Gorgeous Gluttony. the amount of food an epicure ¢ nsumes in his lifetime. In the first place, he estimated, on the basis of so many ounces, or rather pounds a day, secured | by careful observation and computation that a healthy man with the appetite of a bon vivant consumes in sixty years indulgence thirty-three and three quar: ters tons of meat, vegetables and the vest. Dividing these up into the vari. ous characters of aliment his experience taught him men preferred in their proper proportions, he secured this odd result: Thirty oxen, 200 sheep, 100 calves, 200 lambs, and 50 pigs constituted the herds | sinughtered for his benefit; 1.900 fowls, 300 turkeys, 150 geese, $00 ducks, 963 | pigeons, 1,400 partrid ges, 60D wood cooks and snipes, 600 wild ducks, 450 plovers, 180 guinea fowls, 10 peacocks, 360 large wild, and 300 quail and other small birds, native and foreign, were spitted at his command. of 500 hares and robbits, and 40 deer In the way of fish figure 190 turbot, 140 s*Imon. 120 cod. 260 trout, 400 mackerel, 300 whiting, 800 soles, 400 flounders, 400 red mullet, 20 cels, 150 and some hundred thousand or so of | dred species of fresh-water fish, The shell fish consisted of 20 tarties, 30 000 oysters, 1 500 lobsters or crabs, and S00 - M0 prawns, shrimps, sardines and anchovies. In the way of fruit ocour about HO pounds of grapes, 360 pounds of rine-apples, 600 peaches, 1 400 apri. cots, 240 melons, sed some 100 000 plums and other fruits, together with and the like. The vegetables he esti pated at 5.475 pounds, the butter st 4 431]. and the cheese at 681; 2 000 eges of chickens and 100 of p over, 44 tons of bread, half a ton of salt and pepper, and 24 tors of surgar furnish the * fixings.’ These gorges, according to the mathe | watical eaterer, are washed down wi th sufliclent liguids, some 11 6731 gallons {Soyer is very particular about frao- | gions) in all, to foat a ship feighted with them. A portion of the components of this fluid gluttony is forty-nine hoes heads of wine, 1 368 gal ions of beer, 384 of spirits, 342 of liquors, and only 2,730 of water A proper pendant to Soyer's s calonla~ tion is the deseription given in the Gen Heman s Magamue of the bo wl of punch served by C Aptain- General Russe il, Charles the seconds commander in-chiet inthe Mediterranean in 1694 A fountain in the noble commander's headquarters garden was emptied and SWa bbhed out; a canopy was spread over 1 to keep the rain off if there any; tl four hogstiends of brandy, twenty galions o ime Jui 2 da Malaga were dumped irto the be with 25, 000 lemons, 1 3X pounds of sugar, five pounds grated putme d 300 toasted biscuits. Que of iy ship's boys. in a littie boat bai t for the purpese, rowed around the foentsin filling the cups of the 6 000 guests who ss! down tothe col Iatio in the gard n. Tue fumes of the colossal punch made him giddy, and be fell into the basis n, but was Iuckily fished out bei was literally “drowned in drink 8 a a was ex aN nat pipe of 8 asih. sin a. Portrait of Uhele Sam, In personal appesrapce a tail, bony, healt in king man, ap arent! iy of 45; for, though born in 1776, he bears his age weil, and seems to be gelling younger every day He loves to brag of his establishaent, and putsbim- sell on such an equa Ry ith the people thet a train of ba LETS ON are alway his elho «. There are aiways at his ta- ble snumber of s headed old fellows, who were hi in youth. and of whose service | Usily Speaks. He loves to boast how Tom Such-a-one saved his life at Buuker Hill, and how Dick Somebody whipped fellow that assauited him at Eataw., He often, too, wipes ais eyes when he locks at the pic. ture of general, hanging up in his parior, who, he says, whipped a fellow pamed Pakenham who once tried to take away one of girls and a cotion bale. On these ovcasions Usdle Sam wil: become greatly ¢ xcited, and. taking off his cocked hat hich, he says, was the gift of his oid 1d Geo rge Wash- pgton—will & » lias the best land in the world, and -run, out jump, and whip any n ehill. In truth, these are but eccentri ie ities of a charac ter whiel : 13 30 mixed up W rirtue to excusable i t “eo C play the br: rt, and who, while wiil give way of fri fend shi Pp, In bargains will stickie of « hair. At anv stl this character, he will sand scl out a8 many maneuvers as a alf-pay lieutenant of infantry. On the whole, he is one of those who will cud. pel his best friend in a cause in which € is engaged, and embrace his bitterest enemy in whose conduct is observable the smallest principle of macau imity d hic BOT. thern La iterary tFazell eee——— sal ® (Ot “ a 1} | ESU his 1" Ua 2 id an Jan on with e imes of those his life in the the mstter of on tii” ninth part | epipt pon him of somet is one i Tanne A Biver’s Training. Before a man becomes an expert diver be must undergo & course of severe physical trainizg. The atmospheric pressure on the surface is fifteen pounds for every square inch of the body, and on the Average 1 nan is 8 mething like | fifteen tons, but the outside and inside pressure being equal, this Smee weight is unnoticed. Ab every thi four feet cf descent under water Ts pressure isiucreascd one atmosphere, or the addit 3 1p: SSsure of fifteen pounds to the sq e , and as it is absolutely necessa' v 10 Bove th e alr pre ssure in the armor fully equal to that ot the water, some ides can be had of what the diver must withstand, even at the moderate depth of thirty-four feet, athough the inhaling of this compressed sir in a measure relieves th unpleasant sensation. When the ns is in- creased to a huvdred or a hundred and fifty feet the sensation becomes almost unendurable—~the biood starts from the eyes, enrs, wouth, a d even from the bd i : vi ¥ iy pores of the skin, and on returning to the surf.ee ¢xireme-exhaustion is the result. Some men aie so constituted physically that they cannot under water nt all. The greatest deptt that is ever attained is one hundred nad filly feet, and then the most experienced diver can remain at this point but five or six minutes without serious injury. Divers go to this depth only wo secure articles of great value, remaining long enough Lo aitach a chain or rope. Ata hundred feet an old di about an hour, and at fifty feel from four to six hwnurs, aetording to the trength of th he u iver. I ———— Asiatic Cavalry Tactics, A correspondent at Bucharest reports of fighting which bas bitherto been con- fined to Asia. A squadronot! Rou . anian cavalry showed the printe at jeast some- thing not yet tried even in Germany. A body of eavsiry gsliops toward the enemy, and then, instend of charging, halts suddenly and lies down, horses | and men together, the bodies of the ani- | mals forming a breastwork, from be- hind which the men cpen fire. Though the particular action. on tae occasion of | tLe prince's inspection would be of little | use, for Lorses are far too expen- | give for a breastwork, it is clear that | animals traired to jie down by word of | command would suff r on the averave much less from the enemy's five than | cavalry does now. The most sonspien- | ous loss, both of cavalry and artillery, | is always in horses; yet some of the | gunners who fought in Afghanistan were | trained to work the guns in a kneeling | position. To halve the height of a tar- | get is to deereasa very greatly the chance | of ite being hiv; and, besides, the usual | fences and walls in any country sre enough concealment for animals lying | down, Lut not for the same anima! it standing, It i8 to be Loped that the difficulty of makin the horses rise again, | otuerwise, their previous docility might | lead ther riders into s hot corner with- out mueh hope of getting out of it. A cm———— ee Short of Wemen. The first official returns of the new census of Towa, embracing abcut half the counties in the State, show that this is a good 8 ate for Massachuseits to send Ler surplus woicen to. In every c.unty male population exceeds the female, So that this is stilia 8:ate with splendid inducements for good-looking and good women to emigrate to. Accordin the last returns we are short at Es fifty thousand women in lowa, to ake it an even thing all round. If New England and New York had that number of women, of the beat kind, to spare, they will please send them along to Jowa. Here tiey will tind the very best bomes in the world, and in time, and not a very long time either, the best of husbands. —XHed Oak (12) Record . RELIGIOUS NEWS AND et The Protastant Episcopal ohureh is | n hashed to cortribute $158,000 to foreign | yissions this year. " Extracts from Mr. Moody's sermons, | transiated into Arable, are read | Syria at the Sunday evening meetings { The parish church of Fletehing, Eng- | land, which dates from the thirteenth | { pentury, has just been restored at a cost | | of 830,000. | Ther: | dation in London for only one-fourth of NOTES, nt POWs every Sunday, { The Shaw university at Raleigh, N. { C., one of the Northern Baptist schools {for freodmen, has sent out more than 1.000 teachers among tl 1e colored people. It has now 276 pupils. The Baptist mission in Germany re. ports 134 churches, 96658 members, L487 stations, and 11,813 Sunday-school scholars, The churches raised $65,000 | last year for church purposes. The rel fous necrology of the year, ISSO includes the names of Bishop Gil bert Haven, George Ripley, De. Samuel | Osgood, Dr, Henry A. Boardman, Dr, H. Chapin. Nebraska has 133 ahurches, with 3.5068 members and eight y.on® ministers. The total benev- olences of the past ve ar were $3.066 45 The Sabbath-school numbers 5.546 pupils. The net gain in membership for the vear was 414 members, The St, Pav] Moneer Press says that in Misneapelis the membership of all the Protestant ehurches—sixteen differ. ent denominations—is but 5.721, while the members of the Roman Catbholie charch number 7.681, The Value of the property owned by ail the churches is S4886.570, The Bantists of the Maritime Prov- | inces of Canada report an inorease in members and amount raised during the PRS. year: an d hope 10 raase $7.00 for home mission work. They have be tween fifiy and sixty stations which are not se lf-sustaini ne, and require assist. ance from the mission board. The Rev. E. P. Hammond, the evan. gelist, has been holding revival meetings in Manitoba for seven weeks. He has preach ed Winnipeg, Emerson, and three 0 laces, often in the open air, with the thermometer twenty five degrees | below 2E70, His estimated that the nave beea not less than 1,000 conversions. Congregations at er i and re Saved by His Herman Hutter and Charlies Whit- man, of Missouri, Montana Territory, armed with rifles and sccompanicd by a decrhiound, w up the Rattiesrake river in quest game. They climbed the mounta elt of the stream and se opposite sides of the v the hopes of bagging a deer Wi itman came down the Rattlesnake side, and, soon after separating from his companion, he fell, 3 some 200 feel down the mountain side, He vain \¥y end eavored to stop himselt by digging into the snow with hands and feet snd clutching at brush and | saplings, just as he was about to | he precipitated over the cliff into the Rattlesnake, some forty feet below, he fortunately clasped a strong sapling with one hand, apd was left dangling in the air over a precipics. By astrong fort he manag:d to cl the Saplin arm in the elbow, and grasp. ing his wrist with the disengag red hand awaited imevitabie fal Ww ith desperati The hound, seeing his mast Lex lowed to the edge of the ciiff, and whined piteously at the m edicame nt of his human triend. Suddenly he dashed off over the hill like a deer, and disappeared. When pearly exbausted, Whitman heard his companion, Hutter, above him, coming to his ance. He gathered renewed courage, and held on tesperate y till Hatter came down with a rope snd resened him from his peril- tion. Hutter says be had gone ort distance, when the dog came nd i bold of his cloth- He turned upon him snd Repeating the strange Hutter suspee ed something d followed the dog to Whit- S4Q te Deerhound, Of 8 iipped and 8 lidin til REP Him assist @ the dog ran off. mMAnEUver, wrong, § man's reseu e. IA People. In the town of West Alexander, Penn., twelve miles from the QGhio and two miles from the West Virginia line, lives 8 magi-trate wi ho is reputed to bave married 1,800 coupl es within two years, and to have built a fine house with his wedding fees. His popularity arises from the fact that the laws of Pennsyl. vania do not require a msrria ge license, while those ot the two neighboring States do. He will AIrry a couple without their leaving their carriage, or he wiil allow them to rema n sll night and take breakiast with him, charging judiciously for board and lodging. His | regular charge for marrying a couple is £3. He sometimes has from three to five couples at a time waiting to be | made one, and all in a hurry, from fear iest those who pursue will catch up in time to forbid the banms. Sometimes | an enraged father or terrible big brother i of the bride arrives after the ceremony is over and proceeds to vent his rage on the winds and make dire threatenings, and even coffer violence, In an em<r- geney such as this the magistrate’s son, who is his father's constab ie, lays the serious charge of disorderly conduct agaiv st them. At onetime a relative, in pursuit of a bride, was so violent that it became impossible for the cone stable to arrest Lim, when the whole town rose en masse and helped to put the offender in jail. The place is popu-~ arly known as ‘ Hs ardserabbl e, and when John T. Norris, a detective of Springfield, O | from whom the Cincin- nati Guzetie gets the fac ts, inquired the reason, lie was told by an inhabitant it was ** because it was such a hard serab- ble for runaway couples to get there be. | fore the parents caught up.” at nn mn The ManStager. A mean who had committed a dread- ful murder fi .d, and was pursued by the | officers of the law and the relatives of | the murdered victim. On reaching the tiver Nile ie saw a lion on the bank, a tree. He, however, discovered a ser- dent in the upper branches of the tree, and, being greatiy alarmcd, threw him- geif into the river, where he was carried off and eaten by a crocodile. Thus the i earth, the sir and the water, alike re- fused shelter to a murderer. The fore- {going fable was written two thousand years ago, and teaches us how it is that times change, and we change with them; ‘also, that not every change is for ithe better. If the murder reo- ferred to had been committed now, instead of two thousand years i ago, the murderer—uniess he were a j voverty-stricken, friendless wretch, a mere superfluous human quantity—in- | hiave hanted him up and given bail, in order to be better able to assist Lis at | | torney in procuring continuances from State's witnesses, stealing or squashing | ithe original indictment, procuring | | changes of venue, appeals, reversals, re- | i complete vindication when, in the | course of time or eternity, his trial came off, if it ever did. This fable teaches us | that there w | elements refused him protection. It is | comforting to know that there was such | | & period.— Galveston News. i The Advance in Christian Work, The grand advance in Christian work | since the beginning of the present cen | tury is not only remarkable, but full of | good cheer. The following figures will | not only be read with interest, but de- serves to b: earefally studied: 1800, 50 1880, Number of translations of Biblag,...n0nsvv Missionary societies. ... 7 Missionaries..cov.vv... 170 Contributions .... ...... $250,000 Bibles distributed......5 000,000 CONVOIB. co xvse sears 50,000 SOhOUIB.... sess sssiisn 70 These are grand and figures, and ought to stimulate to in- creased diligence and energy. Looking backward at what has been done from a starting point of such smail begin- nings, who hall limit the possibilities of the future? - Christian at Work 2, £6,500, 150 000, 1,800, 12,000 inspiriting A narcow gauge railroad is to be built from Chattanooga, Tenn, to the top of Lookout mountain, and a hotel to ac- commodsate 1,000 guests will be built on the wountain, An Ungrateful Prisoner. The following story was told a New York Avening fo correspondent by | { General Benjamin F. Butier: A man | had robbed a de i: on the Stony Brook | | railroad, and a dispainh had been sent | to arvest him at Lincoln on the arrival | of the Fitchburg train, The constable { accordingly arvested him, but the man | broke away from him. The officer | gave chase, and coming up w th him the thief turned at bay, snd, prosenting a | pistol, gave him war ning not to come any nearer. But he closed upon him, | when the man fired and killed him io- antly, The murdered man was =a i riend of General Batjer’s, attended [the funeral,” hosald, “and In the ab. | gence of the other relations, wha were detained by a snow storm, walked with the widow tu the grave. When the i trial came on I went to court, but waa sorry enough I had done Judge Shaw, who was conducting the case, ealled on the man for his defense. He sald he had no counsel, Ju ge Shaw, looking around the court-roou said: ** Mr. Butler, you are sppointed by the court as counsel for the defend ant.” In vain I tried to exouse myself on account « f the peouliiar clronmatances. Judge Shaw was inexorable, and I was But when | do under take a thing 1 generally push it through. So I hunted up the statutes and found burglary included the breaking into houses, barns, outbuild. ings, eto. eto., but a railroad depot was an unknown thing at the time the aw was made the officers had no right tO arrest 8 man for orime, eons quently his self-defense was in a mea gure justifiable, #0 a verdict of man. slaughter was brought in, and Le was sentenced to State priso nm thirty years. After the sentence 1 walked up to him and congratulated him cn his CRORE, “+ scape this an escape ? | hung ! os wl hy the 00 eo didn't you tell me #0 in the first pl rt] sid feeling very much provoked yi “hi agratitude. ‘1 should have bee moat happy Wo have accommodat rn By 4 that ns the for it ¥ a he growled: ‘do you call {I'd rather have been 8 n ated you ! = A Sheep-Eating Parrot. Ladies who keep both poddies must be earefu acoldent the New carnivorous parrot, would probably eat the other, | proceeding in « drawing-room would eminently and we tinn weil, therefore, warning on the t prietors. The kea hou rot, is a very disagree e lor not oniy Goes iL A CK mals, but it wreeks the building into which it ell [0ose in & room it wi picture-irames sawdust carpet into ribbops, tl and in oth and tain and kea, or pet PAITOLS not to enter ry ¥ OF L080 fore r One U1 ae Of Ju shooking, gh it is a ; OWI ndeedq, living ax furniture o finds its way. i IA REAES & o due WA to rip up Qisaey of all the seats, itseil go odious tha ‘RO one woulda wild state the shee and the lerocity and ingenuity which it keeps itsell to mutton {3 0 the most remarkable facts in thology, the unfortunate sheep SesV] vin the parrot’s attack, ough the bird had lea hearty » it. In captivity ch a feeding the pet as keeping asi he back garden for the parrot to help i i to whenever it was hungry counid not, of course, be thought of, out if tl is to be prevented from kin men.s off the d smestics and 3 ¥ it would have to be provided with ton chops. It will not though it does not altoget pork, the only diet on whi thrives is sheep. owdan Ti with 1¢ of orni- oiten even meal of 12 i 1) 4 Ea LE su method AOD In Ul itsel 1 $4 OOK at eel, Ler di Yielin Making. Violin making in its pertection is one of the most difficult of eailings. It apparently nothing more than the ad- justment of cortain bits of wood, which are pianed, filed, saw- ut, scratched, sand-papored, carved, pegged, glued, and varnishea ; but to give 1t the soul requires ti ghest capability of hu- man intelligence Hands must work in a material whi to out than metal, same degree of pre isio In. be Suliservient to brain, For a guide you must have the fine appreciation of tone quality. If with mechanical dex- ie tiiougl easier up to the ont § XeDL Uf I'S MUsy Fing Cannot be ness of ear, your w oden will give out thesound ofa n oran Amati. T A 0¢ subtie that he who is no longer a servile monplace instrument ny within the ol good maker, but a really ine violin, a great soloist will one throughout the whole register, © | responds 10 the i10f the fing € that makes a pure and una Hoyed sound with the tone quality, whether you j touch it, or ™ with your bow well, that is pothiog less chef d'euvre. Why, there areonly f.ur people to-day in the worid who can turn out such an instrument. — Har- per's Magazine, The Secret. “1 noticed,” said Dr. Franklin, “a mechanic, among others at work on a house erecting but a little way from my office, who always happened to be in a merry humor, who hace a kind word and cheerful smile for ever he met, Tet the day be ever so col loomy or suniess, a happy smile Seed a sunbeam on his che 2 fal countenance Meeting him one morning, I asked him to tell me the secret of ais happy flow of SBiie * My secret, doctor,’ he replied, ‘isthat I ha \ve got one of the best of wives and when I go to work she al- ways has a kind word of encouragement for me, and when I go home she meets me with a smile and a kiss; and then tea is sure to be ready. and she has don | 50 many little things through the day to please me that I cannot find it in my beart to speak an unkind word to any body.” What an influence, then, hath woman over the heart of man, to soften it and make it the fountain of cheerful | and pure emotions! Speak gently, then; i a happy smile and a kind word ol greet- | ing, after the toils of the day are over, cost nothing, and go far towsr d making home happy and peaceiul. i———— He Knew Cals, A little old colored man who lives on the upper end of Antoine street was i down at the City Hall yesterday to see { the superintendent of police a disturbance which had taken around his house the night before, | described the noises as consisting of shouts and groans, and yelps and yells, and the superintendent ob.erved ; “1 presume it was a congregation of eis. Gel five or six cats together on one of these sold nights and they will | almost raise the ¢ dead.” ** Cats! cats! ” replied the old man. “Doan’ vou "spose I know cats when I | | hears "em? Cats! Do cats frow frozen | eabbages agin my front doah ? all on me to come out an’ Gaar mr m TI imitalor. 80 IE fl, } wn ast rs y is Hat er fst than a one i *» like place | women de wut liar an’ Stait of Michigan P” { *1 presume not.” “An' | presume not, gossip too! i i an, | beavin’ a frozen "tater frew my kitehin’ winder, an" callin’ out dat 1'm fo'teen years beliind on my pew-rent, it’ : ear'yin’ de feline bizness a [cetle too far | Press. A Making a Forest Into Paper, part of 20,000 acres of timber land from Pennsylvania before long. This exten- | of timber In Somerset county will { soon be converted into paper. A Inrge | gang of workmen has been gent t vy to begin improvements. will feet high. The shanty once completed, work will be begun on a large store building, thirty dwelling houses and an enormous digester for the cooking and steaming of wood in the manuinciure of pulp, and a huge building to be used in the manufacture of paper sacks and wrapping paper. All these prepar ations are preliminary to reducing these 20,000 acres ol forest Lo news, book and fine writing papers.- Free Press The phenomenon of phosphorescent fresh meat has been observed in Erance. Some cutlets of raw pork shone so brightly in the dark that it was possible by the aid of the light thus furnished to tell the time by the watch. The ment did not otherwise differ in appearance or od r from common meat. The phos- phoresence disappeared on the sixth or seventh day, Entire freshness seemed to be a condition of the luminosity, so that when the mea! began to smell its brightness ceased. S EPITOME. Fastern and Middle States AT a fire In Kingston, N. Y., tw0 men wan killed by falling walls and damage amounting to about $28 000 was done I'k § debt of whieh is a reduction of $4 081.831 during the S00 658 456 Boston 1a 8 Piss Past year tue Now York ! electing as speaker George H egislature organised by Sharpe Democratic votes cast for Krastus Hrooks, ln the senate Dlentesant-Governor Hosking made the opening address, MAssACHUERTTS furnishes more veal to the market than any other Nate in his annual message that the GOVERNOR COV to the New den INELL, York $0, Ha STON agislature, says i, and that daring Fhe State Ww been reduced 838,000 it vil it has tiie year ware the Past year recaints for 6 3483 927 81 t Gy the payments were $12,906 711.8 eh Ea { $3,445,210 3 iat 84 53-1000 @ canals dance in the treasury © from 2 of 1 State tax has been increased 0 ag mils I'he revenues ware 81 200, 134 G63 the expenses H58Y,. 010 84 $i of this Stale \ of teachers of 03 Lhe number the mills and houses 3, 730, average BOO in pupils did of prisone in thea prisons Aub om the repot ing ru banks gra and ng Was Fi is Ol 28 saving that 1 tors last 16 number leposit VOAr was U RS. an increase of 85,011; and was 83356 461,670, iq fire the smount on dep Prensa Of Hal | LY £ companies 10] are ow ne 1 Siste. For charitable institutions the total nditures during the vear reached about Ihe total expe 85,000,000 number of insane per ; th sous in the various asylums during the year ible company, of Jersey aad ite trade in 3 wat §1 000,000 failure was broa of ic porters of ohe and hold 4 SEI TEAL 3 ¢ORIPa Dixon Cras J Tus City, N meant in Lhe gap . the oldest largest esiabli couniry, he cou y the st New boat pany’s ght about t & Co, who owe a pension Fowler Urmmplors York % sanity $500,000 who the Dixon Croebl that copeorn will be anable i I'he company’s assets will Habditios, G. Poaren, of Indiana, in New York to TA, days ago GOVERNOR-ELEX Was 1 ed a jew Miss Cornelia Tuy and Lock sl BET Slone. sone Hodge « pera house buliding tha i the t port, N. , together with Ojos and Have bean 348 Of about vioted OEFFER, ¢OD ol her effor, at West Omrpge John Meierh iF, Was han Was very pale and de waked to gallows withont ssl ance i ast her without oeoules.in ¢ 8 word 3 | aa ReeK gtanies, Ih in AaO0UL nine @ axesution of Mrs. Moerhoellur. that convicted him, He declare pparently unbroken mens i of lam i owed th He asked to ses the jary vie not present was Mete far use about five weeks Del , and was hired to work on . Melorhoefer and Newark | the same day that Me WO men Paila- nargad hands of the ‘aw in $08 wale ot) ys ft th i Bl ie Hayes the ma om he OR foe ¥ ad separaied thn m of the the mar whine 8 | Irwin, 1 ware varnishing & vat ol the men in y and wien 8 oan va? nreal of the men were latall the Gith serious burs i At ding the New Yi 10 104s Were i Shenn the annual per of nad to i ¥ Ward 1D responses ras Grant as an, Heary I others wit Loxag’'s to the Massa the aggregate $32,799,164, bank dvposits 609 212.84, Taere ats, MOEERLO ows thet ay 1 PAYIRES ME ialare sen ¥ On JAROU Was the year the and 5.67 ah FEV Blo St with J0¢ y 8 505 teachers, at a8 cost Ihe governor suggests & law recoguiin Hom of permanence in ¢ Hnouve during good dorses the proposal to give property-holding women the right of suffrage, and Proposes a giv elect change in the law of capital panishment, wies the right practically to or a murderer shall be hanged or im ned tor life N.H ticulars of & fatal fire at the Siat A pisrarci from Dover, , Rives par. ford eounty poorhouse, The building contained 168 per. it had many of the Many of ir rooms, and ther sons, and when the fire was discoverad lerable Leadway and re filled w moka the e Twelve oat. or ost Bem women nated at 876,000, gly t PR i BR in diameter, in the boiler thirty three fect y rolling mill, th great 1oroe, lof the Allentown Pa ing the works in the immediate vicinity, ile mi ntown, » exploded wi instantly killiog one ma fiiteon others, eight of whom died on the tol. lowing day. A MAIL tram Newport, Vt., the track and Mrs. illed was thrown from hy a broken rail t, an old lady, was instantly and about twenty other persons were injured. Ax explosion in the smelting works of E. Baltach & Son, in Newark, N. J., cost four workmen their lives The building was ruined, while the ground and houses directly injuries to four othegs. to the front of the works alter tl locked as it a ter A the youngei was hurled t Mr. by and struck his nico al the time of brick Brough Baibach's resi. ; Miss Wil the , producing osnoussion of window of dence near ex. plosion, he hed the brain. Many marine disasters ocenrred along the on | Several vessels went ashore on the Long Island coat, Ox the seo nd day after the boiler explosion at Allentown, Pa., men died, teen, Wa. Western and Southern States, Tur Republican members of the Michigan legislators, in onuouns, nominated ( D. Conger as their JUDE TCR. candidate for Mr. Conger’s nomination was equiva Anraur Murray was hanged at Pendleton, Oregon, for the murder of I. D. French last Jane. GENERAL NATHAN Gore, of West Virginia, navy. [is nomination was unanimously eon- firmed by the Senate, Tre British ship Lupata struck on a rook off the coast of Oregon and went down with all on board, Goversor Munray, of Utah, bas refused to give the certificate of eleotion to Congress to George Q. Cannon, the Mormon eandidate, and bas given it to A. G. Campbell, his Gen- tile opponent, on the ground that Cannon, being foreign-born and never naturalized, is not a citizen, A Mar train ran into a rock-slide near Lexington, N. C., wrecking the engine and postal car and killing the engineer and eolored fireman, Mus, C. G. Gareey and Mrs, E. 0, Ellis, wives of prominent citizens of Havana, Ohio, were out sleighing when their sleigh was struck by a train and both women were i i { i i | i instantly killed, i A mo From Washington, Doning December the reduction publie debt wus 85 000 431, and lor the past | | fess onal in the treasury, | i On January 81. the total gedit, cash in the treasury, | 12.900 730. 41 I'ng {oorease in the publis revenues for 1870 | 8 544 116 617.607 23.487 40 1880 Castoms + H200, 188,133 Internal revenu 10 131 240 460 Miscellaneous 8, 117.141 $153.4 Mak a0 HOB PRON, jab 406 740 Ii, Total . n ad, 081 UConaursssax I’. of Ken the consus, estimates that in the next oon the Arkansas, 1; | § M insisniy iu i: South Caro and West Virginia, 1. The be Florida, 1; i; 8 repre States tO gain be Cali fornia, Georgia, 1; sic 1; Minune Nebraslia, 3; North ( ij States losing representation will 1; New Hampshire, 1; Vermont, York, 2: Pennsylvania, 1. i's i States will remain ag Congressmen will i; Kansas, Ly ows, Bigan, poi, 21 APOLIDA, loa, Taxns, 4, Maine New sentation from the othe now distributed 87, Durisg December the mints standard silver dollars amounting to 81 énl. lowing is a statement of the the Tun fol ed 18% axe ut mints during the © Dhoubio oa Eagles tall hres dollars . .... Canrte -eagies Lollars F'otal gold .. ars Halt«dolars, Qmrter.dol lars Dimes otal silver, ,.. ive o-nt hres cenis, coovss” Cont ccovvvvnnns otal rans Grand total It wars between 1565 near § 49, 000,0 privates snd thirteen oil 74 087 has been ascertained and 1579 fA ary and that WE With +E were killed, Warken waols an LAENEUAL “ Census wor the plea the This would raise oeont 10 $3,500,0 A movement on 1o0l Wo WasHisoroN dispaioh says POOUre Lhe Bp lored man-—-Senstor Bruee, of Bi pie=t0 General (2. rfisid’s cabinel, Foreign News, Wan between Greeos and Turkey is {as al , Greece bavi jootad all most certain offers of mediation and ins 6 execntion of the treaty of Berl The Br Is to om i tish government inten thi 8 1ES 8 p Doers in the RUE VAS on, and then lay | 4 : of the 7.000 German ¢ ga, 0ue of the best BRETTON Haris In Lhe oonulry, nol mor ides ave wholly able to sup for food. Tue Berl n correspondent leg raph as follows here of a demons wilh the Ovjeot of protesting Gren airs by a foreign many oan tolerate Che composed #lale crowd, mostly n the windows of a Berlis by smashed | moaoh frequented Jows and the Jews they met. Larg ings aguinst the Jews continue the erage seems 10 Le gain vow being subsulated lor the tongue. In the provines of Samtoll, Hassia, Manis are slarvy the pward be ia absolute want, forroNes vil wars of DIRPATY i ol Heotor-Mart : Ing Rossinn ff have been Le with great suc A xew play by has met Ar CUlarfanors by serve a wnt WM, Ireland, a procoss-server guarded constal wos on his way was he tod i sasaal when the party tech dug soroes the road an wit} a shower of stones thrown by 8 crowd « peasant The police charged upon the crow killing one man, Iatally wounding three others and inj neue jaring several move, has been another violent shock earthquake at Agram, Austria. THE ¢ the Ur tish parliament, is jueen’s speech, 108d at the opening of a lovoted largely 10 Irish aflairs. tpromises lan sorms in (re. land, bat th IVE IMeRSUres will be promptly put into effeet, oe Britist the n p Indian Chie! was wrecked at wath of the Thames n men id eighte out ol twenty-nine persons on board were drowned A Burrisu off the coast Forty-five pe A Loxpox dis steamer o0llided 11 and a Spanish of I woth were sunk. 08 are reported lost rtagal an 80 fateh repoits feariul disasters atl son daring a recent storm. The ships Cag Sable and Wild Rose b both foundered at five to go nye sen, with their crows, numbering eighty men, and a la with all ‘hands, on the wd vin 8 Havan denty aye a down, AT a fire in ory was ands, A Ginrgs gar aanuliac- BOVE poeoasons were burned to death and dana amounting 10 $160,000 was canved, During a debate in the Bridsh parliament Irish affairs Mr. Forsior Ireland, stated 153 Werle [reland and there +0 oh chiel seoretary for that pPoersons under police prote stion ia had been 2,673 ag yoar. Tue failure of the rise to the belief that hostilities may rarvian oulrages during last break out any moment on the Chinese border be. China bas made ax. suffer greatly throngh lack of discipline and want of bat will A Jaraxesn judge has been assassinated in tenth of the assassin’s lather fiftosn years ago. A SERIOUS split has occurred in the ranks of the Car have | the whom Ca los, lists, ua large section of of Don A Russia imperial decroe deolares the Princess Dolgoruki, whom the empe:or mar. ried shortly alter the death of the empress, t« be a ¢ Sereno Highoess, ’ Ax American bark has in the strait of Dover and six men on board bave been sunk a CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY, i rat i Senate. { Upon the opening ol the Senate after the | holiday rece s a number of documents from | i Vies-President.... Toa question of Mr. Burn. | vide Mr. Eaton, chatrman ol the committees on fureign affus, replied that no action had yet been taken by the eomnattee on Mr. Bara. side’s joint resolation d preoating the oon. struction of an interoceanic canal by Karopean powers, but that early action would be taken in the matter. ... Among the bills iatroduced were: One by Mr. Kernan regulating the soinnge of the standard silver do lar; one by Mr. Whyie for the purchase of Washington's sword, now in the possession of the heirs of George Lewis, to whom it was bequeathed in Washington's will, and one by Mr. Butler directing tue seoreiary of the interior to fur. nish intormation touching the allaged trauds in the enumeration of South Carclioa....A communiontion from General Ga fleld, decline. ing to sccept and renouncing his appointment as United States Senator from Ono, was read and ordered to be placed on the files. The consular ph diplomatic appropriation bill was reyortsd and pinced on the calendar «vos The army approprinti w bill was referred to the committee on appropriations.... Mr. Conklivg introdnped by request a bill to amend section 4,718 of the revised statutes, in relation to the payment of accrued pension money due at the time of the death ot the pensioner or a person having a claim pending therefor, Benator Perry introduced a bill to authorize thirty-five additions! llesaving stations oa the consts bet ween Maine and Maseschusetis, wlong the souls of Now ¢ dune} and Delaware aud in North Carollo Florida and Dexas, The bill nuthoriews the py ment of one month's exira pay to members of crews tor gallant sarvioos, und prondes for pessiouing the widows of those who may lose thelr lives lu the periormanes of daly... The consular snd diy HADRLUG Rppropriaiion bill was passed, tiause fhe Hoase began business alter the holiday by the making of reports by commit. which the bil ani horiging a change refining Lo lion when at OF standard was "reported and passed, The army spp opriation Lill, which ap. proprintos § 40 195,800, wis passed Mr, Springer (ntroduced a bill for the apportion, of jeprescntatives tn Congios among Bates, Helorred to the cons Yyétass toes ior above the filer malting of fant the several Commie, ihe Wood wis discussed, the n opposition to it being Messrs, Weaver, Molane, lounsbery, Mis and Mr, Chittenden speaking tanding bill Relley $e vid pringer, Mr, Bprager offered a resolution ealling or the searviary of state for all intormation io the department, pot beretoiore oommuni. cated, vedere to the Halilax fOshery award of §5 500,000 paid by this goversment to Great Britain, and especially that relating to the alleged flotitions siatistios and perjared slate ia Oe which evidence the award was made; whether the governwent has taken any sleps to secure a verification of the recently pub. lished stalements of Protessor Goule Hind on thi foreign allnire sutijeat, A few mmutes bolore eight o'clock in the morning a fire broke out in a Now York tense. ment house Ladison street Wore burned either safloeated death, | other inmates of the building were also in { and eight children by the smoke or to jured by juraping trom the windows or rool he cause of the five was the explosion of » whioh tw to thaw oul some frozen | paso ine machine on the frst floor, | water pipes. They were working directly the in inder stairway, and in some way the ht in nsline €¢ machine ocaung ruing liquid was scattered every direc Lion, ihe house is an wood wus very dry and rotten. PW y, and as the fire-escupe was placed front of 1h rushed up the narn the wdder of lirectly in sleep slairwey On in v windows opening on the hallway every avenue of escape was out aff i first inti he #4 anes spread very rapidly, and the any d wis when Aner wke aud Hames poured in al the doorway LUT POOL Ih 8 BIL 8 © 7 = a ol the firomen, who were on the sit wie ht 3 POL egal u At Madison RU ange: 3 inules aiter the alarm sounded aud James streets was collected Crowd, Who oo tie see Lhe amok lhe whe iid only risiog above bulidings window Maings were on fire, and from window hungrily ourling longees of Sames. Al But grew floors and partitions were ina blsse. first it seeped to be an ond nary fire. the laos of the ng shrieks and sey ins rang oul ries, and a thrill of horror ran throag ators al thought o t the the Ca 3 ourth aud the Sheridans y the Af} discoverin Mary 2 the fire, bad sisters, and ransing 's i called to her mother and to the souttle bad pasbhed it open and had Mac i son ing off the escape and smoke h the scuttle, £ to the rool of No. 87 pr #ireet @ fire iol wed her, cut gion of Same bit 0 Rul BOON Up Ha ¥ mbed to the 14 i ug of the Oak street rool from James street But the rivks that rose above the roar of the flames, nokle of eh thro and Davis, saved some ol the inmales. 8 5 of many mn beings suffering a he ltile court which intensely hot from omen could Atl they po The into se opened was so the fi: a the fire thal not enter 11 fo asl. pel ly gelling upon ad. red torrents of waler moans within grew the victims who escaped the flame were smothered by bot smoke half an hour BOK house was gulted and theally In the Half the se he dames were prac extinguished men and policemen began i 2 dead. There was a0 ex. on of horror as the first man who erent blsckened in the kitchen in the rear lay the body Hrdget Cassidy, burned almost to & her Laree children ~ ¥ ¢ near her were , Wii fed respectively six, eight and one years— evidently smothered by the smoke. other side of the hall were the bodies of Killen Egan, aged two years, and John Walsh, & boy 4 no thiresn years, little girl, almost » succumbed ol baby, had quickly fomes aud was i the hth and dead under the bed. On floor were the bodies of Mrs, Sheridan ree children, aged respectively fourteen five and three and years, azed nine, were injured, but not seri Egan, William G. Patton, the plumber engaged in g out the frosen pipes, and Timothy were arrested, the $10,000 bail thawis On, An assistant, prt on HO Ie ent to the hospital as a prisoner. HI Fans, whe fan craving its history, J Hygiene states that the papyrus was one of the first plants used in making fans. In ancient Greece the first fans the Journal and palm tree. It was not until fifth century, B. C,, wns known in Greece, and from this | epoch « the use among Grecian la | dies of the peacock’ tall as a new and | elegant kind of fan. As the fan maker's art extended, the use of feathers alone came to be discarded, as they were found too pliable, and the idea was con- ceived of placing between esch pair of feathers a thin strip ol wood. Fansare often mentioned in Latin suthors. Plautus refers to the flabeliferrse or fe- slaves, who oarried parasols and fans to shade and drive away flies from their mistresses. Fans of peacoek's feathers remained in fashion through the middle anges up to the seventeenth century, not only in Italy, but in Eng- land and France. Fans of ostrich feath- ers came into favor gradually, excluding those of peacock feathers. and such fans Leaves of paim trees, reeds and odoriferous woods are among the substance of which fans are now made in foreign countries. fate A. T. Stewart’s Remains. The New York correspondent of a { Judge Hilton, that the late A. T, The thieves who stole it re- wenkness to redeem But Mrs. | n.an would lie safe in his grave; that soul, and that if he could appear to her in spirit he would tell her never to give one cent to keep alive such an example. Hence the grave rohbers had their work and sub- sequent expense and long waiting on a reward for nothing. Judge Hilton has gaid to the correspondent: *‘I would tell you if I had anything to subject is mainly designed to assist the thieves and extort money from Mrs. Stewart, When the subject dies out, and the wounds of the hour are healed, it ma AY be time to talk upon that ques- tion ’ Little Things. Springs are little things, but they are sources of large streams; a helm is a little thing, but it governs the course of aship ; a bridle bit is a little thing, but we know its use and power; nai s and pegs are littie things, but they hold the parts of a large building together; a word, a look, a smile, a frown, are litre things, bnt powerful tor or evil. Think of this, and mind the little things. Pay that little debt; if it is a promise redeem it. You know not what for. tant events may hang upon it. Keep your word sacred; keep it to the chil ren—they will mark it sooner than any one else, and the effect will probably be A WOMAN'S EXECUTION, Mre. Melorhoaler and Frank Lammeons Havged at Newark, N, J. The execution sat Newark, New Jersey, of Mrs. Meuioh oeffer, and Frank Lammens, & tramp who bad been employed by the vietim of the tragedy-ihe woman's hushand-to work on his farm ls desoribed ss follows by the New York papers: During the morning a marked change was observable in the con. doet of Lammens. He bad been theretofors al. most uneont rollably violent, It was not enough for him to mak protestations ol innocence quietly. He bad made thom always with the desperation of a man rewlved, it he sould, 10 escape the penalty of his crime, at whatever saorifics of manhoo i, He bad passed much of his time daring the last week in stamping up and down the corridor, which was the limit of his fresdom, in yelling like a mad. man, and making grimaces through the iron. barred windows at imaginary foes Soon siter midnight he boone more subdaed, and in the morning was quist and rational. He would not sleep st all during the night, but paced up aud down the sorridor, There were | no signs of excitement in his demeanor, save | when the watchers made relsrence to the | murder. Even on this polut he faslly con. | sented to talk, but only to reassert bis inno. He smoked his pipe most of the time he was visited by the Rev, Therslotore he bad resented all overtures on the part of the priest. At breakiast hour he was given a porterbouse | steak, some coffee and rolls, and mines pie. i He ate the ood, but without apparest relish Boon alterward he was visited by Mr, Charles | Boreheling, his counsel. T: this gentleman | hemade anew his Jeclaration of innocence He suid that oa ose oconsion, in bis presence Mra. Melorboslfor had stiempied to poison { har bushand, but bad been somehow pre He threatened to make sa hous | i epeech on the gallows, Mra. Melerho:ffor's coaduet had all along | been in marked contrast with that of ber fellow | murderer. She warmly protested her iano. | sence, and there are persons who were dis. | posed to acoept her story. Shortly after mid. night she tell asleep, and continued to seep | well till about halt-past four o'clock, when she | venes, In the morning i Father Zelliob, vented, | arose and oar fully prepared hewself for the final scone, which she was to wear on the gallows, Sue wore & black dress which she said was 8 mark of mowmning lor her murdered hashand | ber soon alter she had arses, and she receiv | the last rites of the Roman C It was stholie church the other of the sooused might make a contesdon of guilt sud | exoulpate the other. Some question w | raised, beosuss of this suspicion, as to which of them should first be led to the gallows Arrangements had been made so that if either sontessed the execution of the other | should be stayed, attorney, sat in Colonel Johnson's offios in | the jail as witness, throngh & window op ning of the banging. He had is his pocket a reprieve bearing the great ses thought that one or Ls guilt, i into the corridor, pasture for each of the condemned. of the other the reprieve jor the one yel un. banged was to be presented. Sheriff Van Renselaer 4 Meier hooff + first Mrs. Meierhoeffor was pinioned at her sell door, the black cap was adjusted on ber head gallows st exsotly balf-past view through buried door sdmittieg to the corridor, she wai deathly pale, but walked firmly, suit of biack made her face the whiter by con. Her lips moved as though she wes | mottering a prayer. Sheriff Van Renseluer the procesdion Following him was Under-Sher f Davis. Next came the Rev Father Walter, prior of the Benedictine order, in oitizen’s dress. Father bis \ esuments, and the doomed woman came | next. The rear was closed by two deputy sheriffs. She was Jed at once under the gal lowi. The black was drawn down, the repe around her of the reporiers, fast, led G ard, wearing CRY oap above, ard a minute ster the drop fell, body sprasg into the air, broken by the fall of the weight, one convulsive movement of the body and all was over The body was slowed to hang for nearly hall an hour, ithe priests meanwhile koseling and praying. Dire. wad nd 4 jess casionally a 11ts time, lowered and removed out of sight into an report seatings (rom time io tions were made for the execution of Lam. mens. would give way to histear, and that it would the change in his condact gave rise to hope ol { more resolute behavior. He received the sunouncement that his time had come with composure. He asked whether Mrs. Meier hoofler had yet been hanged, but the sheriff and the deputies returned evasive answers. Shortly betore hall-past eleven o'clock the black cap was placed on the crown of his | bead, the noose was atjustel about the neck, and a procession again marched to the gal | lows, Sheriff Van Renselser and Colonel Davis, the under sheriff, were first; pext i oame the Rev. Fat her Walter. Father Zil. liox supported Lammens, who walked firmly and bravely forward. Jammens took his | position beneath the transverse beam, the rope was fixed to the ring, axd a minute | Inter his body leaped into thy «ir, There | was but » slight movement perceptible alter. ward. The chest heaved heavily a tow times, and then all the observable signs ot lite were i gone. The body hung for twenly minutes and was then cut down. Turpentine. A correspondent of the Scientific Amerwoan says: Let any one who has an | attack of lockjaw, take a small quantity { of turpentine, warm it and r iton | the wound, no matter where the wound is, and relief will follow in less than a minute. Nothing better can be a plied to a severe cut or bruise than cold tur- pentine; it will give certain relief al | most instantly. Turpentine is also a | sovereign remedy for croup. Saturate a piece of flannel with it and piace the flannel on the throat and chest, and in every case three or four dropson a lump of sugar may be taken inwardly. Ev- ery family should have a bottle on hand. There are 1,037 studeuts in attendance at the various schools and departments of Yale college. [8t. Louis Western Watchman.) Music Hath Charms, ete. One of the great manufacturing Inter- ests of Boston is the Emerson Piano Company, whose pianos are used with high appreciation and satisfaction throughout the world. In a recent cone versation with Mr. Joseph Gramer, one grit the je propridiors, that gentleman re- have used ihat splendid marked Bt. Jacobs Ol], in my family, and found it to ba so very beneficial that I wiil never be without it. Tt has cured me of a severe case of rheumatism, after other remedies had failed. The bead of a troupe of Bohemian iass blowers lately exhibited in Wash- ngton a dress made of flint glass that had required 100 000 miles of spun glass thread to weave its material. Tt was of the texture of fine silk, and had taken some twenty-four weeks to complete. Milwaukee Evening Wis Wisoonsin. } A Strong Conqueror, Accordin ng to an Illinois exchange, our days o rheumatism are well-n numbered. Bi. Jacobs Oil enters a rheumatic territory, and conquers every subject. TI hat's right. We believe in it. The first American city to light its gifects wholly by electricity is Ogden. ia D'BULLS (Veg) SYRUP A A HATA A man in Warren county drives an team that onoe to an perate man, an so used stopping for him at that now, when passing a saloon, BO nk Fie doesn't. eae ToF the 4 uot, he says, but is obliged to drink is his team along, $5,000 for She oa oaen, Dn and ring Ta that there is nothing that will do it so perfeotly sad surely us Hop Bitiers, the putas and best of all suedioines. De In Hungary it is a practi standing wo store lars or cisterns, an at ing, n peasant comes ACTOS these cisterns, filled with grain hundreds of of years old, forgotten, no doubt, after some war, when the whole community was cut off. A Phy ieinn of Great {6 Thirty-suxth street, New ural’ ot even help Mr. Wm, McKee, of a son, N J. suffering the agouiss always st. son.X 4 upon dissssed kidneys. bonest man and be | and cured Bim by using one bottles of Wer per's Sale Ki ney | and Liver Care. | The bisnop of Pebstshorcugh recently (declared that agricuitural oupaisian {was a divine win fhment Yo | unfsithfulness | Bush vate at its fret | ing takes the pince of De. { lor Coughs, Colds, leritation GHEAT HORSE MEDICINE DR. TOBIAS 4 JENETIAN HORSE : pe booties 3 cents; 55 years i bos 1270 isd Sfor he ture oF Lodi, id Bares, : Sore ste. TORIAS Cus i Pow DEES sre warranted to : Worms, B As; give a Gne coal; | 1a the world, and 1 | pe Devol—43 THE MARKETS. FEW FORK Bors Osttie— Mad, Natives, live wi... | Onlves—~ Good 10 Prime Veals a= SITRY ray Slivet, s% rE SEER EERE BREE EAR SEAS REREE ov * cE CARER RR EAR AER SERAEE AREER v0 ! Bog ces mena. D evan tn to fancy. 10 fancy... rsesamn ase neuarARS i Waite, FEBRRE Lr RRR Aee RB srnsans ss wo-Bowed Fioar—Ex. Wheat—No. 3 No FesEgRages «4 od 1 i EX5u28888 i Southern Yellow. covsen criss | Dale—~White BUSS, serene: { Mized Western, Bay~Prume,, Er Jing Rye Por OW, iene i Hous , 1850 LEER ABER SERRE | Pork-—-Mens old... uous sessenisrs sob | Lard —Oity Blea, cesennassess | Petrolenin—Orode cece... Gi . Butter—8tate Creamery anv EeS FESESR ERS BN SEER UE esgEase td & was te 82 Th Fo i ® Eageny a « a - = Ey ation Chea » Western lmitati Fast mary | Chevso—ftate FASOLY wou esvenseonsnn Ww Ene »" HEIRS. so coner sbensnss ersten SRREREEEEEAE i Bops—Blate and FERRE Se ERERE | Polstoes—~Blate, bb! Early BOLL VI AA lambs Welter... ..oc00ss | Sheep ~ Western, «ues... CEE BARS | Hogs, Good to Choloe Yorkers. ... | Plonr-Oty No. 1 Spring. . Whest—Xo. 1 Hard wtb Oormn—No. 3 Westert........ ut 4 gErudsree 8y ea REeat cera Eovasssssrstn es saent c anssen we. 1rNSEERE FuEAE Beal —~ Western Mom. conse. oor sarsns | Hoge—Live, | Hoge--Oity a : Pf Prime per bbl cuvnees © ge 2 fre RRERER SS RRREAREE ai BES ane -Wisoousin } Qorn—Mixed and Fellow. vase «0.0. -™ w- Huwsnd: (ams uns anxwy Bes! Ositle~live weight, . 8 eh pe | Lam a BORE... oconssssrnssnnssssnssnnnabis Wheat No, ann. food | Ryeo—iitale $ annnnnns Ee seamen ene Corp—ftate Yellow. sores srssnnersen | OnteMIXOE wanes». vovnnnssvain oo Croats... Full Cream Shsien evan sane U8 MEROT Be ax SEs The Barks, Roots and Herbs FROM WHICH VEGETINE Ii MADR IN POWDER FORM, SOLD FOR 50 Cents a Package. Ll i a Ans En. Ly id REE EAS, i et I Hoa Cre thme—send for , 0. Box 1387, ROBT WELLS, 43 Vesey a N. x2 DON'T YOU “A HOME BY "THE SEA.» E. ©. LINDSEY, Norfolk, Mss AY LAND FARMS, §7 to van ve Acre, cate free. H. P, CHAMBERS, ronal Jaman to gig $350 Aa nov AGENTS WANTED! ¥ Ionsox, Deco Mie A rT $777 HN. ervous Deity. 1. Trial box, he 4 BLE TR : us nsting as life. Mind litule things. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE. ICTORIAL - HIST ORY «rmx WORLD | CELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. Sot and Aber. “Toe Ti a ade by SPE 30d strongest known. Maiden Ee ee oa. re. ro 13 SAPONIFIER Eel ee pany ch ie LJ PENNA SALT MANUFACTURING CO. Phila. PENSIONS, BEE wat Semen FROMGE E. P. O. Drawe- ». Revolution. x EFA Ee : NATRONA "2 i ELIE E Sy pay py, nny PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila Hair isthe SAFEST i i acts instable Pde DAL Le Ar pm inh Fairy rc = Ere i Rocky Sealey Fucioos aries Wa Works By ee toot JE ce 3th Sites, NewYos BEFORE BUYING OR RENTING AN OR RG GA N Ev iri, 8 30 1 nie ENE WANTED. RITA A a wi Sie is feito WL ve ma frais; ve we Brepey A ere charges; we PEOPLE'S TRA OO. Bex 5035, St Lois, Mo. of Sur PATENT DRESS Coin, Waa hy Si hs CHERPEST' T BISLES fir, SE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers