fries the back of their necks, and they get three headaches in the party, and all get oross and scold at the fish like so many magpies. If any unwary chub dares to show himself in the water they poke at him with poles, much to his disgust. Finally they get mad all over and throw the poles away, hunt up the lunch basket, climb up into the woods, where they sit on the grass and cat enough dried beef, and rusk, and hard-boiled eggs to give a horse the nightmare, after which they compare notes about their beaux io Mies ily when they ge home and plant envy in the hearts of their dear friends by telling them what ** just a splendid time they the British loroes. Further advices from Manilia, ohief city of the Philippine islands, report that continued earthquake shocks have been felt and have done great damage. The total loss of lite is estimated at 320, including 200 Chinamen. An eruption of Mount Vesuvius began a tow days ago,and an earthquake shook startled the people of Naples. A rifle match shot at Wimbledon between an American and an English team of eight men on a side resulted a deteat for the Americans. The Kuglish team made 1,647 points at the three ranges and the Ameri. can team 1,668 points. At 800 yards the English team scored 680; at 900 yards 559, and at 1,000 yards, 508. The American team at 800 yards made 644; at P00 yards 515, and at 1,000 yards, 609. On the evening betore the match took place Farrow, a member of the American team, was excluded on account of a dispute with Hyde, another member of the team; and Rockwell, the substitute, went into thing was all over. Woe found that there was a largo falling in of the oarth on the river side of the shatt. The door of the air-lock must be shut—the one that opens into tho shaft: the other is wedged partly open by the Swede's body. The frightiul noise we heard right after wo wore made aware of the leak was like the shot of a gan. It was loud and sharp. The leak, as I said, was on our left, and quite high up. I have been e¢ J on the work for about a year, but lately I have been sick and absent often, I came on last about two wooks he I understand the operation of the air-lock protty well, and the danger about it if one door should be leit open while sitompting to open the other, We had been warned by the foreman, and I had over- heard the superintendent explain the work- ings of the air-lock to visitors. When the accident happened I and tie men about me were working with shovels. The gang at work at the tine went down at twelve o'clock ALO, Flour—0Oity Gro No. 1 «580 uluth, wonssmn 1 x seeene ALO. cucanunssnnsnnnnnsnnnnen diy DBarley-Two-rowed seesansieey OF Dect Oattle—Live weight, uous... ow 08 Bhoop. ...covesnccscnessenssiinnnnee 0s EIORB. wavnes cconssnnnnssanmesisnine 05Y Flour— Wisconsin and Minn, Pat... 6 50 Oorn—Mixed snd Yellow..veee ...., Oate—Extra White. .....cvcovennne.. 41 swseBsvesassserastasennss 1 Wool Waaiied Gomi Delaine, Unwashed, Sng & “ i WATERTOWN (MASS ) CATTLE Beal Cattlo—live Blan) “eavai SEERRB aT ERR é 00 113 Hwy Y] 0 08 aX 6 0° 0] x ‘a a “rena Shenae HORS. i ocuveruerrarsnsssssssrnnnnnnse ee Joung Men wanted for mercantile houses, h Je Viirees Manhaitan Agency, 1899 Broadway: N. ¥. OF; 5 MILLION Planta! Wil pack to reach CABBAGE safely at $1.50 per 1,000. (+ Celery at X2.00 per 1,00 Cata- logue free. 1. F. Tillinghast, La Plume, Lack'a Oo, Pa. A HIN 1 URIA t Hurrah! From Mexico uy AL BE Same son Bk ie OPIUM =555 5m $ 7 7 7 A TEAR and expenses to agenta Jif Free. . 0. VICKERY, Augusta, Maine, Be Swindled. Keo trical Belt, Ra TE Dc Api 1649, Boston, Mass. Rye—8tate,...cssese santa rene Oorn—-Btate Yellow, .eeensessonse... 53 Oats, 1X00 snusnn se nnssnnsnsnns os ¥N town. Fired N. Mariere & Co. Portand, Mates, $66 2.5 Bu seat rsen ge to labor till eight. Oar first move was to hed!” the match unprepared and shot so poorly that the whole team became demoralized y stop the leak; next, to dc that and get the t Oheose—New York Full Oream,...., IX @0T Rdren"brienes & Goh Poriand "aien ON 30 DAYS' TRIAL. diseases - 3 i Jeraonal nae. or ne Swefuaranient
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers