Ean HE Acie puis A THRILLING ADY ENTURE, —— A Frenchman Undersoes the Tanner Tent Tnvoluntarily Hn a Canon of the Yellowstone <« Thirteen Days Without. Food-A Remarkable Epi | wode, A case of involuntary fasting is related by a gentleman who recently arrived in Chicago from Montana. The name of the narrator is lenis Cobn. He is connected with a system of post trader- ships in the northwestern Territories, and visits Chicago onoe & vear. He came here direct from Fort Keogh, which is si'nated on the Yellowstone ! river. Mr. Col n descended the Yellow. stone and Missouri rivers to Bismarck on a small steamer that had delivered a | cargo of military supplies at Keogh. Mr. Cohn vouches for the truth of the | story ot suffering which he relates, It | was by the hardest work that the | steamer reached its destination at all. | The June freshet, as it is termed, was | on at the time, and the Yellowstone was swollen to bursti ing. In the gor gos, | where, on account of the perpendic iar walls of rock—in places 1,000 feet high the torrent could not spend its enormous force in overflow, the current bad appar. ently a foree of thirty miles an hour. In one of these chutes the heroic little steamer, trembling and creaking as if ready to burst and fly into a millio: fragments, breasted the rapids for five hours, in whic h time it had moved up stream Just threequarters of a mile Had ansthing happe: ned at that woment to deprive the pilot of dis control of the | evaft, the boat, cargo and crew would have been smashed against the rocks as a fly can be smashed against a wall, One evening as the boat was @ ing from one of the narrowest in the river, a man named Riche. a Frenchman, who was working a roustabout to pay for his passage to the post, caught his foot in the rope, and stumbling, pitched over the guard into the water. He wasn't much of 2 mar nor was he swimmer enough 10 cope with a current as tumaituous and b wrhar ous as thatof the Yellowstone; so, while erg 1 nons id eal as iner, 4 tible head way.as a floater he made won- derful time. Of cour-e the crew made a show of trying to rescue the poor Frenchman but the pilot had too fresh a sense of the ¢ in that region to think of dropping back down the canon after having nearly worn out a boil ler and ¢ngine in getting through it. So, in ten seconds, more or less, the man overboard had been swept down into the nee K of the gorge, aad soon disappeared al together from view. The erew said, in chorus, ** Poor fellow" and the boat went grinding on up against the bounding tide Thirteen days from that time, at about the same hour in the evening, the steamer, on its Retarn trip, with a cargo of peits, shot down through t same canon at a fearful rate of speed the current alone, without the help of steam, carrsing t it He ie h h the light craft witl lightning-like velocity In the deepest part of the gorge, upon a patel: of beach that seemed to hive been formed of the debris perpetually dropping from | the stupendous walls of granite, a man boat to stop. For a signal he used his flannel shirt. As soon as possible the boat was brought to a landing rear by where the man was standing In the meantime the stranger—no not Stranger, for, despite his changed ap- pearance, he was instantly recogniz by every man of the erew—had fallen in a heap upon the Sirip of beach. This man was Riche, the * roustabout.” who, to the surprise of his rescuers, had sur vived the dive and dash through the perilous canon, and, by no particularly effort of Lis owp, had stranded on the begyar y patch of rocky beach, with a terribie river on v + i OG two sides of him and granite walls on theother twosides. He remembered fal ling overboard, and, more vividly still, he remembere a roli- ing up safely on the rocks, somewhat bruised and with throat and nostrils des of the time spent in the water, nor of the number of days that had elapsed since the crew had cruelly aba ndoned him to his fa'e. Mr. Conn says tha was wretched tothe) found and taken abo Lie could not articulate his words intelli- gibly. He bad taken nothing but river water into his stemach during the thir teen days of his isolation. When, under the judicious app! cat ion of stix ma ating fead, he was restored sufficient! be abe to converse, he told then W at his oniy hope had been that a steamer would come along ind that Le would be able to make himself discovered. the pinching pangs of starvation in- creased, he would lie for hours with ear close to the water, momen- tarily imagining that be could hear the uUisstions of a steamer breasting and waving the rapids. After a few days his stomach reje ered water and, as that was the best and only offering he had to give, it was forced & feed upon itself, and it was doing this at a ruinously rapid rate when succor came. Riche, who. apparently, had been a man of 160 pounds weight, was a skeleton when re cued, ard h ad not stiength enough to lift both hands to his face at once. He said that several times fine, laree trout disported themselves in the shallows at his feet, and once he threw himself sprawling into the water and thrust his hands along the graveled bottom in the hope of ci utching one of the fish, but they eluded his d lesperate grasp, and t Ri ft >t iche's condition extreme. When the boat |} to a hit there were millions of fish within reach and not even a minnow to eat. He wasal- most hopeless one night—a dreadfully biack and tempestucus night. The bolts of lightning seemed to fill the gorge from wall to wall. The wind blew so hard | that the river lashed the rocks with a | fury that terrified him, for he expected every moment to be swept mooring and carried out to certain death. He explained, as a reason for not taking to water and swimming to a landing whence he cculd es scape from the canon, that hie was not there were any other place near at hand | #s he was only an aw kward swimme at best, he had better stick to his — ing, desperate as it was Horrors of a Famine. A correspondent of the Chicago Inter. Ocean draws a terrible picture of the famine prevailing at Orvomiali, Persia. I carried | little bag of dried raising 10 | city on one of the highways. at my sidea men, women and children, and faint, muttering unirtelligibly, | some their lips moving only, and bands | on their mouths, indicating by signs | their desire for food. My raisins I | divided in little portions among these | hundreds, but if I had had a load of | raising they would not have sufficed for | the famishing in this street, and there | sre a hundred more such streets in the city. I saw a great many men and | some whole families fleeing ont of the | land toward Russia, if perchance they | might find food there, but they were | without provisions for the way. | The next day I did not sce dead | bodies, but I sc w ten persons who can- not live jroush two more days. They | no more hope of life. 8: ome were | speechless, some could not swallow the when it was put in their mouths. It would not go down their throats. I | Saw a young woman, beautiful ad delicate, a widow's child. wihout any | protector or provider, dying of hunger I saw heaps of infant children in the | streets. As Hagar east her son under | the bush that she might not witness his | death, so these mothers have thrown | away their children into the streets that | they may not see them die The name! of wheat is precious to the famishing, | more than jewe's to the merchant or treasure or diamo nds. Often men ex- | claim with sighs and @ roans: “Oh ha r-| vest, oh harvest, shail we ever sce al threshing floor again, or eat bread till we | are satisfied*” Many fine ladics have | sold their orname.ts and clothes for | food. | i i { i i i Where I have walked, the correspon- dent wiites ten days afterward, I have __ not seen the dead from famine, but they abound in other parts of the city; but men are becoming insane and frantic from hunger. Many such were in the streets, and begears in every condition without numbers. Jou would count the beggars, they wo «qual in num- ber those from whom they heg. Every hour that you wa k in the city you meet with 200 of these wretched creatures, ans (yey minute twenty emaciated bands touch you in importunity. While the cruel Mussulmsas drive away these: ravenous seekers, their sobs and wail- ings fill our ears. | | ! TIMELY TOPICS. So o— 000 barrels of beer reported by the brews ers’ congress as sold last year filled a canal twenty-one feet wide and five feet deep, extending from New take a pump throwing thirty gallons a minute, running night and day, over twenty- one years to pump it out, all swallowed, however, Dora Young, % favorite daughter of the Iate Brighs am Young, is in Chicago. i She is described ns a partioularly with { She dresses fashionably and in good taste. She has considerable property, secured from her father's estate by a successful suit at law, and intends to enjoy it. Two years ago she was a zealous Mormon, but now she abowin- ates the system and has forsaken her old home and friends. i a popular sanitary error to think { that the mors a man eats the fatter and stro! ger ho will become; to believe that the more hours ehildren study the faster earn: to conclude that if exerciso f tin to imagine that whateyve remedy Causes one fee! immediately wd for the system, regardiess erior effects, Despite the ad- hygienic science, these miss as remain-a monument to concerning health mat. to uit vance of taken ide public apathy ters, the of Glastonbury, cows used to taxes, wiites to tho wad, signing herself Julia says that her husband » tax this year without protest, but went to the collector to pay it, and ther n told her that **it was tax and not hers, and that as he could vote he had no reason to go contrary to law.” Mrs. Parker says: “1 want to take my own stand and ight it out, as | long as men make laws 80 unjust that women ¢ annot say how their own prop- erty shall be disposed of, but men can use it as they please, without any ifs or ands about it." Conn., he sold Mrs hose Parker, wi famous éviry vear for Weman's Jour E. Smith, and not only Paid the t Lis 1] It was recently remarked by Maudsley that one stiri observed by medical men hallucination is that the ¢ be convinced that the obje the sounds the y hear, and the smel ney perceive, have no real existence, an | that the sensations received are the re ult of an excited state of their nerves. Hal ination often extends to but one the person affecte periecti ¥ noreial Arise eith er from an 10¢ mind has dwelt closely, or from ment of the sensory nerves. lt that Newton, Hunter, and so of ¢ quai eminence, forms to ul wemsel to be realities, Prof. ing feature in Cares tients can L al not is is t { it It Jay ich the exoite- condition. idea on wi Oil } , picture y ap; oar Dan Watson, who is known to | police throughout the country, is now ia the penit Btiat at Philadelphia. Being asked why his band had not made an attempt on while operating in several years ago, we went to do it were frustrated, and think ?~—a terrible bull man's revolver? or the safe? Neither, but the watchman bank from Lis Supper ld by the hand ¥ hy Or that neighbe said: and eac i Three na time he t & Wi log? a little child. went down ead ng his atx’, 1d = ¢ rs anged tol ounce e upon him an ! bind him and then rob the place: § NE how, W or I saw that litt] adn’t the heart to give the sig nal ds it, 80 he escaped. I'm a bad man, and iI ain't afr raid of the best man living ut [50 La Port. Years. Yesterday afternoor sho Hl arrival of the train a man rotel in this city and on ¢ w ho stood busying himself with a ent blotter, the terms upon could engage board. * Owing to the location of your room sir. Big demand for our rooms. tl Li y alter “enti req the y # which EL care so much about the eati fii man been eati my life. to be to me. say, give me a respec room~how mue L'll you cha : * Just yourself, sir?” “Well, in a manner. “Twer ii ty-fiv s dollars you are alone.” .: 1% Dn) lied I an old, and n' gettin’ t Ige ? " a month, i it's this way: My wi »e y wit h me, but as times are pret concluded to arrange i take breakfast, my wile will @ e dinne r, and we'll throw dry—for supper. By that both get board for one price. 3 best manager esl see, e # 4 ¥ means we can ge I reckon little the ** Fifty dollars for the two.” “1 don't understand ti iat sort of 'rith etic Both together we'd or ily eat the meais allowed for one person. hurt a bed any more for tw) peop sleep on it than for one. [I've got out in t my wife when we got married dinged if new. It's one beds, with high, yaller posts with kuobs on the tops as big as young pumpkins I'll farnish the room with this be i and one chair. My wile can seton the floor I've lived in the country all my life { havin’ made a little money last year, concinded to come to town and splurge a little. Thar's woman down country that has all the time been buckin’ agin my wife, and to git aw: AY with her we have conc) luded to board at a hotel.’ : * Fifty doliars per month Is our lowest rate. og d an’ I'll be 8 of those into this business right. “Six hundred dollars. “This is a wholesale business with me. How much for ten years?” * Bix thousand dollars 3.’ “That's a gettin’ down to it. | mue h for twenty years,” “Twelve thousand dollars.® “Ali right. Mark me Sos for square meal right now and check for iwenty years.’ ‘bee that card P” said theclerk point- ing to the hotel maxim of persons witn- out baggage are required to pay in ad- vance. “Oh, I've got the baggage,” man ;ifted up a carpet bag. * That won't go.” “W ou’t you take this As security?" ‘* No; get out of here, *“ But | want to board here for twe nty | years. n “Go on away.’ “I'll leave your + one-horse hotel, sir; but first let me show you.” He lifted | up plage d 850,000 in give rnment bonds “You can stay, sir.” **No; 1 believe not. It takes too much money to put up in this hotel. Guess 1'l wagon oe » Ever since Cain gave Abel a clip with | and the serving the laws of ey totle tiock (Ark.) Gazelle I The Sumac Business. A Brunswick county Va.) { says: Sumac abounds here in large | quantities, and itis gathered by colored prepared for northern markets, | used in tanning and dying. The gather- | new industry, Virginian sumac was very litle known, and consequently vey little was gathered, but as soon a8 it was found to be among tue best in the world, the demand for it has stead. likely that before long it will be cuiti- vated. Last year cneof the merchants in Brunswick county shipped fifty tons to Fetersbuts. A colored hand ern easily gather one hundred to one hun- dred Y fifty pounds a day. Saturday is the busiest day for merchants in the rurai districts, and then colored people can beseen coming 10 the stores from morning until evening to dispose of their sumac gathered during the week. Those that are too poor to own oxen or horses, earry it. It is nothing unusual for a colored womsn to earry forty or fifty pounds at a time on her head a consid- Sl distance. Sincethe article grows wild, there are ro restrictions in the privilege of gather ing it, but the colored people, in general, “nsk permission ‘o RELIGIOUS NEWS Japan contains 20,000 Roman Catho lies. Protestant scholars in | 94.000, The AND NOTES, i Episcopal Sunday-school New York ily A Soule, in Scotland | A women's home missionary society | of the Methodist Episcopal church Las | been formed in Cincinnati The Georgia Baptists have 788 white | Sundav-schools, with 3.750 offloers and teachers, 158] La50 seholars; 0 colored sehocls, w ith 9.880 officers and teachers, 21.600 scholars. Poverty