ead, Something for Everybody, Asununrniay, Mass, Jan. 14, 1880, 1 have been very sick over two years. They all gave ms up as past cure. tried the most skillful physicians, but they did not reach the worst part, longs and heart would fill up every night and distress me, and my throat was very bad. I told my children I never should die in tried Hop Bitters bottles? much indeed, I shall take two more; by that time I shall be well, There was a lot of sick folks here who have seen how they helped me, and they used them and are cured, and feel as thankful as 1 do that there is so valu. able a medicine made. Yours, i Mus. Junia G. CusHiNG. Ss ——— Barrie Creek, Mich., Jan. 31. 1880, 1 have used seven bottles of Hop Bit ters, which have cured me otf a severe chronic difficulty of the kidneys and have had a pleasant effect on my sys toa, RODNEY 'EARSON. Warnnexn, Kansas, Deo. 8, 1879. I write to inform you what great re Hef I got from taking your Hop Bitters. I was suffering from neuralgia and dys- pepsin, and a few bottles have entirely cured me, and 1am iruly thanktul for so good a medicine. Mus. Marne Cooren Cepar Bayou, Texas, Oot. 98, 1879, Hor Brrrens Qo: 1 have Leretofore been bitterly op- posed to any medicine not prescribed by a physician of my choice. My wile, filty-six years old, had come by de- rees to a slow sundown, Doctors ailed to benefit ber. 1 got a bottle of Hop Bitters for her, which soon re- lieved her in aay ways. My kidneys were badly affected, and I took twent or thereabouts doses, and found muc relief, I sentto Galveston for more, and word came back none in the market, so great is the demand; but I got some elsewhere. It has restored both of us to good health, and we are duly grate. ful. Yours, J. P. Mager. NEw Broomrsrn, Miss. Jan. 8, 1880, Hor Errress Co: 1 wish (0 say to you that I have been suflering for the iast five years with a severe itching all over. 1 have heard of Hop Bitters and have tried it. 1 have used up four bottles and it has done me more good than all the doe tors and medicizes that they could use on or with me. - 1am old and por but feel to hiess you for such a relief from your madicine and torment of the doe- tors. I have had {ifteen dootors at me. One gave me seven ounces of solution of blood from me. All they could tell was that it was skin sickness. Now, alter these four boules of \ our medi- cine, my skin i* well, clean and smooth as ever. HENRY KNOCHE. Munrox, Del., Feb 10, 1880, Being induced by a neighbor to try Hop Bitters, I am well pleased with it as a tonic medicine, it having so much improved my feelings, and benetited my system, whch was very much ont of tone, causing great feebleness. Mus. James Bers Kavaman Wy, Mich. Feb. RN, 1850, Bor Brrress Mra. Co.: I know Hop Bitters will bear recom- mendation honestly. All who use them confer upon them the highest en- eomiums, and give them credit for mak- ing cures—all the proprietors claim for them. I have kept them since they were first offered to the public. They took high rank from the first, and main. tained it, and are more called for than all others combined. So long as they keep up their high reputation for purity and usefulness I shall continue to re- commend them—something 1 bave sever before done with any other patent medicine. J. J. Bancocsk, Physician and Druggist. Kanoxa, Mo. Feb. 9, 1880, I purchased tive botilesof your Hop Bitters of Bishop & Co. last fall, for my daughter, and am well pleased with the Bit'ers. They id ber more go d than p | the medicine she had taken for six years. Vu. T. McCiune. Werds of Wisdom. Discretion of sprech is more than elo- quaaco. Sufferi endless. Morey is ii it be spread. He that him that is. One maxim is, ‘A pound of pluck is worth a ton of luck.” It is easier for a man to descend to earth than to mount to heaven. However l:borious the life of the ng has its limits, but fears are ry ™ &e muek, not od except 8 not industrious envieth True virtue is like precious odors — sweeter the more incensed and crushed. If a man be gracious and courteous to strangers it shows that he is a citizen of the world. True philosophy places us above hon- ors. but nothing plices us above the ennui they cause, The mind has more room in it than most people imagine, if you would fur- nish the apartments, The evils of the world will continue until philosophers become kings, or kings become philosophers. No m=n is born wise; but wisdom ean casi'y learn to be vicious without a master. Strong minds, like hardy evergreens, ones, like tender summer piants, are, ieadess, spisc because they have not examined and which they will not examine be- cause they despise, Childhood often holds a trath with its feeble fingers, which the grasp of man- hood eannot retain, which it is the pride of utmost age to recover. Natural objects themselves, even when they make no claim to beauty, excite the feelings and occupy the imagination. Nature pleases, attracts, delights, merely because it is nature. We double all the ills of our fate by dwelling on them; a scratch becomes wound, a 8/ight an ivjary, a jest an in rult, a small reril a great danger, and a slight sickness often ends in death by brooding apprehensions. Togles, _Japangse or Chinese togles are exqui- cite carvings in ivory which are so valn- able thet they are Landed down in families from generation to generation. In size the togles are extremely minute, generslly not more than an inch and a half in «length, plum-shaped, and the delicate: carvings of most exquisite workmanship. But so extremely petite are the figures that time and study are required to enable one fully to grasp the artist’s ides, although in the end he feels himself more than repaid by the numberless beauties that are gradually unfolded to Lis perception. One of the most beautilul which the writer saw represents a ‘mermaid’s grotto, its ceil- ing stu ed with pearls. The robes of the dainty mermaid, who reclines upon a couch.of seu-foam, no words can de- Fcribe, so ircomparably lovely ave they in the transparency that revesls the perfect ¢ ntour of every dimpled limb. Her maidens, five in pumber, their gar- ments fairly inerusted with flashing jewels, kneel reverently before the queen, their joined hands lifted high shove their Leads, with the most grace- 1ul pose imaginable. This is ail one sees at first, even with careful scrutiny. ilut, as the eye becomes accustomed to the minute carving, a tiny form is seen in the rear—that of a maiden, with long. dripping hair and the countenance of un angel. Her white robes have the clinging aspect of one just taken from the water, and the delicate form lies limp and lifeless among the flowers of which the mermaids have formed its fragrant couch. This exquisite carving commemo. ates the death by drowning of a fair young girl, in her tenth year. It is about two inches square. One scaicely knows which to admire most — tlie delicate carving or the warm, live tints that make the scene so real. These togles, which generally commemorate some family event, are never offered for sale. sores Durings late balloon ascension aspeed of pot less than 120 miles an hour was attained. A CHAPTER ON NOSES. The Nose as an Indication of Character The Greek, the Roman, the Chinese | the Jewish, | | Tle favorite answer of schoolboys | whet asked the whereabouts of a come | The nose stands out as a facial sign of char. may read. A skiliful actor may alter the expression of the eyes, the mouth may hide under a mustache, and the | chin may be covered by a brushwood of beard, but the nose is a guidepost that is always in sight, The intellectual significance of the nose is apparent when we consider that in the Caucasian it averages in length the average is about one-fourth, and in the Ethiopian some- Compare an with that live American-the former represents a stereotyped, non- progressive civilisation several thou. sands years ola, while the prominence of the latter is significant of the “‘pash” in a century and a hall. the nose of the congqueror—always ag- gressive, Great generals, men who were “horn to command,” those who “find a way or make a way," have noses of the Roman type ammost without ex- ception, Onexamining a pile of photo- graphs of sucoessiul warriors, ruling political leaders, aggressive thinkers— men of mark-the observer will find a Roman nose, or a modification of it, in nire cases out of ten. The Greek nose, the nose of refine ment, takes ita name from the art-loving Greeks, in whose physiognomy it was formerly a prominent chamoteristic, Poets and artists have noses of the Greek torm, or which show a decided tendency toward it. It is the classio nose which delights the sculptor, and is thought to be the most beautiful nose in woman, “The Greek nosed woman," says one of her admirers, ** whether born in a cot. tage or a palace, makes everything around her beautiful. Taste presides alike in the adornment of her person and the furnishing and embellishing of her rooms." “The owner of the Greek nose,’ writes the author of ** Notes on Noss,” * is not without some energy in the pur- suit of that which is agreeable to his tastes: but, unlike the owner of the Roman nose, hie cannot exert himself in opposition to his tastes." Some great mien have lived who had noses com- pounded of the Roman and Greek, ap- preaching the former, however Alex: ander the Great, Constantine, Washing- ton, Napoleon, Sic Puilip Sydney, Lorenzo de Medici and Wolsey had noses of this sort, The Jewish nose may be said to indi- cate worldly shrewdness, with the ability to turn that shrewdness into profitable account. The Jewish nose is the commercial nose, though the love of gain, or acquisitiveness, {3 more definitely indicated by the thickness of the nose just sbove the wings. Let an observer attend a meeting of successful business men and he wiil notice that the central par: of the money-making nose, where it joins the face, is wide, and is a formation peculiar 10 most nasal ap- pendages of the Jewish type. The snub nose is the nose of childhood, of weakness, of undevelopmen.. No man with an unmixed snub nose can hope to become renowned for greatness. The snub noses of the Chinese have not a solitary aggressive point—they will never lead their owners into the nine. teenth and twentieth centuries. A “turn-up "sorb is a perpetual interro- gation point; it isthe inquisitive nose of | ehildren, of Celestials, and is found on the face of not a few women. The ire Celestial nose is continuously concave | from root to tip, which can be said of but few American adult noses. —Chicogo Express. ee ————— Tests of Forbearance. The exaet point where ** forbearance ceases to be a virtue,” is sometimes hard to determine. As a rule, we are re- quired to sccept of penitence and promises of amendment from offending parties, exercising toward them much of that ** i ] of . then the cioak of charity, large and elastic as it is, may i be rent asunder in straining too far. here are some phases of depr.vily which it cannot cover. The following | incidents, one of which occurred in Tennessee and the other in Georgia, w a couple of Baptist ministers, both whom we knew, will illustrate « meaning: In a ehurch,; of which the Rev. Duke Kimbrong, long since dead, was pastor, there was a member whose infirmities had become chronic, so that Lis case, iike some litigious persons we have known, aimost constan(ly on the docket. He had transgressed, asked pardon, and been forgiven, until the patience of | both church and pastor was about ex- hausted. At aconference of the church, he offending brother arose with the usual story, that at some public gather- ing hie had taken a dram, it flew into his i head (the wicked thing!) and turned | him or the world upside down; and fall. | ing upon the floor in the deepest appar- i ent agony and grief, begged his brethren i to forgive him, and his old pastor to | pray for him, repeating the request sev- eral times with all the accompaniments ‘ that tears and roiling over the floor i could impart. The old pastor sat very i gravely with his head down, 8 roking | Lis nose, perfectly unmoved by the | tragedy before him. After awhile the | appeal became so moving that he quietly | rose from his seat, and looking around { with calm dignity, said: “ If anybody ius any confidence in Brother J — lie will please come forward and pray for him. For my psrt I have lost all confidence in Lim.” The other incident is related of Rev. | Jacob King, of Georgia. A similar case occurred in one of his churches. No public occasion could pass but that the { offending brother became, as the phrase { is, * how come you so.” Time and again he was up before the church to answer to the charge of drunkenness, untii the patience oi all parties, as in the above ease, was threadbare Finaliy the offender cume up with the old story, acknowledgment and petition for for. giveness. Brother King, who had by | nature an anusual flow of humor, rose | from his seat and, assuming a serious tone, said to the congregation : “Brethren, are you keeping count? You all know that we can only forgive seventy times seven —four hundred and ninety times. That is the last limit of the law. You must keep tally, for it won't do to tran- scend the limits of that law.” Having «aid this he gravely took his seat, and | left the church to manage the case as | best they enuld. i h of ar i A Chinese Court. At Shanghai, says the Pull Mall Ga- | rete, where we and some other European | nations and the United States have es. | tablishraents, natives are dealt with by | what is called a “mixed court.” [Itijs! 80 called no doubt, because a European | or American consul or other resident | sits with the Chinese judge; but in | other respecte it has little pret«ntion to | its title, for its course of procedure and | its punishments appesr to be of Chinese | barbarism, unmixed with any European | sense of humanity. Thus, a prisoner who refuses to divalige the names of his accomplices, is ordered to receive fifty | blows on the face; and if these, admin istered apparently on the gpot, fail to overcome his contumacy, another fifty may be ordered. Beating the ankles with hammers, and kneeling on chains with the feet braced up. are other meth. ols of persuasion which are employed by this mixed tribunal, graced as it is | by the countenance and sanction of an | officer of some great Christian rower According to a tabulated report, pre. | pared by Mr. E. Parry for the supreme | court and ** Consular Gazette,” the pun- | ishments consist of terrible floggings, or | else of the cangue, or heavy table, in! which the wearer's neck is inclosed, and | which prevents him from lying down or feeding himsclt. That such practices should go on frum year’s end to year’s end with the placid acquiescence of in- fluential Eurcrean communities seems hardly credible. It is to be hoped, at all events, that they will not long sur- vive the publicity which Mr. Parry has given them. If the Europ ‘an assessor 18 Lo sit on the judgment seat, simply to give the countenance of civilization and Christianity to the stupid and horribl. barbarities of the Chinese—to concur with a mandarin in administering blc ws on the mouth or hammering the ankles of prisoners who retuse to conte:s or to * peach” —the sooner he is removed from +0 shameful a post the better for bimselt and the civilized power which he re- presents. RELIGIOUS NEWS AND NOTES, i Of the 60,000 inhabitants of Quebec. | There are 350 Christian’ churches in | Burmah, mostly Baptists, There are a number of vacant pulpits in the Baptist churches of California, The Lutherans of Nebraska expect to gain 18,000 members by Scandinavian emigration to thai State, The Methodist Episcopal mission in Italy reports 430 members and 279 pro. bationers—in all 708, There are twelve native missionaries at work. Thirteen bishops of the Methodist Episcopal church have united in an ap- peal to the denomination tu clear off the indebtedness of the Metropolitan church, Washington, D. C St. Patriok’s cathedral, in New York ity, is, according to a current item, en titled to the distinction of having the largest church debt in the country $400,000 in one mortgage, at five per oent. Mrs. De Groat's ‘church, built at her own expense in Newark, N.J., cannot have fairs, festivals or other entertain ments held therein on penalty of the property reverting to the original owner, The colored Baptista of Texas, Ar kansas and Northern Louisiana, num- bering about 100,000, have determined to build a college for the education of ministers and, teachers in the city ol Marshall, Texas The Protestant Episcopal church on Long Island has eighty-four Sunday schools, with 17,478 members. Thelt contributions last year were $18,650, while the parishes gave for their sup- port $8,047, The seven largest churches in this country are: I'l) Brooklyn, 2.549 members; Chioago, First, 1,193; Central, Brooklyn, 1,048: Broadway Tabernacle, New York city, 968; Church of the Pilgrims, Brooklyn 66: Church of the Disciples, New York city, 817; Oberlin, First, Ohio, 743. 2 Since the meeting of the general as. semably in May last, twenty-two Presby- terian winisters have died. Their ages ran from forty-seven, the youngest, Rev. W. H. Dean, of Tucson, A. T,, to ninety-ihivee, the old Rev. DD. M. Princeton, J.. both ol whom died in July. The minutes of the fifth general con- ference of the Congregational chursh of Alabama, give forteen churches with 732 members, and sixteen Sunday- schools, with 1,382 teachers and scholars. fhe churches Lad Congregational Plymouth, est, N. contributed during the past vear $1,638 tor parish purposes, and $263 lor benevolenoces. In Rhode Isiand there are sixty Bap- tist churches, eight mission stations ard 10.630 members, represented in threo associations. In Texas the Baptists number 120.000 commuanicanis ol ail colors. In Colorado the denomination has twenty-four churches and 1,10 members, but only nine of the churches have pastors. “Go where there is the most sin, sir,” said the old clergyman’s coash man, when asked which of two calis t dominie ought to sceept, The good man thought over it, and conciuded that where there was money ther be the most sin. So he accepted which offered the rust sub. he HOS esbyterian chuarol Canada reports 740 pastoral charges ane 650 ministers. The pastoral charges #m- brace 1,350 churches snd stations, Cope nected with the church are 63 #.3, u ing a population of 300.000, Ther: ie 107971 members. Darin: th vear 10.748 were added to fellow. ship of the church, the set in- crease being 3.619, i entire income lor the year was $5,165,154. A Lutheran student was sent out to preach during the summer vacation among the Swedes at Leadville. They told him they did not want him, but he 81id he had been sent there, and would stay and preach, and took board in the house of the man who had warned him AWAY. ¢ reports that his perseverance has been rewarded bevond his most san guine expectations. Ina trip afoot 150 miles over the mountains he found many Swedes, and preached a hundred Scandinavians at Kokomo, 12 000 feet shove the s2a p of bso at 1E4 A Big California Farm. A former citizen of Missouri, Doctor Hugh J. Glenn, has now a farm of 85.. 000 acres in Colusa county California in the Sacramento valley, 45.000 of which in wheat. The i is twenty-five bushels in favorahle seasons. Of this year's crop Doctor Glenn says, tit rh hie Lins on hand 350 000 sacks, +» thinks thoy He has his own me blacksmith shops, boring, turning and planing machines, buzz-saws, ete. He manufactures his own wagons, separators, headers, har- rows and nearly all the machinery and implements used. : He has employed fifty men in seed- ing and 150 in harves', 200 he .d «{ horses and mules, fifiy~five grain-headers and other wagons, 150 sets of harness, twelve twelve-foot headers, five sulky hay-rakes, twelve eignt mule cuitiva- tors, four Gem seed mowers, eight Buckeye drills, eight mowers, one forty - eight-inch separator, thirty-six feet long and thirteen and a half { igh, with a capacity of nineteen bushels per minute; one forty-inch separator, are yield hing WHINE vators for self-feeder, one steam barley or feed mill, two twenty-horse power engines. The forty-eight-inch separa. tor threshed on August 8, 1879, 5778 bushels of wheat in one day. The working force to run the separator is sixty men, eight headers, twenty-two header wagons, 100 horses and mules. The average run of the machine is 1,800 sacks, conlairing two and one-third bushels each, per day. The utmost capacity of the machine is 3 000 sacks, or 7.000 bushels per day. The harvest ing force cut and thresh simultaneously, and in fifteen minutes from the time the header begins in the grain the wheat is in the sacks. The Hudson in Winter, Some bright, breezy day you casually glance down the river and betiold a sal, ~& sail like that of a pleasure yacht of summer. Is the river open again below there? is your tirst half defined inquiry But with what unwonted speed Before you have fairly drawn another breath it has turned, unperceived, and isshooting with cqual swiftness in the opposite direction. Who ever saw such a lively | sail! It does not bend before the breeze, | hut darts to and fro as if it moved ina vacuum, or like a shadow over a scene, Then you remember the jce-boats, and | you open your eyes to the fact. Another | and hurling across each other's patus like white-winged gulls. They turn so quickly, and dash off again at such speed that they produce the illusion of something singularly light and intangi- | ble. In fact, an ice-boat is a sort of dis- | embodied yacht; it is a sail on skates The only semblance to a boat is the sail | and the rudder. The platform under | number—are rigged, is broad and low; upon this the pleasure-seekirs, wrapped | in their furs or blankets, lie at full | ength, and, looking under the sail, | skim the frozen surface with their eyes. | great—more than a mile per minute, and suflicient to carry them ahead of the | astest express train. When going at | tl 18 rate the boat will leap like a grey- | hiound, and thrilling stories are told of the ice, that are cleared at a bound. | t » the wind so suddenly as to shoot the unwary cvecupants off, and send them | skating on their noses some yards, i A Water Telescope. According to Land and Waler the | Norwegian fishermen always with them cn their expeditions a kind of te'escope callea a water telescope, This is a tube three cr four feet long, with an eyepiece at one end. The other end, which is open, is placed in the water over the edge ot the boat, and a little practice easily enables the ob- server to distinguish objects at a depth of from ten to fifteen fathoms. The fishermen are thus enabled to discover shoals which would othe wise go un- noticed. They then give the signal, their comrades surround them with seines, and they frequently make won- deriul hauls in places and under circum- stances that would never have been suspected but for the use of the tele- scope. Mr. Frank Buckland recom- mends the instrument to the English and Scotch herring fishers. CAYTY | Eastern and Middle States. On the morning ater the election in Maine the Associated Press dispatohes gave a majority ol about 2,000, On the second worning Nopatog was Hepublican, that three out of five Repub lean Congresswen had been elected and that the vole (Or governor was so ¢iose woul have 10 ba decided by the oflalal count. On the other hand the Fusionists claimed majority in the legislature and the election of Plaisted beyond doubt Pharmaceatioal assoomtion at Bavatoga four hundred members were in attendance fhe New York public schools now have 114,000 soholars. Charles Livingston attempted to fast forty. two days in Brooklyn but stopped on the pinth day. Ihe Massachusetts Republicans at thelr tiekot in the feld headed by Governor Long, who was renominated by seolamation The Stale convention of the New Hamp. ghire Democrats at Concord resulted in the selection of a fall toket headed by Frank Jones for govern Une man was killed and five more were seriously burned by an explosion of sulphur in the Koh-i-noor colliery near Shenandoah, a I'he famous two year-old colt Hindoo has been purchased by Dwyer brothers, ol Now York, tor $18 000 ihe New Hampshire Probibitionists have nominated George 1). Dodge lor governor, I'he international military rite matoh at Creedmoor ended ia the three teams represent. ing the regular army divisions ol the Missouri, Atlantie and Pacific taking fret, second and third prizes respectively, the militia teams trom New Jersey, Connecticut and Pennsyl. vania bringing up the rear in the order named. The shooting was at 200, £00 and 600 yards, the highest total score being 1,083 out of a possible 1,260 and the lowest ¥04 Boston has celebrated the two hundred and filtieth anniversary of its settlement as ¢ pity by an imimenss process lon, Orabions and gencral rejoicing. ‘The streets were thronged by multitudes from the surronnd ng country and the buildings a'ong the route of the pro oossion ware gayly decorated with flags, burl ing, mottoes and emblems commemorative of the day Ine proo-ssion occupied three hours apd A quarter in passing Over a given point embraced the military--iseluding one regiment fromm New York eity, two from Brooklyn and a compavy irom Norfolk, Va Civie soclelion, representatives of the Various In the trade ih and trades of B ston, firemen, ele divisions 144 teams, representing all the py cipal industries and mechanical pursuits, wore iu line. In the evening 100,000 prople gath ered on the common to bear a conoert by Gil mores Hand Wii'e five men were at work in a small wood: un sirooture at Bridgeport, Uonn., oo. by the Union Metal jo Cartridge oom " copie pany explosion which could be heard all ting was b own to pleces and over the sity I'he bul he ve workmen were bil od Ex-United States Senator lafayette Foster died at bis home in Norwich, Coan a few days go, seveaty-Jour yoa When Liocols was assassinated and Andrew became President, Mr, Foster was elroted president of the Seaale, Messrs. Moore, Jenkivs & Co., whol sale grocers of Now York aity, bave added for over 3 WO 0 congressman R. V. Pierce, ongress from the Tweanly-sesoond New 5 aged s Johnson I representative York distriot, has resigoed on scoount of pri. vate matters whioh wigently demand bis con. stant slieniion, ates. have Western and Southern St It Mn rs pominated Mayor aadigt far se-p'eation Mai Genera! Has wi Joie of the Moexican war died at his farm in Brigit © 0 WO I ZIAA re. i, & yoleran and an ofioe the Cone ledorate army mn, 1, a lew days ago The O All but our of aged sixty three yours opon legislatare is in session bsinoss houses of the village of Waltsbarg, Washington Territory, bave boon destroyed by fire, entailing a low of about 8200000. Que Chinaman was burasd to death Great damage has been dono to crops by frost ja portions of [ilinols. Ihe Missouri Republi Coloase! DD, PP. Dyer to State ticket! Ex-Postmaster Genera! Key presided fo time the other day at the session ol the United States con't in Knoxville, Tean. At Sprisgfield, Tenn., a crowd of aboul one hut | mes came into the town, tered down the doors of the jail ana killed three rs~a white man named Ra sy in wement for killing a young lady «ho bad Ito warry him, an i 1WO negroes awail rial for the murder of an old man mornings ago the ocean steamship } Mormon emigrants at og, New York, of whom 147 are , lorty Swiss or Lermans, and They were sccompaniel by snteen elders, who are Awericavs. Amoog the elders was B, lL. Young, a grandson of Brigham Young. ibe town ol surly destroyed by five. atl S10.00 ihe Maryland Greeabackers have nomi nated presidential electors and candidates tor LOngies {ae of Houston and Gully for the murder of Gilmer during ihe political trouble at DeKalb, Miss, in 1877, has resulted in an soquittal, It will be remembered that during these troubles Judge Chisolm, bis son and daughter were also killed in the DeKalb jal. Ihe zink at Milwaukee, Wis., one of the largest and handsomest buildings ol its Kind in the country, was attacked by several hun. dred men and boys and completely demol. ished. The police did not interfere, and it was cated ofl plecemenl. 1 ho city has bad troulide in getting the lesseo to surrender the lease in order that an exhibition building might be built on the ground, which is owned by the oity At the Consolidated Imperial mine, Vir. ginia City, Nev., a cage with ten men Lad started for the surisce when the cable broke, precipitating them down the shall some three hundred feet, and fourteen hondred leet of rope was piled upon them. Nive of the men were killed and the tenth was dasgerously hurt, rouble broke out between white and col the 3 have nominated governor and a tall the first PIB ie Jai Seymour, Wis, has been The loss is estimated sent 10 the scene of disturbance, Some miners charged upon ono of the mines {rom three sides, when the troops opened fire, seriously wounding ten men. Dr. P. H. Talbot, editor and proprietor ol the Maysville (Mo.) Greenback Stannard, while sitting at his bedside was shot dead by sOme pe raon at the time unknown. tion of the town, causing au loss of nearly $100,000 and rendering two hundred people homeless. i bo trotter Maud S. trotted a mile the other day st Chiesgo in 2:10. beating the best time on record —uade a short time ago al Hartlond by St. Julien—by halt a second. From Washington. The chief of the burean ol statistics reports that the total value of the exports of dometie breadstuffs from the United States tor the pight months ended August 31, 1880, was 1879, $137,914,047. diers at the United States arsenal, were accel. dentally shot and killed white handling a Gat. ling gun. Acting Postmaster-Genoral Hagan has issued an order intended to exclude trom the muiis all registered letters and letters contain. ing postal money-or lers addressed to several fraudulent lotteries at Loalsville and Coviog. tou, Ky., and New York city. Foreign News. The annual Canatian exhibition opened at Montreal the other day, A Dublin dispatch says that tho New York Herald relief fund committee has closed it labors and cissolved aftor nearly six months of unremitting work, during which it dis- tributed $341,000 among the famine-sir.oken Marshal Bazaine is not dead, ns was re. eently reported, Henry Perry, convicted of an attempt to murder and rob in the London undeiground railway, has beon 8 ntencod to thirty lashes and twenty years’ penal servitude. The German government has ordered the expulsion of the French Jesuits who migrated to Alsaco-Lorraine. The river Ouse in England has overflowed its bunks, and crops and other property near Godmanchester have been damaged. The Swiss national council have decided to submit to a popular vote the question of a complete revision of the constitution. The cattle plague hws appeared in the dis- triets about Warsaw, Poland. The legislature at Buenos Ayres, South of thy Argentine Republi. The senntors and deputies issued aw appeal to the people, but Charles 8. Read, the noted English agricul. pete with America in wheat, but that America cannot grow barley vor rear pigs as well ns England, Sir Fitzroy Kelly, lord chief buon of the Iugiish court of the exchequer, is dead in his eighty-fifth year. He was the last of the lord ¢hiet barons. After existing 80) years the title is now abolished. 1 he French cab net has been dissolved, and Jules Ferry appointed by President Gievy to form a new one, The steamer Aurora, from Oporto, Kngland, bound for Southampton, has foundered at sea. Finty persons were drowned. Heavy rains and flrods have caused great damage to the unharvested crops in portions ol England ———— The oyster would live tor eight years if he had a chance, but he is kept in such a stew that ho dies young of heart trouble. New York Graphic. il BS SARIN | NEW YORK MENDICANTS, Whare the Street Tramps Pass Thely | Nights, FOR THE FAIR SEX, House Plants, The question so often raised by our correspondents a8 to whether it is healthy to keep plants in our livin rooms and seeping rooms is answere by Doctor J. M. Anders in a recent number of the Philadelphia Medical T¥mes. Experiments made by him show the value of plants as natural and perfect *wtomizers.”. The average rate of transpiration for plants having thin, soft lenves—like geraniums and lantanas~is found to he an ounce and a half of watery vapor per square foot of leaf surface for twelve diurnal hours of clear weather. At this rate a great tree, like the Washington elm st Cambridge, which has been estimaced to hinve 800,000 square feet of surfnce, would exhale seven ard three. quarters tons of water in twelve hours. The rate of transpiration for a house plant is at least fifty per cent. more rapid than | for one in the open air; and it is evident that a number of such plants must have a material influence on the humidity of the air in which they are kept. Experi. ments made by means of the hygrome- | ter ghow conciusiy iy 11 at house plants | may properly be cinssed as therapeutic | Fashion Notes, Fancy furs are to be much used this | When the wind blows cold and the winter, {alr Is orisp with frost itis not an un. Purple will, it is sald, be fashionable | common thing to meet at evening in the this winter, | streets of New York, especially below Changeable goods will still be worn | Usnal street and in the Bowery, beggars this winter. [ whose claim to consideraticn fs either Momie aloth in aavk | hunger or the assertion that they have Momia aoth in any no place to sleep, The plea of hunger is worn this winter, ; perennial, but the request for money ta Poke bonnets ave ugly in all materials | pay for a night's lodging is one that Is exoept straw, seldom or never preferred at this season Black velvet outside garments will be | by the sophisticated or professional beg. much worn this season. gar. He does not now sigh for the Black and white net, spotted with shelter of a lodging-house, but is well inrge dots of che nille 1s used for necks content to forego the accommodat fons ties. which later he will beg to secure. The : + | lodging-house keeper Is not at present Rifle green and pheasant brown will | person to whom he must look for be among the Iashionable winter col- | suoh disturbed slumber as, in winter, he ors, ean snatch in the brief truces between Raw silk and himsell and the predatory insect band made up into whose name is legion. It is the police. next winter man who is the autoerat of his bed. Old4ashioned paste buckles are worn | chamber in summer, and the canopy Is on the belt by those who are lucky | thesky. If he oan only manage to escape enough to own them. the notice of the man with the club and Gold beads and chenille are mingled off-hand MABEL. he a Willing 30 Huure a fhe 3 > . in i.3 e UBL And OG distoun i WOrs in the flat trimmings which ave place. efforts of all the mosquitoes in Manhsat. tan island. colors will be is to be costumes even armuare handkerchief agents, As to their unwholesomeness be- | | cause of giving off carbonic acid gas at | | might, it Ee poen shown by experiment | x W hye Sous the homeless beggar of as hn oud Nise Sweaty Sify i hE a hi, Sag I the summer—the | equivalent to that exhaled by one baby wggar whom the attractions of green | sleeper. A practical application of the | fields, babbling brooks, henroosts and | d rool] ad b ex oll de R ive in | potato patches eannot seduce from the | the hl By ed forpuin¥ tib : city to Ye A Sountry amp} Lhe re | & yoom twenty Feet long twelve foet | porter whose duties lead him about the ami] Ri hia streets at midnight stumbles upon him | Side 50d 4 fling Sweive ba i : I'he lawns with stripes and borders will be as fashionable next season as this, and sensible women buy them eagerly, The Languedoc lace is imitated so successfully that the real lace cannot be distinguished from the cheap imita. tions, he — ros i 2d In many places; sees hi curle B ; ; When an evening dress is trimmed 5 p a Hu curled up in plants, with soft, thin leaves, and a leaf | with flowers the wearer should carry a | 8 doorway, stretched out in some hos. | oof 0 Fe oo feel square each, would, if lavas ra et ame bl i able truck wagon that } been le Race 0 siX [eel square cash, won dl, arge bouquet of the same blossoms in | Pia he TH EON i" pnd een OIL | well watered and so situated as to re- her hand in the street, or wandering away in| ; r Alma sesrch of some secluded spot w rere | CEIVE the direct rays of the sun (pre- | neither the light from the street lamps | ferably the morning sun) for at least | Pongee dresses embroidered in Chinese style in red and blu», are among the summer gowns that oan be worn through the autumn The capuchin cloaks are made of Surah and Vienna cloth combined, in cashmere . a an hd A several Liours, raise the proportion of | Bos he A Be Sonn 3 ov Be him | aqueous vapor toabout the health stand- | benches in the public parks, where he | ard. It is evident, then, that every house | enters upon poss gsion at the witching ! IBGLIeF Cub ktep 10 le of wise Noma our o { ; ur | | : : had and pekin and in white serge with braid Ropar OU ol a to | And there is every reason Lo believe that | trimming. and when, Of those who make use of | the lives of many persons who die from i Small mantles covered with chenille, the seats and shade for the leisure | Pulmonary compiaints might be pre- i and untrimmed sacks with bright hours of the day nothing need be said, buttons, are liked for outside wraps to | for it is a patent fact that the old men be worn cool days at the seaside. and children under the charge of their Muslin che misettes set into the open- | White-capped bonnes are then largely | ing of a linen collar that is lolded away 1B POSsession., As evening approaches from the throat are something of an in. the children go away home, and their | Work and Peed novation, but are said to be very pretty, | PiaCes are taken by u variety of men, Ani ve of inventi i | The hats with netied silk uver the ans of them young and well-dressed. | araa h m RVEnHYe fenin In brims will probably be generally worn These do not, as a rule, remain long: be 4 pia RE 0 in 109 food this autumn. Their only trimming is enough to decide where they will go to | be forgotten. small farmer hired a | tho thick cords kaatted J tthe crown | #0€k amusement. When the last meal | Jouth to assist him in the work of his | the thick cords knotted nooutthecrown. | "tha day has been eaten, and the | farm as an indoor servant. The firt | dishes have been c¢'eaned, the servant Ppleee of work he was set to do was to | girls and their male friends begin to ap- | thresh out some corn, As the farmer | pear in the parks. To watch them Was passing the bare in which the youth | closely is to discover that the poor girls | Was at work, be heard the flail lasily | are invariably so wearied by the labo:s | keeping time to a tuno the Ind was sing- | Red beads on a ground of white Jace | of the day as to need the supporting | 148. Stopping to listen, he ascertained | are used to make a trimming for white | arms of their escorts, which are never | that the words were, * Bread and cheese | evening dresses; but they are less effec. | denied them. After an hour or two 18k’ thyease.” Goinginto the housethe | tive than those on which there is a faint | spent in the mildly exciting pleasure of farmer said to his wife: “This is a queer | talking and being bugged, the girls go | 8rt of lad we Lave goiten; he seems to | | thelr ways to rest, and little Inter the | think that the speed at which he ought | | beggar begins to slink into the parks | to work should be measured by the kind | and to court forgetfulness of his daily | of food he gets.” And then relating | wretchedness in sleep. It may be that | What he had heard, he suggested : “Sup- | honest workingmen have been in the | Pose we give him something different 19 | parks to breathe for a few hours a purer | dinner to morrow, and see how that | air than they can hope to find in their | acts Pp" 2 This being agreed to, he had | bot lodgings. These begin to go when | apple pie added to his bread and cheese. | the beggars and tramps come, in order | This brought cown his flail somewhat | not to be confounded with them. | more rapidly. for it was going to the | the strings under the chin. Where has the beggar been since the | #pecd wherewith the lad sang, “Apple | The Genlis bodice is the nawe given smset? Walk in any of the streets ad. | Pi according ly." - Bob's doing a bit | to a waist with a yoke, a hood and a | jacent to the park and the question will | Petter to-day, Inss," said the farmer to | beit. It disputes the reign of the coat | answer itself. As you go along you wiil his wife; **let us mend bis dinner asain | waist. The Genlishat has a scoop brim | become conscious at times of & shadow | to-morrow, and sce what that will bring and is worn with a white vel) even though it be at night: a shadow | forth” So wuen the next dinner time | that is erect and walking, If you show | came around he had a good plate of beef | that you sre conscious of its presence, 8nd pudding set before him, which went the chances are that you will hear the down right grandly, and brought the flail into splendid action to the words, | | ** Beef and puddin’, 1'li gi'e thee a drub- | bin,” and to a jolly good tune. **1 see | plainly,” said the farmer, “if we wish to get good work out of Bob we must feed him well.” So Bob Lad his bill of fare improved without having recourse Chambers’ Journal, | able and so salutary. In many instances | | consumptive tendencies have apparently | been counteracted by working among | plants, — American Cuilivalor. : Several new kinds of plush are im. | ported for the winter, and the material | will probably be made into bonnets, conls and jackets, snd also inte trim ming for the linest gowns. dash of eolor. The handkerchief gowns which are to be worn this winter are to be very simply made, and as they need no trim. ming are less expensive than many suits which cost less by the yard. The jet kerchiets used to trim bon- nets inst year are replaced hy jet scarfs, which are tied in a knot on the top ol the bonnet, and made into bows to fasten ’ The red and yellow handkerchief cos- tumes are ealled pensioners’ pride” in France, in allusion to the red and yellow handkerchief in which the soldiers al the Invalides delight. shadow muttering some words, among which may be distinguished “a few pennies and ** not a bite to eat.” shadow is the beggar who, unlike the wise husbandman. strives to make hay while the sun does not shine, and who How a Rooster Was Conquered, | wearily "moves on" through fear of the ; To illustrate what he meant by the | police, until he has moved with the 10 astrike phrase “ garlicking a stock ™ a New | hours to midnight. He then goes to the TN — —— York broker told the following story: | parks and sleeps, unless the park police. He Took the Hiut, { It was during the flush times in 1850, man, who must remain awake himself Young Mr. Latehours was sitting on | I was a pretty sick man in San Francisco, | maliciously decides to keep him awake | the poroh the other night watching a | and the doctor ordered me up the coun- | #lso. And this is usually the case, for | seventeen-year-old girl trying to keep | try for a change of air. Tom Jenkins it is an every-night affair for the man awake long enough to see the morning | was then running a ranch among the in gray uniform io flit about through the | star rise. They talked astronomy. Lills, and as he and I were old friends, I | parks and roughly shake into semblance resolved to pay him a visit, Tom had a | of wakefulness the wretched creature he | ing at his own poetic fancy, fine barnyard of fowls. and smong them finds, and admonishes him not to slec Pp. “1 would rather you were a come” was a great game cock. He was as big With n grow] that is an oath the beggar | she said, dreamily. as an ostrich, but game to the backbone. | declares himself awake, and straight His heart best tumuituously. Well, there wasn't a rooster in the | way nods again This is often repeated “And why? he asked, tenderly, at whole countryside that he hadn't tackled during thie night. Al earliest dawn the the same time taking her unresisting policeman makesa final round, and with | littie hands in hisown; the voice of authority announces that | repeated, imperiously. and got away with. Tom had tried all | he knew to keep him quiet. Heo had sleep must positively have ending. This time he locked him up in houses, and tethered him by the and hail starved him, leg, 8 obeyed, though with the estness that fell upon hissoul like a bare | beard another rooster crow. that moment he was off at full speed, and | never stopped until he had licked him. | Vell, when 1 arrived at Tom's ranch he had built a big cage, and inside sat the © rooster, looking very melancholy, while | times au dav, if not many Tom to'd me the whole story that hie would gladly give £1,000 to any one who would find a cock that comid Jiok hia chicken, but at the same time 1 did not believe that there was a bird | , in all California that could do it. The Granary of the World. { - - Now, | bad heard from sn old Minnesota, although now claiming to Theatre-goers, ciub-visitors, late supper | chicken fighter that if a Jittle garlic | be the greatest wheat-producing State | takers and patrons of the horse railroad ame was rubbed on the head and under the | in the country, surpassing with the 40,. | traios, should all certainly bave a bots of | wings of a game cock. no other rooster | 000.000 bushels of this year's crops the Dr. Ball's Cough Syrup conveniont. Gentle. | would attack him; so [| asked Tom highest mark of California, heretofore | m8 You WL Bead a what odds he would lay me that I did | the heaviest wheat-producing State, is Next Door to a Fool, not get a rooster next day which would | prepared to see thie banner pass farther ] hie 1 defeat his famous bird. Tom :t once | westward and northward, into Dakota, | of Ind, who wis hes - rpbead offered to lay ten to one, and we put up | A well-informed writer on this subject. | sanion : prs 2 toi a considerable sum on the event I ina Iotter from 8S: Paul, declares that P “Is not vour father a foo! took Tom's buggy and drove down to | the comparatively small farms of Min-| «No! Who said that of m father” | the town, where there was a pouitry | nesota, which are themselves monstrous | wis the reply a a mysather : market. There were lots of roosters of | in size, according to the standards of | « Nobod y 1 knows on.” responded | all kinds and breeds, but nothing very | past generations of agricuituris:s, can. the rag urchin “bat | bir ar 1d i gamy looking. At last I struck a sport. | not begin to hold their own in rivalry | me the other dny hint 1 _— oy ! | ing-looking poulterer. who said that he | with the great wheat tracts planted and toa fool, and I don’t know ty a , oo | had an aged game rooster, whose father | reaped by wholesale in the James River | poant our father or N t 8 ith's ee and mother he had known. and who he | Valley and about the head waters of the | y er Of al mith, j was sure would show fight, He was | Red River of the North. These Red old and dilapidated looking, but he was | River farms are operated by Corpor- | best I could find, so 1 closed the bar. | ations, employing regime its of men, | gain for one dollar. Then I bought a | worked and fed with the disciplineof an clove of garlic, and drove back with army, and transported from tract to my purchase to the ranch. tract by the earioad from the elevators Next day Tom had asked all his | of the owners. The land is not only | | friends to see the fight, and Mrs, Jenkins | cheap, but is four times as fertile ns the | had filled the windows of the house with | most fertile lands in Mi nesota, and re. | the ladies of the neighborhood, all anx. | wards at that rate the most care. | ireeof eharge,a valuable little hook on deatness | | ious to see Tom's rooster get away with | less cultivation. Five bundred thousand | and diseases of the ear—specially on renning | | the stranger. 1 fixed my bird up as acres of wheat land have been brought i ear and eainrrh, and ther proper treatment i | well as I could, and { rubbed the garlic | into cultivation within two or three | —&VIdE references and testimonials that will | { under his wings and all around his head. | years, Under such corporate compell- Sat sly Sho Sion: sicepiisn]. Swadren seslave. | | When I sppeared in the yard where the | tion on the frontiers of the Northwest, | we Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., | | fight was to take place there stood the | the individual farmeron older lands is | il sand pet Electro. Voltaie Belts to the | great game cock, looking more like a | oversinughed and discouraged. Al | fpement in this nen: a DS hei advan | | Cochin China, and strutting round | though for years he may have been | Tria.” Paper handed, + On 30 Daye | | looking for something to lick. I kept! forced to accept only what the railroads | TT ————— } my bird in a bag until the last moment, | transporting his grain calculated to be | Yauax J en Ihe great success of the Vean. | { and ns soon as time was called I took | enough to keep him at his hard life, they | SISK fa 5, © chitin w 4 nade of the blood in { him out blinking in the strong sunlight, | gobbling the rest in charges, his chance | who have taken it ol I Ae edie | { He looked round for a moment, rubbed | was not so slender as it has become | relicl, with such sonirkatle Cura, ying ! his bill once or twice on the ground as | since the corporations themselves took Got Lyon's Patent Hoel Bilfencrs applied | | to those now boots before you run them over. | A A SN. 3 beggar sits salien, Liinking and yawn- ing. until he finaly becomes thor. | 1 oughly sroused, when he rises and dis- aopears. Usunlly, ns he slinks away seems like one who is ¥ drunkmsry you would only come around once every 0 years,” half way to the front gate, when he manhood, of an utter mental aid Wwora! wasle, : came around again.” —T——— | asleep. — Burlingion hawkeye, 0515. 3 Are You Not in Good ! It the Liver is the source of Helen bla ; you can find an absolute remedy in Dx. Sax. rorp's Liven IXVIGORATOR, the only vegeln. | ble cathartic which aos directly on the Liver. Cures all Bilious diseases. For Book address | Da. Saxyorp, 162 Broadway, New York. ! —_—" ————————— i Dr C. E. Shoemaker, the woll-known sum! | surgeon of Reading, Pa., offers to send by mail, | i { if sharpening it, raised his wings to see | to farming on these wonderful ands | if the joints were stiff, and made at once | The same unequaled wheat soil and cli- {for his gigantic opponent. Tom's mate extends far north into British pos- | Pr Bon] | rooster took two or three jumps in the | sessions, so there are English capitalists | ues a Fon | air, poised his head 80 as to take good | who fancy they see the great wheat sup- | Cal, Whites | aim, and flew right at the stranger; but | ply of the world in the future, pouring | Sepprosed the instant he smelled the garlic that | out from Hudson Bay. Five new rail. | reid ; rooster turned and fled like a yellow dog | road lines have been buiit up into the | i with Lis tail between his legs. Dakota wheat region, and British terri. | : Mrs. Jenkins almost fainted, and | tory within a year or two, and the : nd Mothers, CATHOLICON will posi % ach a alling of the Panghters, Wives a IS UTERINE ’ nfl, | old amd pamphlet, wit Payecians and Utica, N. YX. P Ieee y ¥ valent, cures ad cent alis from ticuts, 10 HOWAKIN & BALLARD pid by all Druggistv—§1.50 per bottle there was a good deal of profanity | Northern Pacific is pushing a branch | THE MARKETS, among the male spectators, who had all | line dae north to compete in the race | XEW yonx backed the home bird. The last thing I | for the fabulous wealth in the wheat | Beet Osttie—~Med, Natives, live wt, , saw of that rooster was his tail, as he | lands stili unopened beyond the British | rR 38 B20 Bit... crossed a bluff near by, with Tom in full | line. ~ Boston Transeript. Brgiatsrzsssrsasases —rr—— chase with a double-barrelled shotgun, | re nmin swearing that he would never allow! The Power of Enjoyment anything to be beaten on his ranch and ‘ alicale fr amin escape alive. Comparatively tw peopie possess | uniformly cheerful dispositions. Most | {ol us have cur sad hours and moods, | Rye—8tato.ceies cies. “ Playing I rank, as Papa Does.” | But, whatever his disposition, a man is | a Mixed, i “My carly practice,” said a doctor, | bound by the laws of Lis own being, and | Southern YollOW. .uuearees ss “ sy | “was success/ul, and 1 soon attained an | BY those of his social relations, to ecul- | EL | enviable position. I married a lovely | LiVate the virtue of cheerfulness assidu- Hay—Modiun to I girl; two children were born to us, and | ©usly and constantly. He has no more | Btraw—Lovg Rye, per owi, vues... 9 my domestic happiness was complete, | Fight to injure his neigh or's happiness | Hops—8tate, IN .....ociiuirasen. But I was invited often to social parties | than to interfere with his pecuniary | TR werenes where wins was freely circulated, and | | property, and he cannot indulge in| Petroleam—Orude eee. ( M@OTN soon _becan.e a slave to its power, Bo. | Venting ill humor or spleen, with | Butter—State Creamery. ., fore I was awarcol it I was a drunkard | Rl0oOmy foreboding or complaints, or | Western Imiiation Creamery My voble wite never forsook me, never | €Ven carrying asad, sour frownig vis- | rind taunted me with a bitter word, never | 88¢, without sexsibly diminishing the | Oheese—State Factory............ censed to pray for my reformation. We | enjo;mext or comfort of others, and | { i rasNER REAR RERES Sass Rue aE se i Poge—=Live, sue ! Dressed, | Floar— of SEREEE Os ene 0s 10% 0 oon 5 esse . ory Ex. State, good to fancy... 4 1 Wenlaniis Joel Wianey.....48) @ Wheat-—-No, 2 Rod. .veee veenee 1 ONE 5 8 No.1 White... sera l 06 @ 1 we © - o8 of 5 11 EiM@® six | i i : i Cruenannns Skime, 3 were wretchedly poor, so that my family | thus infringing on their rights. Any | Western. became pinched for daily bread, One | individual who hus tri d to do so can beautiful Sabbath my wile went to win himself from despondency and sar- church, and left me on u lounge sleeping | 1ovss. The power of enjoyment is in off my previous night's debauch. I was | itsell a faculty capable of improvement, aroused by hearing something tall heave. | And as practice always enhances power, ily on the floor. 1 opened my eyes and | It 8 a good thing to form the habit of saw my little boy of six years tumbling | enjoyment, It is not true that the on the carpet. His older brother said | Sources of leasure are few and rare, to him: ‘Now get up and fall again, | but it is sadly true that we pass them That's the way papa does. Let's play by unncticed. Ww ¢ crave the excite we are drunk.” I watched the child as | ment of business or politics or tashiona. he personated my beastly movements | ble life, and forget the world of inno- in a way that would have done credit to | cent enjoyment that we trample under any actor. I arose and left the house, | Joot. Nature and art offer their treas. groaning in agony and remorse. ures in vain, the loveliness of child- walked off miles in the country—think- hoes, the attractions of home, the real ing over my abominable sin, and the | satisfaction of honest labor, the simple example I was setting belore my chil. | pleasure of little things, all plead for ut- dren. I solemnly resolved that. with | terance, but we repulse them. How can God's help, 1 would quit the cup, and [| We possess a cheerful spirit and a glad LT i { EAE Saranns ann : te and Ponn.. coves. iounne | Poiatoos—State, bbl new... . i «180 Cesena Flour—Ofty a nd RITALD ou row ©. 1 Spring... § Wheat—No, 1 Hard Duluth gd n Oorn-No, 2 Western, serses 46 ii @ OBta-~BIAS, sevssvvsrenvnnnes. “renee Barloy—Two-rowed State, , ® @ Ho HY@ 05 @ BO: Beef Oattlo~Live weight, ,.... 00 bi DOOD... anneanss rnrvanass E tersnans 4 cansen WERE hae @ Flour—Wisconsin and Minn, Pat. ,, Oorn—Mixed and Yellow,,,..,... 830 as Oats Exira While, new : Bye Shit us bes 00l—Washed C Unwashed WATERTOWN (MASS ) gar Beat Cattls-ive er). TIA BARNES he sseRB cars nnn nnann Lambs, @ 175 “200 8 00 108 in 3 70 083g Bg 08 80 ERB TON, Seas cenas tela nnnen 1 08 08 - BNS osx Penn, Rye—State—-new, , nots teens ty @ 08X5@ 1 05 a isd Torpedo Balloons. A weientific gentleman warms the and the government of & new gainst utterly defense. It is the torpedo balloon. A ves. d of tavor eg Il pounds of wind been estimated. It will be readily ithout dol h andinl missiles without doing life and property somewhere within the rent area covered or New hors Ton and Jersey City. comfort to think that other such terrors, and that even London Paris are not fur enough from the sea- board to escape harm. A general agree. ment between civilized powers, such as should promptly nip this danger in the bud —~ New Yorx Herald. I Fs Poulticing the Wrong Patient. It was at the city hospital that the nurse in a female ward the night orders, ** Poultice for No. 16 feet to waist,” The poultice was pre. pared—iaking bread enough for in an orphan asylum-—and carried to No. 16, The patient, aroused and told what was protested vigorously. Her trouble was burns on the neck anc arms, and she objected to such sum- mary pickling of her lower limbs. and the patient being helpless, into the Linge poultice she went, like a plam into a pudding. There she lay stewing and groaning all night, with no satisfaction in the morning but an apology from the nurse for having mis No. 16 for No. SBULLS . rg CE thoroughly, There is a Balm in Gilead. The success which Bes marked (he Introduction bere of Cream Ha ms, 8 Catarrh remedy, prepared by Ely Broa, Owego, N. Y., is indeed marveious. Many persons in Fuson sve using i with most satisfactory Presa is. A indy Gown-10Wn is Teoovering the sehse 11, which #he had not enjoyed for Bfices Foams, through the use of the Bam She hat given up ber case 88 incurslie. Mr, Barber, the drocgist, bas vied it in bis family, and come mends if very Bighly. Io another colging, & youn v Tanks hannock ‘sawyer, known to many of our readers, test Bes that he was cured of partial dosfoess br the Balm. IY certain’y a very sffickcions remedy ~From the Pitstop {Pa} Guaetle, August 18, 1979 Price 50 cents. On receipt of 640 conta, will mail » kage free. Send for cireglar, with fall information. ELY'S UREAM BALM OO, Owege, NX. Y. ‘A Blood Producer and Life The three Jrincipal ingredients in Mary Brevess are MALT, HOPS, and CALISAYA. As omubined, snithout frmentation, by the Marr Brrrems Ooxraxy, they are ¢ grandest erative and u Nouri 5, the grea tied Producers and Lite mtniting ‘Friocspies f medic spepsia, 1 : Joanplaiet, For Dvs ) aria end Liver © Ive J spon, ciation, wate Foo winlon, Nursing Mothers, Sickiy Chilaren, ani the Aged, Maur Dirrexs are supreme “re Halon sme rir named. The pensine bear the COMPANY'S SiG ATURE ws above. Seid everywhere. MALT BITTERS IMPANY, boston, JELLY Sliver Moda si Paris Expostion, substance is acknowledged Ly 1 of Wounds = voverad for the ture arn, Skin Diseases, Piles, Catarsh, Chibiatos, #c. In that every one may Uy "1th put up ln Sand 25 cent bottles for household use. Oblain § from Pour end you will Bnd 8 superior to sayihing you Dave eve i N Grand Medal af Philadelphia A Exposition. ™s wonderful TIQUETTEZBUSI r « This De Gesput ahd Sul) CoN I uN work on Etiquette and Rusiness and Social tels bow to perforen all the varions duties of iife and bow to appen” 10 the best advantage 08 sii GOORsIODS, Agents Wanted ~Sead for of cular { descr pt on of Lue Worl ahd « X18 ters 10 A - Address Nanoxas Pusiissisg Oo. Phils del p , Pa SAPONIFIER is the = Origtral * Concentrated Lye and Soap Maker, Dirsctions accompany each uh for ard, Saft and Tollet sonp STA, B W fel welch and strength your grocer for SLPONE. 5. ARK Fin no olherr, ALT (MANUFACTURING COs Phila we rp pn tire, -Kezper Tumbler To Medicine The-Ke: or invalgable in the sick-room. Sime piifies and alds in giving doses medi cine socutalely. Indosed by all Pluysicians and Nunes Mailed post B= i upon receipt of cash oF stamps, iow, each; for De; 20 for LOU; 100 fo $4.00. LETHE MUSES DAME CO., Danbury, Ot. CAN MAKE $3 PER DAY SELLING OUR XEW Platiorm Family Scale. Weighs accurate’y vp to 35 Ihe. Its handsome eanatce ys it tw of ARETE AN , of the New Yors vole, The duaw ammugition foro volume at a fraction postage, 7 cents. © the issding AMERICAN BODR Tribune Bui New York We will send our Kloctro-Veltale thes Blectric Appliances upon fiat for 80 nh a. Ae of the Liver Ene Ran Pans wat Wo of the Liver, Ri : puaranioad or mo pay. A wire owe Address _Voitale Belt Co. Marshall, Mich. RUPTURE Relleved and cured without the infury trusses inflict by Pr. J, A SHERMAN'S svstein. Office, 931 Broadway, New York, Mis book, with photographic likenesses of bad cases before and after cure, maltied for 10 vents, Gen Polished Granite Monuments from Dat) B25, Free on boa d ship to any part of Amer fea. luscriptions accurate and beautiful. Pans free. JUIN W. LEGGE, s OUNQC MEN sine. th. Kver fnduaty anteed hs pri mont. a allo Addrom R. Ve entine, nestle = bm Se HA GE o N W YORK Eclectic Medioal College 4 Sewmion 1880-1 begins October first, continues five month p NEWTON. Ju, M. D,, 19 K. Fees, a8. For catalogue address RUBT. 8. WA NTED — By an Experfenced English Lady, St, New York, w tion as Governess-Companion in a family er inglish, French, rudimentary German; needle ood references. Address LL. L., Box 672, NewYork, A LLEN’S Brain Food-—cures Nervous Debility AR & Weakness of Generative Organs, yey druggists Send for CIr'l'r to Allen's Pharmacy, $13 First Ave N.Y. A YEAR and expenses to agents Ouilit Free, Address PF. 0 VICKERY, Augusta, Maing for the TRADE. Territory given ENTERPRISE CARRIAGE CO. Clacirratl. 0. Calslogus FRER IN GOLD Given Away. Send 3b stamp for particulars, Address Tas " Messexcen, Lewisburgh, Union Co Pa. NEW OWAR EC on new plan, giving « H 4 Progress of the United States ata G anes Hoy B St, N. YX. Her pling Habit Cured in 19 wo Da. J. OPIUM Ea Bors NER" A MONTH! AGENTS WANTED! 7 Rost Selling Articles In the word; 8 sample free. Jay Bmoxsow, D ty r——— Corn—~Ktate XeloW, ones oer did. No lecture 1 ever heard from Mr. heart when we scornfully despise our Mix Gough moved my soul like the spectacle | imple p'easures? Every innocent means of my own sweet boys, ‘playing drunk | of happiness should be welcomed, and rane SRERNE LL manane xtra..... ERE an Dukur~Oreniar 4 Ohesso—New York Full Cream, ,.... Petroleum—Crud ROT) as papa “oes.” gloomy thoughts persistently banished. 0. cu ve ees 08 @OT HICH se'ling our Rubber Stamps and M Swuples Free, Cook & Dlssell, evens A WEEK. $I2a day at home Outfit fres. Address Taos = ho H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Nas Vv is Sold by all . KY K U-ils HE LIVER, THE BU NEL and toe #1 This cowbined action Hives Io cure 2 0S, wl pore” RWhy Are ve Sick Rio become cogoed or fsonovs humorsars 3 nto the blood at adouid bs * A TT WE WEAK E4YOLS oy action of Teese orpas Crow of causing free pr main Uicir power ko ? 5 Ly Love sleepless nigh Cee BIDNEY WORT and rojoios Inj Reals. Tis a dry, vegetable dl] 4 Oe pactegy will 4 8 it i of vow egy, JE * Jor you. Price, TOL REMEDY FOR CURING CONSUMPTION, EEL TRY IT. YOUR REXEDY 13 ALLEN' LONG BALSAM Pores FRAZER LUSB O.4. \ hE, NAY Landa THE BONANEAL FOr Boy REE EY #8 selling our wo eu N " Ra ite ol EN wien by bos lite IANCOCK 3 author 2 6 over 10,000 a week { Apent Quid be SCH, Fur bel bao dy h quick, HUBBARD Biss. Puliadeiphia. Pa. 5 R BE TTY n 4 oF WaSHINGTON, NEW JERSEY, SEI-X.%S 144Stop ORCANS New Plans S103 fo $1,000. Theta Sos io: Nid DANTE P RRATY, Washington, ¥. 3. "CELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. Amber. The lightest, handsomest, and strongest known. Sold wr Opticlass and Jewelers, Made by SPENCER 0.M.00,18 a dane. New York. ad Dari eu in ed Address, with stamp, EE ART a b.0. ATRONA Ba PAN ER pS PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Fila your own town. Terms and Oniths
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers