A DEALER IN MENAGERIES, ANS. How Ie Made a Fortune ouipf Canaries Investments in Rhinoceri sid Hippo- potami. A New York letter to the Atiants (Ga.) 0 omstifl ion gays: One day I was walk- ing down Chathmn sweet, New York, when hy steps were serested by a queer sound, proceeding from a store. It was a sort of chirping tumult, as if all the birds in the world had met in a debating gociety. 1 had little difficulty in finding the door from whetice the chopped volume of music issued. It was, { be- lieve, No. 55, a handsome front and a large store. sauntered to the dom and looked in, and saw a sight that I do not think can be duplicated in America On each side of the store the walls were lined with bird cages, from top to bot- tom. The groundwork was of canaries, and there must have been thousands of these yellow tufts of fuss and feather, Underneath the swarming tiers of canaries were large compartments in which were pheasants, cranes, and every rare hird, sacred or profane, that I ever heard of. On the higher shelves | were smaller song birds and show birds, from inane love birds, or finches, up to the hoariest and hoarsest of parrots. walking leisurely. As he saw me he turned and came forward with that easy, pleasant grace common to well-bred city men. I saw at a glance that he was of the best type of Gerona - hearty, seli-poised, intelligent and cordial. face was clear, thoughtful and strong — the face of a man who has scen the | world, has fought it and whipped it. 1 am thus special in deseribing him be. cause 1 found himoneof the most agree- able and entertaining men 1 ever met, engaged in the most unique business, and the Napoleon of his profession. I don't know how I came to know so much of him so soon, exoept that he dis- | played that engaging frankness that the traveled man shows to the inquisitive | provincial. At any rate, 1 discovered after an hour's chat that I was taking to Henry Reiche, of the firm of Reiche & Bro, This firm is faraous the world over, and stands withou: competitors, In the name of this firm there are organized bands of hunters in all parts of Asia and Africa engaged in capturing elephants, lions, tigers, ete., for shipment to the branch house in Hamburg From th point the animals are supplied to er America. All wild animals that fill the menageries and parks of this continent ith with whom | spent that delightful day. His history is full of interest. In 884 or 45 Charles ard Reiche, two young Germans; having little jess than the practical education that seems to be natural to young Ger- ans, were bird peddlers in New York. They went about from street to street selling birds from stands. Their trade was principally in eanaries, which they nad sent over from Genmuany, where they only cost ten or twelve cents each. They did a pretty Inir business up to 1852, when they made a daring stroke | that made them s fortune and estab- lished the enormous business they now control. At that time California was in the flush of gold finding. Gold was pientifui there, but luxuries few. There was no transcontinental road, and the Isthmus route was tedious and costly. Young Reiche, knowing that canaries were unknown there, and be. Heving they would become the rage when. once seep, determined to carry over a Cargo. He, therefore, got 3,000 of | the yellow fellows together, and, pack- ing them in :ittle cages, started for the Isthmus. Arriving at Cartagena, he | i his birds carried across to Panama bay, by natives, and canght a ship there and soon reached San Francisco. He was late in reaching the ship, and the captain was about to sail without him, but, seéings his boats filled with covered boxes, who ught it was belated mail mat- ter. When Reiche drew near, the cap- | Jit hailed him and asked him what he Henry * Canary birds,” replied Reiche. “Canary birds!” shouted the captain. “If I'd known it was birds, I'd ha’ left you long ago.” Reiche's first idea of the flush he | was to ride was caught from a homesick Englishman, who, hearing the wh of a bullfnch that had been sc.identally put in with the canaries, offered to pay the expenses of the entire cargo for that finch. Asthis amouuted to $383 R: ich saw t hat he bad struck a rich lead, and he put the price of canaries at £25 each. | They did become the rage. Hotels, sa- cons, private residences, all must have A a canary. The little yellow birds made a craze like the tulip nuanis. The price soon went up to $50, and the cargo was tide t a rich man. A bout this time the menagerie became an American institution. The “moral ow went abroad through the land, and the re was & demand for Asiatic-African animals. For years Hamburg, in Ger. many, had been a sort of depot at which such aplmeis were gathered by ineom- ing ships froth the tropics ceived gh: idea of establishing a house there, and supplying it steadily with all sorts of beasts, to be captured by bands of hunters, working under his direction in the deserts and jungles. Up to that | time the supply at Hamburg had been | essual, depending on what sailors or | ship captains might bring over. Mr. Reiche went into Africa and Asia, and found that his best method was to de. pend upon native hunters, acting under | order of their sheikh and directed by a | few while men of courage and address. His system was soon so organized that | his beast depot at Hamburg became the jargest in the world. It was supplied constantly with all sorts of captures, from aS ante lopes up to elephaats, running through all the pli {from leopard to rhinoceros. From Hamburg he now supp. ies the most of the parks and gardens of Europe. and ships heavily to America. He imports every wild animal sold in this country, and keeps a “large snd assorted stock on hand.” Nine-tenths of the animals in Central park, New York, and a large proportion | of those in other parks are his property. When Lie receives a consignment of lions | or hippopotami, or a few rhinoceri and "oom ”" in Ces tral purchaser. He keeps in his siore only a few of the smaller animais—and even the inary in Central park is stocked with his birds. He considers twenty lions a good average stock, with proba- bly as many tigers, a dozen elephants, four rhinoceri (or rhinocerosses), and | oth.r beasts in proportion. The most extensive animal he dealsin is the hippopotamus. A good hippo potamus is worth (to a man who wants him) from $10,000 to $12,000. They must be captured when they are young and raised on goat's wilk. A caravanof | hunters returning across the desert with captured animals is a strange sight. | About one thousand goats are brought with the caravan to furnish milk for the | antelopes, hippopotami and other milk drinkers. As tbe goals cease giving milk they are killed and fed to the flesh eaters, The animals are carried in bamboo cages, rigged with ropes. and | slung across the backs of camels. From the coust they are shipped to Hamburg, where Mr. Charles Reiche receives them uy “uy ing to demand. Elephants are captured | when young, and usually by driving | them into immense traps that Converge | rapidly until the beasts are cribbed into | reach of ropes, A fine elephant will bring from $1,000 to $5,000. Of course, the price of animals varies with the de. mand. You must get a man that wants a beast before you can get any price for him—then the price depends npon how much he wants him. **You see,” said Mr. Reiche, smiling, “vou wouldn't give 810 for that lion there (for we had now drifted to Cen- tral park) for your own use, tnd yet he is worth 82.500.” A good companionable tiger can be bought for $1,200, and a nice leo rd is worth about $400. Monkeys the bunch by the dozen at es each, and a rhinoceros brings A $3,000. A giraffe is very expensive and very delicate, and a zebra, striped up to the regulation of ninety,nine and one is worth about $1,000. Giraffes die of in- digestion, the rhinoceros, despite his heavy overcoat, is a frequent victim of consumption, and the monkey dies of emotional languor. The depot for sea lions is San Fran- cisco, where. a man named Mu:lett su- perintends. They are taken on the south California const, and bring about $400 each. ~ Polar bears come from the Arvctics, and are worth about $2,000. They are kept ip deep caves that are damp and sunless, or in dens set in ice and with Lugze blocks of ice dripping from the top. The point at which Mr Reiche buys them is Hamburg, very few being taken in our Arctios. The snake | | trade is one of the important dopart- | ments. The headquarters for snakes is | Para, in Central America, though, of | course, the boa comes from the Nile, and the anaconda from Afrioa. There | are various depots for rave fish, and Mr Reiche is an enthusiast on this subject, being owner of the New York] aquarium. The bright-colored come from the tropical waters, and the dullcolored from Acetic stations. ostrich has animal, and yet is worth $1,000, They are caught while young, Birds come from all quarters. The most expensive is the bird of paradise, which sells for S200 to 8600, according to plumage Parrots, paroque and monkeys are brough come in on forexgn ships. The principal shipping points are Alexandria, in Egypt, and Ceylon, off Southern India. At the first point the animals Com the Nile region and the heart of Africa are collected: at the ta wi, latter the tigers and lions from {the jungles of India. The bed fof the Nile is the best hunting { ground, as it has been for years, overy wild beast of the tropics may be | found there, and in fine sample. The African elephants ar smallest and i most stupid, but otherw 10 bensts from Africa are large and vigorous, Toe amount of business done by My Reiche wonderful, His { order for canaris is 10,000 birds a woek | These are imported from Germany and | sent all over the continent. He has an | agent in Savannah, and! iments to Atlanta. Frequently he re. ceives £50,000 worth of animals in one | manitest, There is a growing demand from cirouses and menageries and moo- logical gardens all over the country. No circus now travels without its menagerie, and no park is complete without iis 2001 ogioal d lepartment | There is a large sale for rare birds and | antelopes for private parks and grounds { Mr. Vanderbilt once gave 500 for a bird of paradise. A large number of | PAITOLS are so! id and trained to talk and sing, a od t alker being worth $100 or $00, ‘he supp! y of all hirds and animals must be kept ap by importa- tion, as few of them breed ip captivit y- lions and tigers are about the only animals that breed in captivity, and they bring only such ragged and puny cubs that they are not salable. The growing demand, therefore, and | {the losses by death must be sup- | plied by fresh captures and importations. Conseque mtly Mr. Reiche's hunters are | kept busy, and his ships are aiways coming in. Frequently he receives a special order from some cireus ov park for a certain animal. This order is at once dispatched through various agents until it reaches the hunters, who or- | ganize a special expedition and cap- ture it. A pair of hippopotami are now being brought over for a ¢cirous at a cost of abs S20,000, A lar se business American animals; this well as the importing, is controlled by Mr. Reiche. The grisaly bear is the typical American beast, and isalways in demand for Europes an buyers. T buffalo, moose elk, and caribou are the | larger animals exported most heavily, they being American types. The opos- sum, the gray squirrel, the red fox, the hedgehog, are the most popular of the smaller animals, while the puma is in great demand as a new type. The mock- ing bird is a great favorite among birds, and Mr. Reiche has men who search the Southern forests for them annually. { The red-headed woodpecke r is exported heavily as a show bird, and the robin is esteemed in E nglish parks as a quiet but | handsc fellow. Thereis a very large profit on the exchange. Mr. Reiche once bought a pair of fine cranes in Schoh arie. N. Y., to fill an English order—giving $25 for them and receiv- ing $400. There is an interesting story connected with the famous London show ele phants, s showing some of the points of the animal trade. A Mr. Ke ly, a Sanker, who drifted into the show busl- ness by a mortgage on the Van Amburgh menagerie, sent out a ship to Ceylon. He loaded it with a number of Yankee houses, all ready for putting together. He had the sashes, doors, locks, and everything complete. Arriving at Cey- lon, he sold the houses at an enormous profit, ball asted his ship with coffee, and put thirteen elephants and a lot of animals aboard, He made $30,000 clear money by the trip, and had his ele. phants clear. Of this herd five were trained for the Lo nd lon show, and one of them, ** Baby,” is the mother of the first elephant ever born in captivity. Of course, Mr. Reiche has amasae huge fortune in his unique trade. is more than a millionaire, and is ¢ tainly growing richer. He has a superl residence at Bergen, N. J., where he is surrounded by every luxury that taste and money can command. $3 is is done exporting th business, me NL e § ul is i & He C—O 3. Cariosities of Speculation. It is curious to note what men will do to make money. Some months ago there was quit e a brisk speculation in | hops, there bx ing as usual two parties— the bulls this case of the farmers, who naturally wished prices to go up, and of the brew- to decline. The contest raged furiously in this city and elsewhere for many weeks, as there was really a large amount of money involved. A wells known circular, publishing the quota- tions of hops here, gave great dissatis- faction to the bulls, because its prices were not up to their i ideas; and, as the | commercial Jepo rters had been in the habit of publishing circulars, it was re- i solved, at a mass-meeting of the farmers, not to subse ribe for any paper that pub- lished printed notice to this effect was actually gent to all the great dailies of this city. With the right or the wrong of this con- | trove: | speak stir u; Then Suffice it to say that hops can 1 tempest in more than one way. rain, squune years ago, when it | WAS propuse d to put duties on tea and | coffee, tlicre arose a mighty specu ulation in these articles. One speculator was! { credited with holding about 60,000 bags of coffee; and the speculation Th tea was equally important. At the time of the i famine in Bengal, Hindoostan, some ! years since, there was great speculative activity here in rice, and some heavy losses as weil as handsome gains were scored. It was trading on the distress- edness of othe TS, for the inhabitants of | Bengal depend almost entirely on rice to | sustain life, and it was assumed that, when the crop failed in that region and | famine ensued, there would be a great demand for rice; than speculating in breadstuffs, whereby | the poor are often the chief sufferers. Agsin, nt the time of the Turkish war, when Turkey was invaded, it was the signal for immense transac- itions in opm, which now mainly from that country. And Ww |in progress, based on an anticipated falling-off in the next crop. A number {of large drug houses here and Smyrna, Turkey, control the lof the stock, and have {realized Jarge profits on were | | venture. Turkish pruges, at time of the war alluded to, also bought up largely by speculators, | and for a while proved profitable; but { uitimately this article ot gpeculation, , | which few would think of in such a | th: | one Strong house. | made and lost in indigo speculations; i and, for that matter, this article has far | | more commercial importance ths an | | | might at first be imagined. Then a few | years ago, when we had the potato- bug | invasion, there was a large epeculation | in paris green, and the market advanced | tions of speculators. Another curious speculation] was that in canary seed, two or three years since, when it was | | supposed that the crop would prove a failure. A speculator, with a genius for statistics, actually prepared an esti- mate of the number of canary-birds in the United States, and the quantity of seed consumed per day, and consider- able money was Yeally made in this Stpangefiventure. t> yet the cases cited here are but a few among many that might be named where what would be called curious sorts of speculations really pay better than half the railroad or mining stocks that are foisted on a credulous public.—Frank Leslie's 1llus- rated Newspaper. One of the home missionaries on Puget sound, holding a meeting in a mixed neighborhood of whites and In- dians, observed that the Indian women, carrying their babies according to their usual custom, were surprised to sce that among the whites the men carried the babies. At next appointment the power of example was seen, as the In- dian men came carrying the babies for the first time. FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD, a——— The Hest Management of Grapevines, To prune a tree or shrub severely whe n | in full growth is known to be hurtin! | know its extent, There is not oniy a | shook checking growth, but hurting the tree for years, it not permanently; and | where the exolsion of limbs {a severe it | may kill the tree. Some will bear the | The willow | is one of these, A tew years ago I re. moved a clump of rose willows, eutling it off even with the ground. It had been growing some teu years thriftily, and was cut in July, New shoots put out, | but tardily and spindiing, and made a | growth of about eighteen inches, the leaves gradually turning pale and bx coming mildewed and prematurely drops ping. Another clump near by, of the SAMO age, was out in spring before the | buds pushed. The growth of this was | magnificent, dark, thrifty and healthy, | because there was no shook, no hurt | and hence no ocoasion for mildew, had a similar experience with a blag currant hedge, which 1 out back verely when in full OWE mildew fol. | | lowing. This was three years ago. My cutting back since then has been dong early, when the woon was €t in its dormant state, and a clean, healthy plant is the result and numer ous other cases tha at might be mention fare conclusive mildew fOlOWS severe injury. The treatment we give the grapevine is a parallel case. We cut hack severely our thrifty sorts in ring and vinch back in the su a single cutting when the vine dormant state may not hurt it pera hly, as in the ease of the wil currant, and as is the practic hedges generally, But itist continue it yearly: add summer pruning, and pu the task of duced leaves a heavy, ined crop ol i | | | a 8 t i The me, { i that sind 8p NOW ins whi pit nummer 1% i i the nt V y much to to Lhe ro perfectin rant, to unthi and the usual mi! dew or rot, or dropping of leaves, or ail, is the result, Our fruit trees are cut and forced in their growth until the ery of disease become ge neral. Be rries are shaded situat ion, the strawberry cut of the grass, and the blackberry and rasp- berry from the forest border a doned new land, and exposed wo the hot sun, and subjected to tl strain of cultivation, Is it wonder that de. terioration lows such treatment? Nature will allow improvement where it favors hor] law habit, but she never fails to punish rs because her ad vance is slow and gradual. Let a conform to this. Our crop, { then, though more moderate, will be more uniform, with haps we now comp need more room on the ty has nd aban- i to the Hn i o or INess, ss nin of. number of clusters, reduction of the n p are such a severe draft forces. At the same time! fruit little certainly in ¥ i I the non \ i the volume of | iessened, and the quality proved When [ pr g and hacking I got mil- run on the lessened the clusters an d diverted growth, [ got hea! th and a fine iy crop with the same vines and others, and for ne ANY Years. Now and thea a littie dew will show, i growing 8 ason, asudden © to transpiration forcing, aided danpne $8 restra will happen to the true and natural state, jected to the strai n tion that our grapevines and berries ¢ No excess of ] should be pruning, in and in the sit wid u ie ty is is ra ticed manurir dew; when Ui gave Yin, the i nner i HPproved mi t is when and t trees dise ASC. one ii kinds in fruit-g rowing i manuring, | specimens, 8] 10 eX. moist (Gent uatio ure in ro or ir the s0il (r.. 18 cman Health Hints, For A Bomx.~If ie | broken use raw linseed oil If the skin be broken, wet with a and the white of an egg, and charcoal through thin musiin. Heapacne —We extreme ¢ asses of heada« an hour byt t} is not skin sil have known +} he cured ir + ii some ay taking a teaspoon! powdered charcoal in half a water. It is an innocent alkali. A Varor Bata.—A vapor bath easily prepared at hom ne. pail of hot water under a i chair, or if you have not one row piece of Hoard this the patient should hour, covered by a blanke the floor, so as to keeg A CURE FOR A Covan.- ~The N York Tribune says: The following cipe is sent by a valued friend w who has | found it very eflicient in her family in curing coughs: Tincture of blood-root two ounces; tincture lobells, two ounces; tincture of tolu, two ounoees: essense of anise, three drams; essence of wintergreen, one dram; two quarts | ot MOIRBEES, one every three hours, or oftener i nay require. of inely 13 u be + % y in the steax reachin 0 ow ~ i ba of Jose, the pnea AS LOC CRBC Women’s Rights in Mississippi. The new code of Mississippi has cut up by the roots all the ancient disabili ties of married women, and the ey are now free and equal in every respec their husbands. It is the most radical legislation yet had upon the subject Susan B. Anthony and Mrs. Meriwether should at once move 0 that Sta‘e and not cease this agitation till the ight vote lias been sceured as thor agh) ly the rights of property have been. ** Sect ion 1167. The common law, asto | the cisabilitics of married women, and itg effect on the rights of property of t | wife, is totally abrogated, and marriage to a8 { the or incapacity ownership, property of any sort to make contracts, and all acts in reference to property wi ich she could | lnwfully do if she were married; but évery woman now married, or here. On a woipan as {o do ot capac ity to acquire, hold, manage, con- trol, use, enjoy and dispose of ail prop erty, real and personal, in possession or expectancy, and to make any contract in reference to it, and to bind herself per sonally, and to sue and be sued, with all the rightsand liabilitie 4 inc ide nt t! as if she was not married.’ “Sec. 1108. Husband and wi each other, “Sec. 1169. A married woman may dispose of her estate, real and personal, by last will and testament, in the same i manner as if she was not married.” “Bec. 1170. Dower and courtesy, as | heretofore known, are abolished.” Other sections conform the general laws to these radical changes. Ilusband and wife inherit from erch other all their respective property if there be no children, and eac'i achild’s part if there { be cnildren or tle descendants of chil- dren. They maydissent from each other's wills and take of each other's estates ac. cording to law, except that if there be no children, in case of such dissent the lissentient gets only half of the estate if he or she has no “estate of his or her own. If the dissentient has property of his own or herown, equal to one-fifth | of what he or she would be entitled to | in the others’s estate, then the deficiency is to be made up out of the other's es- tate.— Memphis (Tenn.) Avalanche. ———— The Thunderbolt, The name thunderbolt, which is stil in use, even by good writers, seems to bave been introduced in consequence of the singular effects produc ed | i igh tning ikon a sandhill or sar dy soil. It bores a hole often many feet in length, which is found throughout lined { with vitrified sand. The old notion | was that an intensely hot, solid mass, | whose path was the flash of lightning, had buried itself out of sight. melting the sand as it went down. It is quite possible that this notion may have been strengthened by the occasional observa. tion of the fall of aerolites, which are sometin es found in the holes they have made, still exceedingly hot. And at least many of the cases in which light. ning is said to have been seen in a per- fectly elear sky is to be explained in the same way. Another remarkable peculiarity, lon ago observed, is the characteristic smell produced when lightning strikes a build- ing or a ship. In old times it was sup- posed to be sulphurous; nowadays we know it to be mainly due to ozone, In fact, all the ready modes of forming ozone, which are as yet at the disposal of the chemist, depend upon applica- tions of electricity. Lut, besides ozone, which is formed from the oxygen of the air, there are often proauced nitric acid, ammonia and other compounds, derived from the constituents of air and of aque- ous vapor. All these results can be pro OTe, i€ can sue { | i { | i | A WOMAN'S CHECKERED CAREER, Bud of a Long Life Filled With Heomark able and Homantie Incldents««Born at Gibraltar of Noble Blood, Marvied nt Twelve and a Mother at Thirteen VY onrs=stior Social Trivmphs in thi Country. Mra. Abijnh Smith is ends a eareer strangely cause of is varied Hghts and On the high fort was born to in the Thus be shadows dead, interesting { i fied rock of Gibraltar there tthe noble house of Gannecliffy, summer of 1793, an heiress, with much ceremony anil pomp who, at the age has been given sa Montrepaose Four life of the child heiress of and a dreadful epidemic { that scourged ** the rock * left her doubly an; both [sther and mothe were lost to her, and by adoption she became a member of a certain noble Spanish family, who gave much more onre to all else than moral or mental She was in possession of her large and with every given to her whims and wil fainess her development was rapid even for that clime; at twelve she was ma ried, at thirteen was a mother, and at seventeen a widow with four children. Her husband was Jose De Sa Manos, a Spanish gentleman of leisure, the vietim ol a duel entered into upon her ncoount Not long subsequent to the death of De Manos three of Lis four ch { died; thus was his widow left with but relative in the world, This was a daushiter, christened Inez, who, in ac. cordanot written will of her father, i the care of a Cathol tion such daughter went all the and Donna Isabella “afloat in the world,’ bind her to tl wudent have been hers, The season of 1815 was a at Gibraltar, and vis world—among others Capiain George W. Walker, the owner American trading vessel, brother of Commodore Walker, of the United States navy. At a ball given ey the Amerioan consul Captain Wa met Madame De Sa Manos, and, despi numerous warnings from frien effect that she was the ** Gibraltar,” within two weeks he ! fi bride. Tarning | “er of Cony into for I'his infant she eighty seven, nl is ast rest Me | Ganneciifll estates, t altention i ¢ Sa one L with the was consigned to meet, To the father's property. WHE Onoe mor f O hie deemed ns « tie iC} brilliant one iors were ther from all over the an i i ut i to thie TE 4 i } $3 5 Als Bil ie} g £014, slic Phi ty ord {6 proper I her new His rank i ? gb eing with tl nest Wns Having a Ni Ww ern and Mr 5. We directly lirops and others oi New England ol connect gh il I @ and hi hi wealth, ! LW en ut ain not al LW Osi are f { u HU y be y ia ane tC JB ports, married if was, | however, tendec fourt lu Lael ot i aver h of whi glad in the 5 Maly © 1 every far Ho years, becoming navigation boast one ain ot alter OCeasion, BET LO save storm Sy COTGl Pion add 3 asiy 8 guit ad y : | Eastern and Middle States. At the Now X ork Dom oeratio State sonven. tion, held in Saratoga, Judge ( bharies A Hapallo was nominated tor o biol judge of the court of apg wala I'he delegation from Ne w York olty was divided equally among Pam many and antl Tammany. Speaker Samuel J. Randall has been nomi pated fur Congress in Philadelphia for the tenth consecutive time he fret day's registration in firooklva this showed an inoresse of nearly 17.04 Pwo boys quarteled over a game of cards al ‘ Here's one for which Line shouted, hemi,” and threw a big stone oke the other's skull, killing him. A woman 101 vears old was arrested as a vagrant the other day in New York Ldwin a lad of sixteen, employed in the agrienlturl works st lion, N, Y., was dang hit y wid whirled aboot at One arts was twisted off and a Pooler, in Lhe muohines rate 4 k # and ware broken prove an international park at 1a Falls is being pushed, historia, ge Hanoroft, has just ated his elghuieth birthday at New; th le HT t on Glen i A statue of the poet Robert Yarns, has bean he Central park, Now York. The behall ot the elty by man Carts gnvelisdd in glatue wns received on M Ryo ie Cooper, and George Will vorad an address, Arenibald Forbes, the tamons English war Gudent, in Naw York a few He will manke a lecturing tour of ited States OF Tus) arrived Western and Southarn States. By the bursting of a boiler steam thuosher on a raseh (al, the fireman and and the engines: belonging tw a near Princeton, two Uhinsinen ware and six others were erionsly scalded ‘he prisoners confined in jail Misa, fire WO nsamed at Grenada, which was were the All buliding the prisoners wt y BOL o i | i i PL Wed in 8 HES al Saratoga 3 . ti and Niagara in 1¢ summer and at Washington and other centers when the snow came. Rumorsof i gui reached ars of Captain W Shir wh wou a nte 141 He ¢ ides pring him home, and wit! fore ost It ¥ sone Jackso for i 4 | Or UARS pr nos | Martin Van Baren time i gled me out in crowded drawing-rooms Impl oring me to give him a monopoly of Im) 1 ney w Clay and Webster, } Cs an and Re andolp! i 1 if the day—1 knew \ a savor, and SE ayed it 0 1 Ollie me to hls cause, an d again sin- Bilt hie 3 packet of letters in which admiration ahd, indeed, se n ents even more decided appear with the autographs of the ie mentioned as among her devo And there were eiogquent episties from others almost thelr peers, Wintie id Scott APPEArs perhaps not 1o advantage, in a hillett th'at would have t an ard ¥ Swain. the poet, writes pleading pouring out his ** fee in a hall gen by the by, are quent p ublished vo! ume ‘here are other letters from 0 her men of prominence in the | pO ition, and social world ot a i DE mtury ago, but there is no demand for their publication. Not all of Mrs | Walker's time was spent in this coun- try; she crossed the Atlantic seven times before she was forty, d in the first ty London and Paris she was conspicuous many seasons. And made many juests—** harmless t were,” she ever averred, as in her { days she recalled them. | In 1854 Captain Walker died; but his widow remained free but three years, when she accepted the suit of Abijah Smith, of this city, and eame from New York to become mistress of that looal celebrity's home on Golden hill. The marriage was an unhappy one. When by an explosion at bis saw mill Smith was Seriously injured, the home was broken up, his wife chafing restraints put husband. While yet she was Walker she had made a * dash | street, and, leaving Golden i iN er become P. Wil for an in te rv ew, in 3 ont count i £5 unspeaka de ansas, the which, pd ina EE of poems. 31 st I his iterary arr i OCH Of sh ey Iatter COM hill. she would never she declared. and I did I doubled i Panama, other stocks,” hat I was about, | not come out a * lame ducky’ | my fortune in two years.” During the past twenty years Mrs, | Smith has for the most part made her { home this city, though not as the | helpme of her Hashaod who died | year. The property that she held at her mary Inge ghie retained in her own right and thus was entirely free from depend | ence. Recentiy her advanced | weighed heavily upon her, and she grow | teaty and at times sullen and morose Wi ing and El tha “I knew last E | deserved by those with whom she had | {to do The daughter, Inez, died ong {years agn in a convent, and save when recalling that daughter, or re. counting social triumphs of the past, Mrs. Smith was seldom an agreeable companion; and with her better nature had gone als ness of form, and other gave her prominence i in days bygone. It was her that the leading artist of 1nd pleaded long and eloquently to have ner sit to him ; “and such an arm!"—hren cast lnster as a model for sculptors of re- nown. her features were shrunken, evidences there were innumerable that the beauty and power of other days had | altogether passed.— Kingston (N. Freeman. a ——— Bat-Killing Extraordinary. A correspondent of the Funcicr Chronicle sends the following: wood, near Manchester, of a rather novel rat-killing mateh the other day, between Mr. dog, Turk, and Mr. Lewis’ monkey, £25. The conditions of the match were | that each one had to kill twelve rats, and the one that finished them quickest to be declared the winner, was agreed that Turk wes to finish his twelve rats first, good time too, many bets being made on the dog alter he had finished them. After a few minutes hind elapsed, it now came the monkey's turn, and a commo- tion it caused, Time being ealled, the monkey was immediate:y put to his twelve rats, Mr. Lewis, his owner, at the same time putting his hand in his cont is weket and handing the monkey a peculiar hammer. to the outlookers not long in ge iting to work with his Lammer, and once at work he was not grace and It him. You may talk about a dog being quick at rat-killing. but he is really not in it with the monkey and his hammer. key would worry the rats in the same way as a dog; but the conditions said to gence, and won the $25, besides a lot of bets for his owner, The various theaters in New York | theo on ag Lag scale in the labratory. city employ 24,000 people. 3 3 Deadwood, Dakota, has just had a fair which lasted a week and which was the first Hills, General Grant presided and Senator Conk. ling spoke ats Republican mass nesting in Warren, Ohio, F. M. Shaw, lite president of the First Na. wank of Meola, Kansas, which went inlo months ago, has been arrested charged with the con. tional t aq by uidalion soln i miates marshal, entries in the report of rank. “w nited dition of th A ceremony by telegraph took place a lew the contracting parties being H. A manager of a telegraph office at Al and Mi iss LL. innie Faris, at Portl y the lays ag off Moe at land was Uransmitle dirty six minut , Mo., the ue i. ihe he xt day W« tobaocconists of Lieh tailed lor $158,000 wit} Ya. assets placed at LAVSe ’ gle 1 reports rom G0 in Lou. Arkansas, indicate a Various points i, Alabama, Texas, sspe and Fon 6 Orop as © mpared with last in at Bay City, Mich, 1 400 teat In vie hie fire persons ree olher were h he: mer. Ports Bell, together wi otton and other t her whart at fire S81 1'he stemney I sano Oy y CRAY al $41,000 £0 From Washington. | year the United States to Great Britain, and 10,094 pounds papers and periodicals domestio ails weighed 13 x age payis 829, or Tmdm maks next is Oth with itilers is 0 Ls The the on which $1.2 0 France. ni ra: sported over J in ed OHS, 3, is discovered that safe in the office of the second saditor of the treasury at Washing. deposited a large number of effects taken from the tiers whose relatives has boon robbed of prop. % i] Ww ioe Are i pedsonal Ts rig kk dead Ih at willie wi + § ment LL of tl of u , year ended oe domestio money ee department for June 30, 1880, has just sted. II shows that during the ),.637 orders for Sion 352 818 were inst §58 204,401 for the previous He wali hb e of in Admiral Farragut, Hoxie, On in rouare, flag ship, y has been scooesRin Farmgut out of the old the Hartord. i represen Farmgut his Jeit g upon at i tackle. so stands upon a | Mais eet six inches high, and the total It has been covered with sail wil a § propel Loy pio It is of with » arragul & sre "ET an = Fine-ginss in Ot restin OOK 85 ® ue of grants wl is odestal 3 § ten © to await as to the date of Lhe vavaeling oereinonios The deughter of ex-P Zachary Tay. has boon paid $16,000 by Lrossnrer, This was the balance of the salary which Ges. eml Taylor 1d ave received had he lived until his term of office expired, would Ih general in his aonoal report gates that 24, 860 seamen were treated daring g cont of Gi 2.185 yo public debi was re. “The re oash in the } ; total debt, less onal 5.604, 182.66, ¥ whe asident lor the th & Burgeo ta bagry is $1.91 States mints Value §l, $60 320 | 1,000,760 | 48 40 16 Quarier-engios, . ... 475 £4.015,784 2.301.000 -h IRE Total gold Silver dollars Cents Total coinage 5 151.058 The report general land whe flacal thore > re publie } lands and 65 elnima, YOY Ware ma ie as follows of the during | ending 30, 1880 vod 15 acres of 52.161 nove of private land of the affioe oOnmieee shows ioner that June 600,253 ", ORI urve Cash entries. . . 4 } Homestowd entries imberculture entries Agricultural college sorip Locations with military bounty warrants Swamp lands patente Lands certified tor railroad Foreign News. 3, 184 +250 land 88! 94 ‘ee 522 HK 379 to States 3 Parposos i. 167 3 wool for New Orleans, having on board 150 British farmers lor Texas. Turkish troops near Scutari are dyiog of | {over at the rite of 200 a day. time off the coast of British Amerios. A dis- pateh from Victoria says: six feot in length, with an orthodox | in by Indians recently, they baving eanght it in deep water in the straits of Deharo. appearance oreales intense interest among savants, and old fishermen cannot place the The sea serpent has been photo. and the body will be preserved in spirits and sent to Ottawa lor classifioation. » rg | Rep of monster, ¥ Fifty barges on the Nv have been destroyed By 4va, euiniiing * $250,000, A meoting of five hundred Orangemen al Giltord, county Down, Ireland, has passed resolutions calling upon the government to gospend trial by jury in murder oases, and declaring that citizens of the United States and other foreigners abusing the hospitality of the country by denouncing the institutions of he United Kingdom should be expelled. According to the last issue of a wellknown rerman work on population, the number of gninat 1,430,000,000 two years ago. almost everything which enters the city; that of London on scarcely anything but coals, whic h furnish n large revenue, The war between the British and the Afghans | tWOo years, They say that they are unable to remain as deputies in a country where liberty is trodden under foot, Mr. William the house of commons, has been elected lord mayor of London, Prince Bismarck will probably have pre. sented in the next session ol the Prussian workingmen's assurance and mutual assist. will be bound to contribute. The bill is pro- arresting Gorman em gration, gal. Many shops and houses were gutted. The Spanish government has resolved to proceed against all priests who iniroduce poiities into their sermons, and to dismiss all mayors who are notorious Carlists. A reward of $5,000 has boon offered for the arrest ol the murderers of Lord Mountmorres in Ireland, All the editors of the chief journals at St. Petersburg have been summoned before Gen. oral Melikoff and told that their continual dis. cussion of a constitution for Rassin has highly displeased the cear; that nothing more on the subject would be allowed to appear, and that | daring tho present reign it would be prema. I'he international exhibition at Melbourne, { Australin, has been formally opened, All the vrincipal nations are represented. to resist the demands of he great powers, A syndioate for the wuéruction of the Panama onoal is sald 10 dave boon tormed in Paris, JOURNALISM, A Practieal Aritele for Young Men Wha Want te be Kditors and Wield & Moral Influence, All the way from the university of a { fur distant State comes to us an apple i ention for a position on the (mons na an editorial writer. It comes from a young man who says he h pur suing a special of study with a view of adopting journalism as a pros fession, He has about finished this course and desires to enter immediately upon his life.work., The young gen tleman writes that from early youth his ambition has been to wield a moral influence, and he sees no hope of exer. cising this influence save ns a Journal. ist. He has tasted of science, of lan. sunge, of philosophy; has labored to win & style which he could use with effect; Lins sought out new paths, and endeavored to make new paths where he found none, His know ledge of politi. eal history, law and political economy he thinks would enable him to discuss the average questions of the day intel ligently, In treating quéstions of social interest, his knowledge of socit] econ. omy might not prove amiss. As a journalist he would keep his life pur pose ever before him. In his paper he would introduce new features —io old ones he would give the charm of novelty In political discussions he would shun insignific ant party isms or personal re flections everything save a fair presen iE Den COUrse ! teresis, energy and brain. The young gentleman 18 no honest and sinoire in his statements, hut perienced newspaper man, are not turned out of universities ready- made, service—on the same princip that to be a good lawyer, or a sucoess. ful minister, or a competent mechanic, one must have practical experience can attain prominence only after long years of patie ut labor, Young men on CAN ing Olle ge could shape Lhe destinies of a nation if! they could only get control of the columns of some newspaper. Perhaps A young gt raduste d tunity to write editorials for some coun- try weekly He inunches a bolt, then anxiously awa ts the report. He generally walls in vain, and is both pained and chsgrined to find out his majestic ulterapoes no sttention whatever, Perha gers a position on one of the big q and with a proud heart he hands in to the managing editor a long article, over which he has spent several days and nights in writing and re-writing, only to be mortified almost to death by the matter-of-fact chief, telling him to cut active ww he roem for any such stuff, ther tell the young man, whose am- bition is to wield a moral influence, they want no opinions from Lim, they only want news, and that in a con- | densed, Sonsise form. urther nken oul of the young man by helog detail ed to write up the stock | yards, or sent to get the points in a scandal case, and told that he must get bt his copy in by eleven o'clock sharp. This doing unecongenial work, | doing it on the jump, with | elaborate gl owing periods and eloquent wone he mazes a flat failure and | Jonrnalism is drudgery— plod. stentatious drudgery. Thein- york which mskes up a com- newspaper siirac the public generally. Readers say | that paper is a good une, with- caring who did this or that to gach. And this alone be eruel to the unfledged writer who | hopes to wield a moral influence. If | one of his articies appears Le expects it {to be | disappointed it ding, a tviduai plete from is or out ance make it WwW if people do not talk about and insist ou knowing who wrote it i The Natural Orator. “The orator is born, not made,’ { certain critios. | dicted by so many exceptions that it cannot be received as a general rule. It { is, however, verified in the career of | some great orators. The most notable {ease in the annals of American orators {is that of Patrick Henry. The bees of | Hymettus touched his lips, as they did those of Plato, while slumbering in his {eradie. He lisped in eloquence, as Pope { did in numbers. Henry was a natural orator, but he was “only that and nothing more. | Mr. Jefferson, who knew him well, and | {often listened spelibound to his elo- | quence, says he Wis neither a man of education nor a well-read iawye r. Wirt, in his “ Life of Henry," 8! hould more properly be entitled Wirt's ** Romance,’ " says he read * Plutarch’s | | Lives" onoe a year. *' I don't believe,” i Jefferson, | volumes of them.’ | One November, on leaving Jefferson's house, Henry selected two books from | his host's library. “I will take these | {two volumes of ‘Hume's Essays,'” he " iter.’ | was 100 | to read. His delight was 10 pass weeks ) | hunting in the *piny woods" along | with overseers and people of similar | ial position. At i i i | and erac i ng jokes until bedtime. | Yet the lazy, hall-educatea | before a jury or on the stump. 1 "He appeared 10 me, | ferson, ‘* to speak as Homer wrote. | never heard,” he continues, {name with what flowed from him. | from is inconceivable. I have fire i shut my eyes while he spoke an uent ly | word of it. He was no logician. | But Henry's case is an exo tions] one. There is nothing like it in our his- | tory, and the times were on his side. To-day the man who wishes to attain eminence as an orator must have ideas and know how to put them in an ate tractive form. To gain ideas and ao- {quire the art of putting them he must study.— Youth's Ox ompanion. Uncle Esek’s Wisdom, There is no victory so cheap and so complete as forgiveness, If you suspect a license him to defraud you. Luck is the dream of a simpleton; a Wealth in this world is just so mach | Luggage to be taken care of, but a cuiti- { never-failing source of profit | pleasure. Gratitude is a debt which all men | owe and which few pay cheerfully. Impossibilities are scarce. | has not seen more than half a dozen of | them since the creation. | Hapviness consists in being there is no particular rule for it. { About all that cunning can do for a man is to make him incredulous, Too great economy in youth leads to avarice in old age All prudes were ¢ hanged because {obliged t» Experience has a very poor memory happy— once coquettes, and they were A fair compensation for honest ser- vice is the best present you can make a man, and the best gitv he ean receive. Doing nothing is the most slavish toil ever imposed on any one. True eloquence is the power of com- impressing others with our 1dens, The charities which a man dispenses after his death look suspicious. Adversity links men together, while prosperity is apt to scatter them. Some men seem to have a salve for the woes of others, but none for their A {Chioago Inter-Ooean. } PERILS OF THE DEEP, The world renowned swimmer, Capt. Paul Boyton, in an interview ‘with n newspaper correspondent at the sea shore, related the following incidents in his experience: Reporter,—** Captain Boyton, you must have seen a large part of the world Captain Boyton—"' Yes, sir, by the ald of my Rubber Life-Saving Dress, I have traveled over 10,000 miles on the rivers of America and Europe; lave also heen presented to the crowned heads of England, France, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Italy, Holland, Spain and Poy and have in my possession | forty-two medals and decorations; 1 | have three times received the order of knighthood, and been elected honorary member of committees, clubs, orders and soc leties,” Reporter.~*' Were your various trips accompanied with much danger?” Captain Boyton, —“That depends upon what you may eall dangerous During my trip down the river Tagus in Bpain, nad to “shoot” 108 walter. falls, the highest being abouteighty- five feet, and innumerable rapids. Crossing the Straits of Messina, had three ribs broken in a fight with sharks; and coming down the Bomane, a river in France, | received a charge of shot from an excited and startled buntsman., Al though all this was not very pleasant, and might be termed dangerous, I fear nothing more on my trip than intense cold; for, as long ns my limbs are free and easy, and not eramped or benumbed, I am all right. Of late I carry stock ol St. Jacobs Oil in my little boat (the captain calls it * Baby Mine,” and has stored therein signal rockets, thermome- ter, compass, provisions, ete. ),and I have Lad but fittle trouble, Before starting out I rub myself thoroughly with thearticle, and its action on the muscle is wonder. ful. From constant exposure I am some. | what subject to rheumatic pains, and nothing would ever benefit me until | t hold of this Great German Remedy, ‘hy, on my travels I have met people who have been suffering with rheuma. | tism for years; by my advice they tried the Oil, and it cured them. [I would sooner do without food for days than ! be without this remedy for one hour, | Im fact 1 would not attempt a trip with- | out it." | The captain became very enthusi. | astie on the subject of Bt. Jacobs { Oil, and we left him citing instances of the curative qualities of the Great German Remedy to a party around him. i —————— Afghan Soldiers, i i i I+ The relations between the officers and men remind one of those existing in the { Turkish army. If an Afghan officer drinks tea, a number of soldiers are sure git around him kaliana, all the soldiers gather near him | and await their turn; the kalispa have ing gone the round of the privates, re- turns again to the officer. 1 a soldier smokes a pipe, the officer asks him to et him have a draw at it. Should a | soldier take from the folds of his dress a tobacco pouch, in order to put a plug of obacco under Lis tongue, the officer in- serts his finger and thumb into the pouch aiso, and takes a pinch of tobacco. On the other hand, sheuld the officer | take out his own pouch, the soldier | helps himself in a similar manner to his | tobacco. I did not observe that this | mutual freedom of manner had any det- rimental effect on the discipline of the troops. The men obeyed the commands | of their officers with doeility. and never { displayed insubordination when sen | tenced to be thrashed. Indeed, it is ex- coedingly rare that the officers employ : 3 i i [Chiongo Tribune. } Mr, Ira Brown, the en estate man, states that he would say a word for the Jacobs Oil, whieh had cured him severe attack fl failed even w allay. Minister Fairchild, of JV isconain who represents the United States in Spain has only one arm. The other he Jost oy battle, II Quality and efonoy considered, Dr, 1 ily Cough Syrup is w ut exception the Oo Sonsh reparation in the market. Prios 25 eonts a bottle. Ee “A good Indian" is what the Herald oalls Chief Ouray. He is indeed a good Indian. He is dead. ~— Chicago Times. Dr CO. E. Shoemaker, the well-known aural surgeon of Reading, Pa., offers to send by mail, {res of charges valuable little hook ob deatness and disesses of the ear y on rauning ear and catarrh, and their a givin ejurentes dud 4 and testimonials that will salisly Se most skeptioal Address as shove. -t Health) it the Ars You Am in toad your outa, vou ean find an sheolute Be in Dn. Saw. poun’'s Liver InviGoRaTOR, the ble oathartie whieh sets direotly gat) a he tive Cures all Bilious diseases, For Book De. Bawromp, 162 Broadway, New bade, V sorrINe will regulate the bowels to healthy section, by stimulating the searetions, cleans. mg and purifying the blood of humors, and, is & healthful snd naturel man. ner, expels all impurities without weakening he wody, he Voliate Belt Co teh, wit hdosy Electro. eran iy, Mens afffictens upon 30 days’ trisl. See their by des Lisoment in this paper bead od, * On 80 Days’ Trial Get Yoors Patent Hoel Btiffeners applied 10 those new boots belors you run them over. New York witness, ‘, ublmen a Ds MA RAE TERI HE, Wo ure aint ch Womb, » utes, Clr featiueni, wes and cerudosies rliea Ww HOWARTE & BALLARD, by ail Druasivts “$i 100 pas Vegetine. More to Me Ae than Cold. Warrore, Mass, March 7, 1888, Humor for mors thas hy other paris of my bod ferer, | commenced last August snd eau tr me that any other med! ly free from this humor snd every ope, Would not be without this nani. tis more (0 me than pRB her Be iam Liessing 10 others as it bas to me, Yours, most res Mus, DAY. Fo———— J. BENTLEY, M.D,, says: It has done more good than all Medical Treatment, Newsasxer, Ont, Feb, §, 1880, Mz, H, BR Srevess, Mass: Bir—] have sold during the past year s consider. able quantity of your Veoryrixs, and I believe in all asses it hiss given tart In one case, 8 delicate young lady of sbout seventeen Fass wat much benefited by its use, Her parents informed me that it had done her more good thaw all the medical treatment to which she had previously been sul jected, Yours of ull TER I ve boen & grest wal. taking Veorrine one year ico, 1 seem 10 be panfuct. 8, can recommend it ! ‘CLARE, «MD Loudly In its Praise. Tonowro, Ost, March 8, 1880, i the lash. During the whole of my so journ in Afghanistan I only saw the punishment inflicted twice; on both oc- | easions on men who had stolen hay from my horses. —Colonel Grodekoff. ) THE MARKETS. NEW YORK Beet Osttio—Mod, Natives, live wt, | Oalves Foor to Prime Veals,.. oe taal. Poge—1ive, coves Dressed. vee Fioar- Ks. State, good to fancy. Western, 0 f8B0Y... . | Wheat- No. 2 EL No. 1 White Ceraan Bye—fate, soon eres . Bariey-Two.-Rowed ‘ate smn Oorp--Ungreded Weslern Mixed. Bouthern Yellow, cuvee Oats White BUale, sevens. , Mixed Western... Bay—~Prime..... . ! Strsw--Long Rye. PEF OWh,punne ses Hope--State, 1880, we MOE, DOW, cones sunsnns | Lard—Oity HIGMIE. eens sanee Petroletn—Orode cee. . EXB08 | Butter—8Slate Cream PORIBETY. os ses crssrns DIST curarnrssvann sss Western lmitation Cresmery Factory. cesses sens i (heese—Biate Factory. .occrss essen BRIE, coven ssonnecs Weslern oc vunes vassvavanscen Bape —Btate and POlb.cvcess cor veves Potato Bate, Dbl. covsvrssnnnies ! BUFFALO Flour-Oity Ground, No, | Spring... 580 @6 00 Whast-No, 1 Hard Duluth, cosme1 08 @1 08 Oorp—No, 1 Westere 5 Onl BIBS, scons nnsns srvnnns susan 87 Barley —Two-rowed Bt 0 SERBS Sessa ern ERABE BE + 4 os & i BR caanses EERE x rE 4 $58650563 508000000000 ag 110 u suze FREER EERE ee LE Be w 15 2 B30 @ £68 Hefined 10% 3 @ 3 re naE sr ee BOW Beet Oattio—Live ELE x uunns aap ee LAIR, season cssnssrnnnns oon | swoonsin and Minn. Pat... Oorn—Mized and Yellow, cue Osts—Extra White, now oBERI0, Ly ves 00} Washed Sonny & Deltne,, Unwash w a! N (MASS ) CATTLE MARKET | Peal Osttlo—live weight... ws 0B Shee ane seen CARRE AEE Cas sen Shs wis ears saRSIES. PHILADELPHIA, | Four—Penn, good and Janay. massa BBD Wheat No. 3—-Red . | Ryo—state. . *. OCorn—Htate WOW, cnn sessstrseas Oate—Mixed | Putter—Oream | Ohosso—New Yor Petroleam—Orade SREREE » CREE RRRARS BAAS seus nasssn Full Cream, coves coe ennns 003 @OTN Boda [For Catarrh, Hay Pever, Old in the ead, toh insert with Tittle finger a particie of the Baim ote the pos IB trils; draw breaths Dose ed, cleansing and heal ing the diseased msi brane, le It of the ear, thoroughly. An Invaluable Article. The readers of the Argus have no doubt seen the adven tisement of Kiy's Oream Ram in another column. AB article like the Cream Balm has long been: desired, and pow that it Is within the reach of sufferers from Ostarrh, Hay Faver, eto, there 8 every reason to believe they will | make the ‘most of it. De W R Buckman, Mr, Charles | Badwin, and other Easton! ng have given Eiy's Cream Baum a trial, and all reconunend it In the, highest lermA From the Easton, Pa, Dally gus, Oct 7, 1808, Prico—80 cor ts. On reocipt of 60 conta, will mall a package free. Send for circular, with full information, ELY'S OREAM BALM CO. Owego, N.Y. rubl dng In Sold by all Drugeists, CELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. Amber. The lightest, handsomest, and strongest known, Bold by Opticians and Jewelers, Made by SPENCER 0. M 00, 1 18 Mala nn Lane, New York, OR 30 DAYS TRIAL. our Klectro-Voltalc Belts and other supon trial for 30 days to those afflicted wii Nervous | diseases of a personal nature, Aw of t A Lineys, Rhewunatism, Paralysis, ete 0h Bre Our onarantied or ne pay dress Voltale Belt Co, Marshall, Mich. A DAY to a Responsible Person to take the name of every family in their $3 own city or town. References required. Send for particulars to SNT7 Purchase Street, New Bedford, Mass for the TRADE, Territory given BUG aN ERPRIAE CARRIAGE CO. Si Full particu- FOR: Olncinnati, 0. Oatalogue F REE. PF. TRIFET, ars and spe~ 27 School St C ciuien free, = LLEN'S Brain Food-—-oures Nervous Debility & Weakness of Gaperative Organs, $1-all drug cats. Send for Cir Ir to Alle mar barmacy First Ave.) Boston, Mass. $350° A MI NTH AGENTS WANTED! 75 Best Selling Articles In the world; a sauple free. dar Broxson, Detroit, Mich N 0 RviCHn UNIVERSITY, 3 Mitt Mege, Northfleld, Vi. able, Scientific and Tens reasons ss Outfit d, Maine. Degr Bir--Oonsidering the short time hs! TYREE | yinm has been before the public here, it sells well | a8 a biood purifier, and for troubles arising from s | gluggish or torpid liver it is & Sretcinse medicine, | Dur customers speak Soudly in ite rains. WRIGHT & y ry Oa snd Elizabeth VEGETINE PREPARED BY H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass, — Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. MALT ~ BITTERS A Blood Producer and Life Sustaining Principle. The three Jrined ! ingredients in Mare Rivress are MALT, HOPS, an CAL: SAY As combined. | fermentation, by the Marr Burress Coxrany, they ate be grandest Restorstive and Nowdshing Agents, the restest Biood Producers and Life-sustaining & food or medicine. For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Pais, hin and Watery Blood. Malaria and Liver Complaint, Weak Nerves, Lungs, Kidneys and Urinary Organs, Cone sumption, JEmaciation. and Exbasmstion of Delicate Feo tmaion, Nunsing Mothers, Skkiy © hfiarens — Ba | Mar Bernar Are supresne. mnitatio bear (he re COMPANYS SiG varywhere. MALT BITTEXS {larly pamed. The pesuine NATURE as shove, Sold everywhere. BI- CARB COMPANY, Bosvex. 11 ts the NATRON oi fs atwolutely tel bast 8 In he Yona. n Purposes. 11 is the best for all Droggists and G sl Dr Said by PENNA SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila. This Clatm mouse Established wes, PENSIONS. New Law. Thousands of soldiary and heirs miifiled Potions date back to discharge or a Address, with stamp, GEORGE BE. LEMON, 335, Washington, D.0, Fine Algerime Watch Chalne, Hing enirsly ng new snd nest. Ges’, hengi 0 1043 40 sea. Ladies , from $1.50 workmanship, We will send them free on rece! We will pond them C. 0. D. bt Bxproms ob ory over, but not Joss. We have Watches of the sume at B15, 8&2 end $35 each. Rvery watoh warranted. Seal Kings. $7.50 each Watehmakors Tools and Materials. Bend Tor sur ciresiar. Cotaams Goto NEval Warcwm Axn Jeweiay FaoroRy, eadway, New You York. X.Y. Y MOODY MEETINGS AT NORTRFIELD. Extended reports of the ten days’ meetings at Northileld nN. ¥. WITNESS, oa) and oF IA open “hon sent, Postpaid, wh 3 oan y nea hy Bo wostpald, for a ny, ie k Frankfort 81, New Yor x En SOCAL Pokey: A beautiful new smell gia. Weekly, contain choloe selections from brainy authors. Only cents a year, Six ¢ Ah far 160 cents. SABBATH mE DING. Week Ty Conta essen. and Religious matter, BO cen a year. Ry 2 DANIEL F. BEATTY'S ORGANS! 14 STOPS, SUR BASS & 00T. COUPLER FOUR SET s125°%8 Sent on Trial Warranted. Address DANIEL F, BEATTY, Washington, X. 3 RUPTURE Relteved and Sure) rithout the tndnry trusses § Dar J A SHEEMAN'S s¥etem. Office, 251 nnn New York, His book, with phot eraphic Hkenosses of bad cases ! fore aad after re. Mia r 36 ox xis. WANE ¥ ANTED Agents everywhere ere to sell sell our goods, by sample, to Bailie les. We give a Ereaeut 1 first-class - 15; we Prepay al expres en: we aoa Write for PROPLR'S y Tha 00s C0., Box 5095, St. Louis, Mo. MOODY MEETINGS AT NORTHFIELD. Extended and 6 Sep of Des Ten Days Meetings in N. io Wirxess, 9 an Both ho mek Wr postpaid, § Gems of try — oh. "beautiful little weekly, Six AR rmonth. Al EXPEN advan WAGES £3 Y earn $40 to $1 month, Ev wy Bmployment in Mercantile Houses, Hotels, Stores, Ol SANTA Broadway, N.Y. Y. Ony. How to reach and possess them CEXA Granite) Mow uments from tree. . JOHN W W. LEGGE, Sculptor, Aberdeen, Sco ‘and. TAKE 0 Johan Street, New York, n $2000 IN GOLD Given Away. Send Sct 1. JOHN DOU GA L200. 7 ry New York. YMENT Ce Aor to E MPLOYM OUNC MEN 0 alentine, Manager, Janesv Ar JL Persons wanting if at a distance, address with stamp, TEX AS Mountains of Silver In Western Texas, = SUN. *an Antonio. texas. Ea in criptions Rccarate and a a —. and stant relief, Sample sent free, 0. D, W & CO. | Mall us a Postal with your 00.531 Commerce St. St, Phila, Pa, Sry ox ALLY { VA LUABLE Informatio AAD Monrsz & Co., “ Wi est 11th St, New York City. stamp for particulars, Address a THAR 3nd 7 7 7 Enns P. 0. Oo VICKERY, Augusta, Maine. own. A a ivee “scholar shilpe. 566 A WEEK In your own town. Terms and { Different Songs. 10c. Ten Songs and List 100 for ie. stamp. . Wilson, Pauisboro, ¥. & made, Costly Address Trus & Qo., Augusta, Maine, free. Address H. Harner § Co., Portian A WERK. $12a day at home east] made, Co $729 Qutnt free. 1 cents, or fifteen copies " each, Copies as Samples, 10 cen & Co. 300 George St. Cincinnati. 0. raduate guaranteed a atien, Address RB. V J ces, on Steamers, otc, MANHATTAN AGENCY, 13529 § Address, with @ cents postage, lished sy HA on board sh ATEEA Yai Asthma Remedy Ll It will pay you. A. GORTON & for MARRIED PEOPLE, Circulars free. MESSENGER, Lewisturgh, U Union Co 1 Co Pa “to agents. day at home. Samples free $5 to $20 v Fm Stumson & Ca story ga Backache, pia, Bolatk re hosts the Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, Saniral Bodily BOLD BY ALL ee AND DEALFRS A. VOGELER FLER & CO 0. Baltimore, Md., “REMEDY FOR CURING Conghs, Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma, CONSUMPTION, all Tiocst sod Lous Afeclions — Puysicians, Clergy snd Afted TRY IT. YOUR REMEDY IS by the CENTS TO JAN. La The Chicago Weekly News ; = i Bn 1, 1881 Eleven LOO. Regular price in TF ia aon Farry py STE ’ ny BRARD RD vw iS. Pa his T OE Medal a Priateptn Exposition. This wonderful! substance Wa roughout the werd 16 be the bee) Temes db. govered for the ar. of W Barns, Skin Discases, Plies, Catarrh, Oribiatne, aS in ordet that every abe may ri iis bottles for housizel d use. OF Jp ET) ag an 33 cent nd you will find i superior Ww anything Ba FRAZER AXLE GREASE. FOR SA AL n SALE BX BY Ll, DEALERS } | hago. FRAZER SEN C0. NewYork. st Py best in the Warld, for sale by the D. A. McKINLAY Land Commissioner, ~t, Paul, inn, [CICLOPADIA o= oF This I the cheapest Sompletes work on Etiquette and a hi Jolla Sow tw Reform ail the varions da ot lite, and al i 5 aati} on of tad a. Sheulat coving : ddress Nanioxas Pupusuise Oo., Philadelphia, Pa. ] he Ko ran la Wg a Briosity | te syary Foe, and a nece ens LF dition translated omy Arable by 5 ih old sore Sale Pormerly published at SE a a5 yh a and SS Cents aor poe. Catalogue of mang to club, Tn ow in price, with extra terns to clubs, fr yop od bn] saw this advertisement. AnEnicax Boox Excmangs, Tri bune Bullling, N Is the « Origa re oncentrated Lye and Reltable Pam 'y Bt Son TS Hone Ray wl ha . ® As Soar oer » or BAD is Zin RED RIVER VALLEY ET LC TIOUETTEZBUSINESS SAPONIFIER