stares many independent Lu- | theran pastors of Hesse and elsewhere in the face. Their papers tell the gad dist tales of suffering, and propose a | fund for their relief The total preaching power of Engiish Methodist connections is at 38 000 preachers, of whom only some 3,600 are ordained ministers, and the re. maining 34,400 aymen it Pr it shyte stons pays its chief the given y ii ian board of torel 8 gn mi gooretary $5,000, tl Methodists pay 84,000, the Congrega tio 300, and the Baptists and Epis SCOpARIAnS uel $3,000, lows has more Methodists among citizens than Christians of all other de nominatic combined, and has far nished an unusual number of distin. guished ministers therefrom The Rev. Joseph Done, DD, wed Wesleyan minister in diced recently, aged forty-eight years, He was president of the Aus tralian Wesleyan conference in 1878 and visited this country in 1873 ' Joseph of the Oka (Canad %) ib w of Indians, is a man of good educa tion. has been ordained as a clergy man, and has translated the four Gos. »e m French into Ivo quois, He i 10 the transiation thie New Testament before the end present year, { it naiists *=J ] 18) is a dis tinguisl tras y Chie He an ty in of of the Ones finish ‘here are thirty-three missionary societies at work in Africa, and there are 75.000 converts belonging to Prot- estant churches, with an outside popu- intion of 250,000 under their influence, In Central Africa there are already ten CU an organisations established with or CNeOUraging pros. pects, ue arist Mor USS Catholic population of C (1,546,500) is provided for by twenty. bishops, 1,599 priests, and i hes. There avealso eighteen sem- three CHure Inari RB, 10 mies, 347 communiti ty-four hospitals, » schools. nv f “LWO religious § th ninety three asylums, 3.544 elementary convents, forty- and he List churches this ye gainst 2.102.034 las’ neres ot 31,010. being an non ministers, ni ¥ reported in 9,158 044, showing are 1,085 of 30; HTH 295; 15,401 crease of tism were a falling off from year of upward of 33,000, sions numbered 20,580 ¢ State of Rhode 260,000, the it MM every church edifices, or onerelig ation for every 878 inhabit religinus edifios every 86, One! of allth while s one commodation there. every name report 118 and [17 societ In 1835 the England iwen by Seven ure hi A and tidings unfin i were in four Connec ticut $0, 19% Cat! hurches iv, ani 8 associations 4 church ordaine d 447. 8 he, OS, CHSO an Islan re are U6 £ IOUS Organis ants, and one it fo is for € people hird could find The church ¥ filth CASE ac 3 ies, in the 40,082 Catholics, twenty - tw 'e were Sintes only Priests, fift y eee sl VEArs » States, other le n the is ed. Wf i and thirty priests, seven Cl and thirty-t ations. Now t!} ‘ g ations. ow there are in al le 8, 516 pric sts, HR ¢ hurch re ( omit ¢ b t in hode { olics, and 395.101 Catl 154 st T} ations. t hie hn aayer, ssedd Chris . 's & AyYs: 1 believe the hi 21 fi i A culty i3 to consider inying and ail his acts in as worship. To enter tue place sonal display. to show wl 1d fingers. 1@ art of registrat have a fine and wi meets witl r jor p skill i » A at ir ion, to sin 1d CAN 8 me money, or tainment, is false it sooner or later Lie 1 ong: ana 1 hold that no person . Uhiristian or heathen, step a foot inside a without a full of sacredness sof the piace. The owing is a summary of Presbyterian church (South) ‘as pre- by the minutes of assembly for oo! OLE S, 13: presbytemies, 67: . i 060: churches, 1 928; * CA lates, Rahs ord inat ions, 38; ins t nisters deceased, 19; arches 40: Hit digsol ved, ht 8 3 3.811; added ti well to sCHse ‘ sent 1&5) ed by ndie mi tions, chur 5, =I: inati i 3,614; fants PO d, 47; Ide I's, £ org: ani 18; ruling added on exam- on certificate, micants, 120,088: in 4,705; aduits baptized, 1.802; ber of baptized non.com- municants, 20.397; number in Sunday- and Bible-classes, 74 902. The contribution s amounted to £1,052. Of mount $39.577 was for foreign mitsions and 815233 for evan- gelizing. During the past year there has been an increase of 107 in the hum ber of chiure 3.273 in the number communicants and 4 675 in the Sane fre | school. The contributions were in- | creased over the preceding year £46,635, or ———— Bibles With Queer Names, An interesting collection of Bibles was recently exhibited in London, which comprised copies of nll the editions that, because of peculiar errors of the pri inters, or from sowe other reason, have been known by strange names. Among the Bibles on exhibition were the following: Tre Gurrexserc Bimie.—The Par liest Book Ki Own. Printe. i from Movable Metal Types, is the Latin Bible Issued by Guttenberg, at Mentz, A. D. 1450. Tue Bue BisrLe.—~Was so Cal its Rendering of P on “Ah Bugs by Ni ight.’ Present Version reads, Night.” A. D. 1551. Tue Brercnes Binre —The Version is that P oO pularly Known as the Breeches Bible, rom its Ren- dering of Ger nesis iii. : (Making T hemselves Breeches out of Fig~ leaves.) This translation of the Scriptures—the Result of the La- bors of the English Exiles at! Gepeva— was the English Family Bible During the Reign of Queen Elizabeth and till Supplanted by | the Present Authorized Version of King James I. | ThE PLACE-MAKERS' remarkable Typographical Error! which occurs in Mattnew v.: O: “Blessed are the Piace-makers,” in- stead of Peace-makers. A.D. 1562. Tne TreacLe BinLe.—From its Render- ing of Jeremiah viii.: 22: “Is There no Treacle [instead of Bal lm] in | Gilead?” A.D, 1568, { Tne Rosy BisLe.—From the same Text, but Translated ** Rosin” in thie Douai version. A. D. 1609. He Axp Sue Bmues.—From the tespective Renderings of Ruth iid. 15-one Reding that “She went into the City.” The other has it that “He went.” A. D. 1611. Tue Wicken BinLg.- From the Facet that the Negative has been Left Out of the Seventh Commandment, (Exodus, xx.: 14.) For W Hie h the | Printer was Fi ed 8300. A. 1631. Tue Tuvms Briere. —Being by Inch | Bquare and Halfan Inch Thick, » as | Published at Aberdeen. A. D. 1670. { THE VINEGAR BInLE. g de ACONS, 3,920; ni comme num gchool total 333. this at hes. h i led from XC i.: a; Oar * Terror by aid of Ge Neva i Bore. —~From a { Tue i Luke, which reads as “The Parable of the Vinegar,” instead of the Vine- yard. A.D. 1717 THe PriNTERS' BioLe.- Weare told by Cotton Mather that ir a Bible printed prior to 1702, a blurdering Typographer made King David ex- claim that “Printers [instead of Princes ] Persecuted him without a cause.” See Psalms exix.: 161, Tue MurpERERS’ BiBLE.--So called from an Error in the Sixteenth verse of the Epistle of Jude, the word ** Murderers” being used instead of “Murmurers.” A. D. 1801. Tne Caxton Memoriarn Bug — Wholly Printet and Bound in 12 hours, but on ly 100 copies struck off. A D.I877 Hits of Information, ~ The plirase ** To row up Salt river | hina its origin in the fact that there is a [small stream of that name in Kentucky | the passage of which is made difficult and laborious by the abundance of twenty-five years more than sixty | shallows and bars, The real applica sons have gone over the falls, Fe | tion of the phase is to the person who summer seven went over, fouron the | { has the task of propelling the boat up American side and three on the Cana- | the stream, but in political usage it is to ' Of those who go over the Amerl. | those who are rowed up. falls the bodies are very seldom | Ariemesia married her own brother '" 9 ‘ i they tell me, while the bodies | Mausolus, King of Carin, 877 B. OC, At on the Canadian | bis death she drank, in liquor, his ashes, { side mie usually found, ‘This is becuse | NIAGARA FALLS. Bome of the People Who Have Gane Uver the Uataraet ' John Paul writes as follows from Niag- {ara Fallato a New York paper: Within { dian, Onn recovered. of those who go over | | after his body had been burned, and | {of the jagged rocks which lie hidden in { erected to his memory a monument, one | the whirl and foam at the foot of the | of the wonders of the world, termed | American falls—these, grim teeth that | Mausoleum She invited all the liter | the y are, seize upon the vietim delivered | Ary men of her age, and offered a re. {to them, snd hold him ina grip from | ward to him who somposed. the best which neither bell nor diver ean deliver | verses upon her husband ’ Ie | him, a grip which shall not be relaxed | Was adjudged to Theopompus. until! the sound of that trumpet at) whose blast the most inacoessible graves ghall give up their dead, It is generally | boatmen, I am told, familiar with the river, who (all a prey to the falls {Crossing and recrossing the river in safety thousands of times, knowing, as they suppose, every phase of the current, | they finally come to look upon it with | indifference if not with contempt, and, going once too often to the wail, come Lo ! their plichers terribly broken at The usual fate ofall who toy with the nianes of ttemipt the role of tiger-tamers is theirs. Some day there and all is over. Last sum tance, two boatmen start od to cross the river in a sailboat, taking | no oars along. It had been their home since ehildhood, and bosting was their { business. Whoé should Presume 10 warn | But in mid river the wind died and they found themselves in the grip of the current--a grip relentless and unrelaxing as th at of fate. Faster and faster, as though drawn by demons be. neath the keel, their boat neared rapids. And once in the rapids—ah, the story told. From the head of | the rapids to their foot—the falls ~a dis- | tance of perhaps eighty rods, the decline | pigh upon ninety feet. And down this inclined plane, as you oan very well see, the water slides with something of | the speed of an express train, lt is a | terrible meteor that shoots by the few (for the exhibition lias not been adver. tised in advance) who stand on the banks and bridges. Two pale-faced men in a frail boat, seething waters around | them, and the falls thundering in antici. pative triumph below, arms wildly out. stretched for an aid which none ean give, no « ry lor succor audible, though you know that theshrieks of ti ie doome ad are sent up to the skies—one se of this and no more. The bal ful i has vanis . AR | again the glad waters lanecing and glancing onward in the You know that lives have been like tapers in the fteful foam of the is, but the only testimony to the rage dy is tl ouds of spray which roll up to heaven like smoke from the: ation, Here, gs elsew comes t id of water ments work Lig on and abn rsd begotten at what outset) a very inconsiderable cost But aller ¢ to the Canadian side the American infrequently kn OWS the boatman no forever. Charon takes up the oar, and the Styx, not the Niagara, is ferried. Thus Mr. Whitney, of the Cataract house, tells me that last summer his son, sitling in the summer. house of his gro und 8 above tl saw a man getting dangerousiy sliding water. Running down to the bank he shouted to him to pull in shore or he'd be caught in the current, but a drunken stare was the SWer, the among the dimpling edaies—the as it were, which precede th wreld suddenly Before oniy ax few minutes more and boat t inughter of ! TA} ids single pater his sodden so The tiquiti 1857, and pinced in the British museum. The adopted by the Romans during the em pire, It was revived in the twelith century by the Emperor | who invented the title of poet laureate { The French had royal poets but no lau. Ieates, ave little is known of those who bore it inst, Fugland is that Edward 111. in 1388, | emulating the crowning of Jegrarel Rome, in 1341, gv anted tl office Chaucer, with a yearly pension tthe laureate was made a “'patent’ { From that time there has been a re | suecession of laureates, Nominating conventions date back to 1831. In September of that year the | Anti Masons nominated at Baltimore | Wirt and Ellmaker. In December, also { | at Baltimore, the National Republicans jominated Clay and Sergeant, and in the | March, 1832, the Democratic National convention, which siso met at Balti. more, confirmed the renomination of Jackson already made by his friends in the New York legis ature, and placed Van Buren on the ticket as Vice Presi- dent. President nominated by such a conven- tion, In 1898 the candidates on both sides were nominated by common con- | sent or by State of congressional caucuses having Hons or a i £ isa oraunch, mer, lor ins ‘office guia them? away, is soon iN not y«t introduced friends had tried to | gressional caucus system, was thinly attended, and the * scrub race.” There was no oppo sition to Monroe in 1880, Before that time the nominations were by congressional caucus. veil — Wasted Efforts to be Funuy. Take, avery simple the ease of the young man who offered a saucer of delicately cream by two young ladies, w in convulsive glee for the first and its attendant remarks. Not ture or word betrayed that Le ticed it at all. Still last night's German and tennis, he linished the entire then, bowing slight elt Was ever “fun™ spoiled? Take again the case of a legey ol ssor, who had almost! practical joking on the facu punishing. bu! by foil t fun of the dents. inf night that the students Were the walls of the chap ‘Very he said, quietly, *' i pe Tovive the Lhe 4 431 AG giim : i hed i Bie « sun quenched the fa ns i Lind heey ited wail grimace 3 104 3 snr Lie great « Lo { ] EE h here, whisky and sup pit of de sty uciion. Canadian side, {1 may be WM yidne 55 is in the i the cap i the } uor 80 an Y, he room seems (and delioate § in rossing certain ia } 8i0¢ ROO Ly, not nore ing t . st Pr O y atntin ainiin wi i . + ie ¥ ¥ or . I~ 11085 then p teil me when they are through.” ing hastily, went about the rousing evi ry ps in the place as the ast student went out of the A | a dozen artisans went in Next Was | ing, when Was an unususily attendance hold the o mined wr fair as ever. The d of the college had not been sllowe insulted, yet never a student was questioned, blamed marked or « x] id In the same munner, wher the of the bell had been removad one night another was in its woe before and the astonished students were moned to their devotions at the hour. Again, when the wheel of organ disappeared and the organist retly informed at wou d not be requived the next day ol the very dellr to take his place, finding, to his chagrin, that the keys responded dutitully to hi ouch, Ifitisthe “silent organ” th ants the master's requiem it was ecertainiy tl music that chanted loodest the of the guilty. No wonder that the students at (hat institution have thal what nn calied hs i oN Ens IC Yapids, jel 1 sin 11 - near Lie 4 t he * it inter morn 11 u al prayers, te ere smiles, infernal he poor his 3 i Then t rena eonid hiceup a ul stood before £ fis Lig i sh Ie d . u } i » ¢ { d t L 18 God. No human be falls anda lived. v g ever went over the oe Patch but jumped from a ladder a hundied feet high erected near the toot of Biddle stairs Of the eats and dogs with which human. itarians have at various time $ experi- mented i is said that ave picked up alive, but I mainly doubt Why, let the fall but brush you with outermost skirt, and "twere one corner of that ponderous shes ing with only half the impetus pa by its descent, would smite the life of behemoth! pit 4 } thi h ren sed th some | ath ' t de but strik- hered out i nl § t ioudest ¢! in this case we Or Literary Men's Losses by Fire, The world of letters has pa thetically Interisted during the ew days in the loss which Professor Momm. sen, the eminent historian, susiained on the 13th ult. in the burning of his valuable library at Charlottenburg, Germany. The number of books in it was about 40000 volumes, renting mostly to the history of Rome, besides | numerous invaluable manuscripts. A the time Professor Mommsen was en- gaged on a history of the Roman em- perors What rendered the disastur peculiarly afllicting was the fact that there went with the rest rare parch- ments and manuscripts joaned him from the royal library at Berlin and from the vatican library. An eye witness, who saw the professor just alter the dis. covery of the fire, savs that he never Saw a more touching sight. The I man seemed almost beside himself witl grief. In his frenzied though un: vail ing efforts to rescue the borrowed mana- scripts, he received several severe wounds, and the police were finally obliged to force him away from the scene. His loss, of course, is irrepara. | ble, but ic is a pleasure to know that he | wil make the best of circumstances and | resume work on his history as soon as his health will permit It is noteworthy that several similar diss asters have, from time to time, be- fallen literary men. In the winter of 1820-30 the house of Professor Niebunr, Mommsen’s predecessor in the profes- sorship of history at Berlin, was burned and with it his large and valuable library. The second volume of his his- | tory of Rome, then in manuscript, also perished. This, however, Niebulir, by hard work, was able to replace within a i year, and get it through the press From the shock occasioned by his loss the historian never fully recovered In the height of his fame the great wind of Sir Isaac Newton was for some time affected to such a degree as to une | fit um for scientific investigation be- cause ol a similar mishap. Brewster, { his bio grap her, says that while the philosopher was absent attending relig- ious service one morning, his favorite {dog Diamond, overturned a lighted taper, which set fire to several papers, and they were reduced to ashes. On these papers he had recorded the results | i | of se weral years® Inbor in important opti. cal studies, When Newton perceived { the magnitude of his loss he exclaimed ; “Oh, Dismond, Diamond, little do you know the mischief you have done mel’ tion decided the professors DOYS al Ragby ing Arnold a lie, for us "Christian Ee iny be not pay Oeen syin inst | aid tin } § ae RIWaYS LN £ Mustard, two COmmon purposes, : ust BOOS ThLe seads o 08 of {Sinapis) a de f spect ™ ™ t 10 y nd seeds The flour used as a S mixture dicinal black mustard #0 extensively is prepared from ns ard white mustard, diment, Con con wack ¢ seed 8 are of two parts and three P white, Th pounded and the husks then removed from the flour by sifting. It is remarkab) e that the pun- gent prin iple for which mustard valued does not exist in the seeds, but it is produced when the constituents of the seeds are brought together under tix influence of water, Oil a stimulant, diuretic and emetic; ex. ternally as an irritant and rebefacient. White mustard seeds are often taken in an entire state as st mulants in dyspep- sia. Mustard should be mixed with water that has been boiled and allowed {to cool. Hot water destroys its essen. | tial qualities, and raw cold water might cause it to ferment. Putthe mustard in acup with a small pinch of salt, and mix with it very gradu ally sufficient water to make it drop trom the spoon without becoming watery. The Ger. mans have a way of preparing mustard in which much of its pungency is modi- fied by spices. The following is an ap- proved method of preparing it: Take of the white and black mustard seeq, ground fine, each one prund, and half a pound of sugar. Pour upon this mix- ture a sufficient quantity of boiling vinegar to make it of the consistency of soft dough. It should then be stirred constantly with a paddle for about half an hour, in which time the mustard will | swell and become much thicker. After | it has cooked--say aboul an hiour—add one ounce of powdered cinnamon and 1 thoroughly It may then be set away in tightiy covered bottles and jars, an if the vinegar is good it will keep 1 length of time and improve with | It may be thinned with vine wanted for use. Mustard prepared in {this way is far superior to that mixed { in the usual manner. <= Troy Times. 3 ni of Wisdom, hope Words He who loses with anything. Sin is sturdy, it cannot reign. Benefit your friends, that they may become your friends. The error of a moment becomes the orrow of a whole life. a How Long a Baseball Pitcher Lasts, Successful pitchers have very short | j lives in their positions, the most diffi | cult at first to hit becoming easy game to the heavy hitters in about four years, | Especially is this the case when he is put in to piteh every game for a few sen. sons. Batters become familiar to his | balls and his different motions in deliv- Love, faith, patience |e ring Shem. Spalding Xe tire xd in his sentials to fn happ vy life, glory after a short period of six years. | : Moh insted se Ba n years, ix Joa or I'here is nothing terrible in no heavy hitters Intely for any length of without life hath made it so. time. Bond is now in his fifth success. | A judicious silence is better ful season, but gets it hard occasionally | truth spoken without charity. this year, ns dyes White, only in his He who can pay homage to the truly third year. Nichols went out very sud- | de gpicable is truly contemptible. | Sealy, bt a fine work for A fe W Bef. True virtue iv like precious odors sons aft 75. Cummings wns great ‘sweeter the more incensed and in the days of the lively ball. This erushed chapter in pitchers’ history teaches that | omy the best Pile her will fail in about three Ihe mind has more years if played without relief. Two good pitchers will Inst a long time if changed every game. Cincinnati En quirer. and will rebel where the three es death than room in it than nish the apartments. { until philosophers become kings, | kings become philosophers. “Would you mind standing here tijj | No man is born wise; but wisdom {Igo in and get a cigar?” he asked, “Of | and virtue require a tutor; though we { course not,” she replied; * but don't | ©an easily learn to be vicious without a | you think, Henry, that smoking is of- | master. fensive, and that it will be easier prac- The harsh, hard world neither sees, ticing economy after marriage if it is | nor tries to see, men’s hearts; but | prac ticed during courtship P”’ “You're | | wherever there is an upportunity ofevil, | right,” he said; “TI shan’t smokelany | supposes that evil exists. - ” more, sweet,” and she looked unutter- | If good people would but make good- able love at him as they resumed their | pass agreeable, and smile Stroll Just ghendhey eame to an ice | frowning in their virtue, how many ream saloon, and he saic There, | would they win to the good cause! now, I meant to treat you to fee cream, | wi y but, as you say, it is best to practice | hoever is an imitator by nature, economy during courtship. Ten cents | choice or necessity, has nothing stable: for a cigar, thirty cents for two creams | — forty cents saved in a single night. | | tude is inconsistent with strength. Let's go over to the fountain nnd take a | An angry man who suppresses his | drink ot water.” They went; hut she | Passions thinks worse than he speaks; was mad enongh to bite Ler own head | 8nd an angry man that will chide speaks off | worse than he thinks. or i ¥ i 3 NEWS SUMMARY. Enstern and Middle Btates. The population of Massachusetts is 1,783,812, A pein of nineteen per cent, since 1870, Al Rochester, N, Y,, the horse Sieve Max. wall trotted two miles in 4:48} beating Flom Tomple's previously unbroken resoid of 41504 He ran the second heat in 4:81, It is reported that Miss Agnes Dehart, of Mariners’ harbor, Staten leland, bas com. pleted a fast of thirty-one days, undertaken with the purpose of curing uleers in the entirely sucosssiul, The Aweriean bankers’ association opened its annual meeting at Saratoga the other day, i i i being in attendance. On the second day Bees and refunding, i Fanner has received an offer of §1 600 olure * from ocean to ocean.” fhe Connectiout Republioans at their State egnvention in Hartford nominated a full Uebel, H. B. Bigelow for governor, and adopted resolutions which ratify the noming tions of Garfield and Arthar, favor sound protection to free Amerioan labor, and a modifeation of the State laws in regard Two excursion trains trom N, J sults. Jt seems that the Atlantie City at about 6 betwesn them being only May's Landing, seventeen lantie City tracked 1or the 46:10 {| hardly some to a stand, ul the | river, a but swift strean | oar tralia onme thunaering upon it through Lhe Open swileh The losamotive telescope the rear ear, which wes full of men, womes and children. The roof was lifted aad ; Wilh appealing re inlorve A ¥. M,, the {wo minutes, miles from flown express, It ha On Email 3 i | | foreed out. BENZCrS Were more nor Une of the eyviinder heads of blown cut and filled with scalding steam, escape wus, 01 course, slow, fog of steam, and the sufferings OI the prison ers must have been frighttnl, Their groan are described with shuddering b in the other oars who beard them ware unable 10 extricate themselve at all, and & vumber in doing so plunge into the creek, which fortunately was low So terrible was the flores of the co | the engine fairly plowed a furrow hall wa Dirange la say, injured and eries those Many | | 1 iid over the smokestack of the locomotive. / Rs this dent eaascd | delayed express arrived, about midnight, crowd had assembled at the de At 1:40 the next morning the | began to arrive st the hospital in Philadel; hi | carrying the woended, Some of ths men had down 0 the soaside in ty-five stretches. intense excitomen’, and when th gone costume, Lion against the stenin jols. ried from the in a mass of flour and under which their lorms were Ito was 8 A. um cars eotion, distinguishable. been got two the hospital. sons were killed and loss seriously. Au foot embankment fi were wis onused by he truck of the { : ihe been i trotiers rotted a 1 he P the ceus g Valley, N. Y The scoider at dp injured. LreaNing Oo teen persons § ang ume Hooheste EN | wRlen al Maud 1 St. Julian, who en i alation of New York is shown b Ie 9 us 10 Le tT] boen seen nen my the Ba nt they Tepe gd of an sqgonti Towed bun MAR tions lke that of an eel. Twenty-five Dreight on pear Cooperstown, was instantly kil 0 res 1 black, by a coll N.Y. fireman on one rain 5 i ifelnan on two other railroad Af stroyved snd Lake Champlain railroad, ocoutal Hives antadied S100 O00 K. EK Bath employes were bart. Maly . sl i) 1 t n Fe the roun loom and a loos ol abo lawyer re Hed Miss | minent Parkburst N. ¥ A ay 3 8 young Lo] boiat shot mielgis Rings out i iy baving wele man $88.1. bat | separated by RLO, pever gelher, jarents on sodount ulits iets an esl ext fans ' bitants at 48 451 According Ee wal, partly minted an i which pu excl pare \ ta the whole sai on doe i the UEive © spRinst Of his estima'e an¥e a popu southern States o { growth of t being sight of twenty eight per cont ng slightly below (went Bix matksnen from Ni Ww You k ¢ srksmen from RGA BL } The Amerior us were viotork ore ot 1.273 to 1,235 for the Ce i highest soore for the Amer oans was 217 by Waters; and jor the ans the } roore was 210, made by Gil pomsibie single soore wis 2405 As Miss IN Mateer, aged eighteen, walking with a gentieman near Pa, 8 spark fix Her's cigar set fire 1 Int de 3 and i he avers LE we South iv in exon VEN per cent he Amateur rifls I with a like nund the Vicioria nfle res Ontests Cr aesOeinli Lan by 1% Ma the fmoor range on iw € LEH EH ihe WOO. ie Hn the in soon allerward is appearance the other she died Frost in vanous parts of Middle States. wade da Western and Southern States. Tennessee Democrats have nominate Wright for governor and a full Sta 1 hore 1 ex 1geost of a number of delegates to th Sinte convention, has consented to ru Wor. are at present iwoago charged with women. to the aan A | for gover: There at Uh fleon are Tet boy ter marder. Two of 1h Des respon ey, An eye hint Moines (In.) 8 sible citizen, 8. fal A. sponsible man, the notorious Bende family, fon i in number, were captured soo: alter the discovery of the murder of Colone York. The eye-witness says that the fou and were told their Inte: ihat Kate wa tQ “* shoot and be and thet the four bodie wore bur ol Labette, Karnwas, Wilson, by Herman Rackers, his son. The the loss of money deposited with Archbisho Parcell and bad been drinking. Having bee refused money by his wife be undertook t strike ber, when Herman struck him wit A spade and erushed his skull. Ihe United State twa indictinenis sgaunst KR. OU. bezzlement of $11 938 Rev. J. W ) « held many offices of trust in th ite, was bitten by a rattlesnake a tew day 2x0 and died the next night (rom the effoots ¢ the woun Halilvx county, a tuicus hailstorm, which did great demag to the 10 wos crop, hills of tobacco destroyed. From Washington, of government funds. I WwW. ol direct American foreign cities. ol a new counterfeit one It came from Maine. session egal tonder note, and with the signature of A. U. Wyman treasurer. Canada. Reports made to the department of agricul. all in a favorable condition, against eighty-one at the same time last year, year, erop is 102. The general avernge of the n 1879, Foreign News. The steamer Jeddah, from Singapore, found. ered off Goardani with 953 pilgrims for Jeddah. All on board perished, except the captain and | his wite, the chiet engineer, chief ofMoeer, an engineer and sixteen natives, who were picked | up snd brought to Aden by the stemmer Seindia. been murdered by Chiet Wrambo in Central Alrion. The fust railway train between Edinburg Loudon, known as the *‘ Flyiog Scotch. " ran off the track near Berwiok-upon- Tweed, killing the engineer and brakeman | | | | The Emperors of Germany and Austria have had a conlerence at Isohl, An Italian meohanie, condemned to four years’ imprisonment at Cusano, starved him. selt to death in thirty days. In the district of Ratibor Germany, more than twenty villages have been destroyed by floods, and a loss of many million ol marks ha been entailed by the total destruction of tbo harvest. Four hundred and eighty square wiles ere under water in Silesia. By an accident on the Midland milroad be tween Leo's and Lancaster in Kogland seven persons were killed and twenty injured, Volunteers are enrolling and recruits are seing actively enlisted everywhere through. out Greece on accooul of its anticipated war with Turkey, Mr, Lowin, a justice of the pease, was fired at while returning home from Toam, Ireland, Three bullets struck him in the breast, but without effect, as he wore a coat of mail, About one hundred men boarded a Nor. wegian vessel lying ln Cork harbor and stole three oases of rifles Irom the ship's hold, I'he eutire male population of the sity of Tima, Peru, belween the ages of sixteen and sixty, have been enrolled to delend the city against the Chilinae, An extraordina ily rich gold mine is reported to have boon « soovered in the village of Las Placetas, Mexioo. The foundations of the houses are said to be of stone worth three dollars a pound. A young physician of Lyons, France, tried to imitate Tanner by fasting Alteen days, but | wave ap alter a week's abstinence, | Forty-six thousand Russian soldiers bave | been massed near Bender, 10 be ready ia the | event of trouble in Bulgaria, | The Cologne cathedral, which has been many years in the course of erection, has just | been completed, President Avellaneda, of Buenos Ayres, bas resigned { Adelaide Neilson, the celebrated English notress, who played her last engagement iu New York eity met October, died very sud. denly a fow days ago in Paris, Lord Suattord de Redeliffe, a veteran Eng. lish diplowmatist, is dead in kis ninety-third | your, The Afghans are besieging the Euglish | army {a Candalar, { i i t i wo parsons have been sentenced to death and nineteen olhers to terns of penal servitude, { Marshal Basaine, the lamous French soldier, | died in Madrid, Spain, » short time ago, aged i i A sixty-nine years, Marshal Bamsine com. | war, and was alterward tried by the French { government jor incapacity in allowing himself | 10 be shut up in thet fortress and was sen. tepced to death. His sentence was commuted 0 twenty years' imprisonment, bat after surving nine months of his sentenve he es. sapped, 8 | gal, Lreland. A London dispatch says the lady of the sultan’s harem who recently took reluge in ¥ who was subsequently surrendered, has been spines. £ eral Strong Boxes, a un A { binations have taken tne places of these | keys, they are kept framed ns relics of | the * degenerate" days. Mr. Gilfillan { says that in the old times the treasurer, | when the »aults were locked up, carried {the keys home with him, and several i times the house of the treasurer, who i had the oy in custody, has been broken into by thieves to get these open se- (sames. Under the present system the | vaults are locked by time and combina- 1 | tion-locks. There are inner and outer {doors to the vaults. The officer who ® {knows the combivation to open the { outer door does not know the combina- | tion which opens the inner, and vice | versa. Hence no one person can get { into the vauits. When the combination | is chang d the changes are noted by dif- {ferent clerks and handed 0 Treasurer | Gilfillan in a sealed envelope. — Washing. ! h y at | lon Nar, wl IOI If the chaneos of recovery for an adult be so trong wedicine be , how much swaller mast be the chaness of a "baby when dosed with opiates and other powertal medicines. Dr. Ball's Baby Syrup | 38 fhe remedy for the diseases of children Price 45 osuts a bottle. The water in Philadelphia is 50 bad {that the T¥mes, of that city, says: | “ Every person who takes a bath is | obliged to take another to wash the mud [of.” e— ! Are You Not In wood | Nealth ' i Lu the Liver is the wouree of your trouble, shsctute remedy in Dx. Sax. {WORATOR, Lhe only vegeta. sats directly on the Liver. soases. For Dook address 62 Broadway, New York. ——— i i you yO {¥ $ Can Nn pal CRT Tk ree all Bi JANPORD, oli i wus d Aa ! Lia | The Yoltate Melt Co.. Marshall, Mich., Ww send their Kleotro-Voltae Bells to the ted upon 39 days’ trial. See their adver. ent in toe paper beaded, “On 30 Days’ x a in ral eosin is composed of Roots, Barks and | Herbs. It is very pleasant to take; every child likes it. i | a | Mervonex, N.J., Aug. 20, 1879. Messrs. Ely Bros, deaggists, Owego, N. Y. | Being seriously troubled with bay lever and | rose ood, I (at the earnest solinitation of a | riend) tried your prepamtion, “Cream Balm,” | and was sgreeably surprised in obtaining ig | almost immediate relief. 1 heartily ind ree a | it and earvestly recommend it to all similarly we | afflicted. Very Fesinctiul} y yours, ée., le | P AxpRes os, druggist. i" . My Existence. Abigail 8, ie of Moorestown, Burling ton Co., N. J, says: “Eighteen months BQO 1 had dropsy around the heart, My physi. | clans and friends despaired of my ever Rot. ting well. The first bottle of Hunt's Remedy {| gave me great relief. 1 foal I owe my w | existence to Hunt's Re 'mody, and | am deeply thankful.” Trial size, 70 counts, The habit of ranning over boots and shoes corrected with Lyon's Patent Heel Stiffeners. id O w | 0 ¥ i FOR THE CAMPAIGN, o— { Tux New Yous Wesxiy Sex will | auxiliary by all who are earnestly wo Ting Tor the reform | of he Nationa! Government, Throughout the Presiden | tal canvas of 1850 Tux Sux will give its rounders & fall, | Cear, and honest report of events and opinions. Heliev- i ing that the evils which have so ong beset the ountry : can be cured only by 8 change of the Panty in power, it | Will support for President and Vice-President, Hawooox | snd Exciism, the nominees of the Nationa: Repubisosn | Democracy. It will also Fupport such candidates in the | Congress districts as may give the Dest promise of keep { Ing the National Legislature out of the gr Pp of fraud, | bribery, and corruption, snd In the eontrol of | pene and patriotism, | be found & uselel © n 1 i © ¢ nw 3 ol y all the ho &¥ A b r) To all those who sympathise with our purpose, we | commend the circulation of Tur Wexsiy Sex In order that they may most efficiently aooperate with | oa wo wil send Tax Wenkiy Sew to cubs or stugle | subscribers, postpaid, for twenty-five cents 1 | the Presidential election. As this barely covers cost i there will be no discounts for orders however large. : ¥ . | ® " Rade clubs In every school district. Five dollars will pay for twenty subscriptions for the | snpalgn. Address THE BUN, New York Oity, "1 THE MARKETS, h | ENW YORK | Beet Osttie—Mod, Natives, live wi.. 09N@ | Osalves—Oommon to Extrs State... Odi Bhoee Lam p | ni i BRREEE AEE SERA FERRER 2 x ® CREE AAR EARNER REE oy TeErsen, - Dressed, | Foar—Ex. Bats, good to fancy. . Wostern, bo fancy... Wheat—-No, 2 SERRE EEE AA NRNERE No. 1 White, seereen.. ZEER e | ass % | 3 | Ryo—8tate. conv crnsanceis Barley—Two- sansa ntees Qorn— Ungraded Nautern Mixed. . « 39888800888 " 4 ! i - a resnene SeEesn esa 2222 ” “ i senane trun enn S252523z8ER | Hay—Prime to fancy... see i ay Rp por MWhesnsss. | Bo CrsrRERERR A RRARS a | Pork-M i, 1 Ny i nh ane as u 4 @s0 | Lard--Oity sesennnnnsnsiiei... 180 @ 7 68 | Petrolentn-Orude coves. . 07 @uiy Refined oy Buttar-Siste CROieEF cussessesrnss 3 3 @ BIT sooner vnnnnnans Western Imitation Creamery Factory ® EESge2s & > g ! resssnsenrses | Cheeso—State re BRIA, conenssusrnns ss Western pry ry sEEsee Re INE Egee—8late POD... ceses con sunns Potatoss—Btate, bbl new... vier. 1 BUFFALO | Flour-Oity Ground, No, 1 Spring. . 8 50 | Wheat—No. 1 Hard Duluth. coeeeens 2 28 Oorn—No, 2 Western,....... . | OMte—BIAI0, corer sesrinsee Basiay—-Two-roue1 Sh | Beef Osttlo—Live rr BhotD....eeneenss | HOgBesnness SEeRE santas our — Wisconsin and Minn Pat. Svrn-Jiixed and Yollow..sses «.... ta Extra White. .... | Rye ato, seve 4 Tua, (MASSE ) CATTLE MARKET | Beat Oattle—dive wolght. .. 03 03 | heen, CRRRRRE RRR Lah 04 BRB +s aoeneersnnsnains CEE RNNNEE PHILADELPHIA, Flour—Penn, good and fancy. , ,. | Wheat No. 2—Red Ryo—BIato—DOW.... sesssatsssinses | Qorn—State YolloW.eesess Sens | Oate—Mixed, eves Bes ERRNReRRRENS « | Butter—Creamery extra. ...uue saanes | Oheeso—New York Full Cream, ,,... Potroleum—Orude. ... eve 00 ROTH ’ seapn SRRNERBIL Ls ERR RRS - £852288% ERE EL TL 2 = isssss a *asenaans ” 3 EE LE E282 8 888s -=a ® - g MLAB ARRRE Lau was $538 oy gzsrzax « on Vegetine Dr. Callier Surprised, Vogetine Cured His Daughter. CaLrinusvrLLe, Chilton Qo Aly ay Degr fir--My daaghter has beay sfflicted Kaas! Oatarrh, Affection of Bladder sud Kidoeys, and is of serofulous diathesis, and, after exhausted my skill and the most eminent siane of Helms, 1 st last resorted to the of your Vearring (without Sonfdemel, and, to my rest surprise, my daughter has been restored te henith, 1 write this es a simple sot of justios, and Bot us an shvertising medium, Vapeiel "1X ovurem, up. Worked Like a ‘Charm ~ Cared Nall Rheum and Erysipelas. 76 Count Br, Hous, N, X,, July 10, 1879, Ma H.R Braves: Daur Bir—One year ago last fall hm Jute poy had 8 breaking oul of Erynipelss an 1 Hheum, his Lave being one matiersd sors a i tion, Noticing » 1 purchased two the two boltles, my son was Jus suything lke the Veorrowe] # worked Uke charm, | have been oily watchman st Rome for years, This testimonial frateiious, Yours, Penpeptiul "fio GEL oss Remarkable Care of o of Serofalous Face Wesrniseren, Conn, June 19, 1879, Ma HR Brevess; Dear Bir—1 oan testify ota oud effect of your Medicine, My lite boy had » break other, under his neck, sud 3s 4 Shs, 30 solid meses of sores, Two bottles of For Tagaett able Yaowrm Shel buf of Sop "THAT HER. VEGETINE PREPARED BY REMEDY FOR CURING Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma, CONSUMPTI Hi Throat and Afections. An em Parada BE TRARY XT. TOUR REMEDY 18 | ALLENS LUNG BALSA. Seid by all all Medicine Dealers. FRAZER AXLE GREASE. by JELLY Bt pry Phe PETROLEUM oy x = IS This wonderful substance 8 acknowledged by phys. Clans troughont the world 6 be the pe remed ¥ de covered for the cure of Wounds, Barra, Khe Bin Disonses, Piles, Cater, Ohllblaies, &c. In arde hat EVEYy one may try it, Ja rst up in §8 50d 35 cent bottles for } i use. Oldain if frome your drugeist, and you will and MH superior to anyling you have eve 1 epublican Manual ! Rep ALIGN OF 1880. Rigory, Kary Lesders, and Achievemnests of the with full biographies of YARBIELS THUR, By & V. Saaixy, of the 3 A book wanted by every he pent voter The best of al arpenais Prom which to draw aluspunition for An wlegant doth-hognd voluthe si & frmction usual cost. Price, 30 cents; postage, wet a free. Forswe by the tow 3 Baa rn 2,000,000 Acres Wheat Lands best Ln the World, for sale by Ge St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba R.2. 00. Three dollars allowed te wetlier break A) JESTEY& C® Enatraroon VE he ew Law. Thousands of soldiers and heirs entitied. few 1 date back to discharge or death. Time Rasited Address, with slamp, GEORGE E. Wax, P.O. Drawer 325, Washington, D.C. IMPORTANT TO AGENTS. THE LIFE OF GEN. JAS, A, GARFIELD By BY nis pers nal g end MAJOR BUNDY, Balter ¥. T. is Le onl to which Gen. Garfield has 2a. a IRON] a ion of facts, Beautifully fila frase} and bound, Full length steel portrait by Oi A plcture taeh express)y 7 for his work, Agents Wanted. " nee for oo unpiete € 1112 “1 wes te my brether Tom's vhoat. glenn & wool ago. and really believe there bs one third mere whist whet ed with your Pelvis. Tem 1004 me be Dad sensured rows, nad found sity thevs bonds bn The “wine Bagh of row Pee of the old war of drilling H.CLa © Pe. Oltivers Nation! Baek of Widdiston, il ond “§ got Sve busbels 10 the sore more whest, with your Pelets, thas vith the old style tos, ou ne fever ~JOSRUA cLavTos Ju We Pesennt Pet — GELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. representing the choicest selected Tortolbe-Sbell end Amber. The lightest, bandsoment, and strongest kuown, Sold by Opticians and Jewelers. Made ty SPENCER WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY, MIDDLETOWN, CONN. Three four-your courses —iaasion!, Latio-Sclentie and fie. e range of wective studio In each Fie pares th Lisoratite a Obustvatefy. COURS Terslure sar! Drepatatory of : oourees. Free Scholsmsbipe 4; mdigeni and meritorious Modena Entrance ition. Bept, For Cstaloguss addres gr TORT SAPONIFIER is the * Original * Qunoentratod Lye and Relistie Pamty het ay 5 RES Winam Street, New w York CUAMBERLAIN 1x INSTITUTE (established 1803, J Randolph N.Y. Ontie A. 8 G. W. BR Kin the Chand run y region. A well-endowed and socoess fal seu pond fot both sexes. The usual | Sterary Depart. menis sod 8 very flonrisiing Commercial School snd Music De PACE B52 different students last year, Pure wr, mounting walter, good food sad careful vision. No deaths in 3 yea's. Endowments oo Tad Tn Rew Aeuite » studen tent (Iotal rape) = I Term year, $150. &o Sviiuben to the Pribcpa PROPS. ’ T "EOWA re. Tis the Fall Term opens Auvga or Baling and Grooms NATRONA %s® Is the best in the World, It is adsolutely best for Medicinal Porposes. 11 is the best al Family Uses. Bold by all Drugpists and G PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING C0., Phila. SORE EARS, CATARRH, Many prope ave aflictsd w A hese loathsome tivenmey aut very Few Yes! Bet well froon them: this phi Improper Uesiment only 33 ther are readily cursbs properly tested This Is no bile boast bul a fact 1 have proves over and over again by my Ueatment Send fer my tte Rook, Swe fe owt eT about Sham Jrsies and who | an Ma Jn E03 pages, octave - $2 hr ar "Pi © E SHOEMAKER, Awa! Jureey Reading, Pa Marchiery FEMAL ili polis vely cure Female ¥ {ineol t we Womb, Whites, Ch Xu ration of the ‘We nh, inet inle 4 stud, Supphoss Soap Maker each Ons for ER Sra Ask pig or Abo! Nie FIER, BO other, PENNA SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila DANIEL F. BEATTY'S ORGANS 17-STOP * ORGAN Ss New Faia BINS 1 5 oo 000. EE a Hy Address DANTEL F. BEATTY, Wasingion ory N. GENTS WANTED © oll the FIELD GEN. JAS. A. 6 ode Ch RE, wort 2 iets nt oe give the po tell eaknees, such as Fall a! Hemorrhage oe Irvogular } 16 cnedy, Send pos 1, with treat ment, Cures snd ‘ to how ISBIN, a Na oy wil Urata. anthntx, berpraced fin the best a Seid 30e. Soe. of coe Tint 3 and yom oan $116 i “a Ye a oh i Patent Spark-Arrest En. gine Ss, mounted and on skids, ertical Engines with wro't botlers. Eureka Safoty pow. ers with Sectional boilers y can't be ex All A {| \ with Automatic Cut-Offs , From $8150 10 $2,000. . Send for Circular. State where you saw thls, PITAOHE La WeKEny i . Peony & great Pie to one of the Court ladies. Overcome with gratiiude, she gave me the secret of her jon. Knowing how many Us Chemicals 0 ted ¥ my sex, and sciusted | Sno desi to do Sond, 1 wily Eph receipt of stamp, forward, Postpaid, the above a — re: A. L. ECREIP, Rochester, N. ¥, HARTWICK SEMINARY; A first-class Preparate both sexes S'tuated four Entire exp-uses $200 MO por Pare stout $3 from Aibany or Ris Principal, Rxv JANES PITCH Seminary, Otsego C N.Y. ON 30 DAYS TRILL, We will send our Electro-Foltale Ralts Electric Appliances upon trial for ee. and Yih Nersvus Debldity a 0 disses of a ls 4 of the Liver, Aldnerw, Rheumatism, Pa. Adres « Voltaic He Belt elt ¢ ou + Marshall, Mich. Exh * ————, ( Live Se Norwich University, {i Northfield, Vi. Expenses nu rata cular, W. M. RUMBAUGH, Commandant TEA ANPETINGS 2 to 8 per rand. FEL R Ak for rooms in place of Paster, PEL ING ands] Nt. For ciroular & Sa AE 4.3. FAY, Caden, N. Jersey, d BC EEDERS. JohnH. AO a [ Con Cin, 0. month. Learn Telegraphy and earn $40 to S100 3 Every graduate guaranteed a paying sity. rons Valen tine, Manager, Jan eavile, Wis, ston, Ad Rich Cheap Lands; healthy, orderivy good crops. For ciren'ar address K. NORTE TEX Gaba, Graham, Young Co. Texas AGENTS WANTED Best chance ever offered to make money, Sample free. Address METAL STRIP CO., Fremont, Ohio, $35 A MONTH AGENTS WANTED: COPY p AD.’ RECEIPT (with sai equal to those sol Pp for §2 Ww oy and Receipts for 30 kinds of In BO cig Ly ree dress 1. BLEDSOR, P. M., Alvarado, Texas. penn WELL, AUCER i» or largest firm in America. Sethe Siastand «Chicago, Ill sue. rindi Fo. HANCOCK. ES er GARFIELD. 35% ibaa St, New Yor. 4 P.O VIC KERY, Augusta, Maine, $5 to $20 Roar at home. uvapies Young Men wanted for mercantile houses, hote's, res rane dO : Sh taurants, stores, seaside resorts and steamooats. Call or 2c address Manhattan Agency, 1839 Broadway, N. Y. City. NIG H T ' Scenes, ed. Boents. Jor Co. N a - : A = at home turn mail. Address 73 Best Selling Articles in the word; sample free. Jay Broxsox, Detrott, Mich. A YEAR and expenses to agents. $777 Hn erik 12 free. $66 A WEEK in your own lows Terms dand Maine Quits ps free. ¥ tres. Address Mi. 1 — & Co, M IIE AML N] "MATCHLESS™ - FRANZ LISZT - "UNRIVALLE ! NO OTHER | ZAMERICANORGANS MUSICIANS GENERALLY REGARD THEW AS UNEQ CABINET OR GA [MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CO.E
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers