HUNAN IREES. How the Bheel Maobbers of Indian Escape From Their Parsners, { All those who feel a sufficient interest | fa said by !. : ] Istting © a falls pia w in the subject to stady or notice the | g. one glove fall; the gloves me | facts must at times be struck with : oy Jried.inthe right band to suy No.l | nmameme nt at the ‘wonderful resem: | you have become indifferent partig un. | Pianee of certain insecis and other ani- glove vour left band. To indiate that | DAIS 10 vegetable snd inanimate objects. | ou desire to Ye followed, strike your | SO eX8ct is this resemblance in some in- | eft shoulder with the gloves. “1 do |8'ADCes a8 10 deceive the most experi: not love you any more,’ is pronounced (enced, Wallace, the great naturalist, | by striking the gloves several times WA Very anxious to secure a specimen | against the chin. For “I hate you"! of a certain brilliant butterfly, but was | turn the gloves inside out. * I should | weable for some time to capture one on wish to be beside you,” is said by | ccountof the creature's sudden unao- | smooth ne the gloves gently. To ask it founisble and Juysterious disappear you are loved, the left hand is gioved, ance. He finally discavery d that the eaving the thumb uncovered. If you | Outside of this fnscot’s wings was an wish to make the charming contession, | ¢¥8Ct representation of a teaf. When “1 love you,” both gloves are let fall at the butterfly alighted upon a shrub und once, To gives warning, ** Bo attentive | dosed its wings it completely deceived We are observed,” the gloves are | ¢VER this experienced sotentist, Some turned round the fingers. 1f you would | Species of lobsters found at Bermuda so show that you are displeased, strike the | 2i08ely resemble submarine stones, even back of tour band against your gloves; | 10 the coating of sea weeds, that I have * furious,” you take them away. passed by an Rquarium containing them . : supposing the tank to uninhabited, The common katydid cm whose constantly-repoated notes, late in sumunier, warn us of the approaching frosts, has a repres ntative in South America, whose wings not only resem. bie a greea leaf, but, to add to the de. cepiion, the tips of the wings are ragged and discolored, having the exact appears ance of» leaf that has been disfieured from the attacks of enterpiliars onee abd one in my studio, and it was with igreat diffienity tist I could convince visitors that it was not an artificial inscot with wings made of real leaves. In the snow-covered regions of the North the foxes, hares, bears and birds, | FOR THE FAIR SEX. Pl Language of Gloves. The following is said to be the lan- fusge of gloves: “ Yes" | | | i oe A Dachess’ Clothes. A public sale of the personal effects of recent decossed duchess took place Iately in London. The catalogue, says the London Queen, describes a vast number of articles of wearing apparel, all of which belonged to the lste dows. ger duchess of Somerset, the second wife of the eleventh duke of that title. A notion of the extensive character of this wardrobe is given when it is stated that of shawls alone there were no less than 80 speoimens, while there are 500 lace and other handkerchiefs, 800 pairs of slik hose snd 2.000 pairs of gloves, bes sides other articles in like proportion. These are divided into no less than 1,600 Jots. Most of them appear to have never been in use, and scores upon scores of Landkerchiefs remain nea'ly folded as when they were originally purchased. In almost every case the different effects bear a ducal coronet and initial embroidered upon them, but be- yond this there is nothing which ean supposed to give an adventitious in. terest 10 any of them except in two or three instances.| witli very few exceptions, assume the | prevailing white color ot the surround. ing objects. Man has not been blind to these hints. There are various tribes of savages who successfully imitate stumps and stones by remainirg im. movable in crouching positions 30 as to baflle their pursuers. This miguiery is earried to a wonderful degree of perfection in India. That strange country, as Dr. Latham says, “of a teeming, ingenious, and indus. trious but rarely independent popula. | tion. lt is a country of an ancient lit- | erature and ancient architecture.” A country where such a society as the murderous thugs is possible; a country | w here robbers are educated from child. | hood for the profession in which Whey take great pride, openly boasting of their skill. One of our most skillful Tea Gowns=-COhildren’s Dresses. The iatest novelty in this kind of house dresses is the recently imported ** tea pown,” a new garment that can be classified neither as & dress or & wrap- per, which has been imported from Eng- land with the afterncon tea or kettle dram. These gowns are made exactly after the pattern of those worn from the time of the first empire, when a revival of the classic Greek dress was sttempted, which ‘asted until about 1840. They | are made of tinted twilled silks, the waists under thearms. no fullness in the skirts, sleeves close-fitting, with slashes and puffs at the shoulders; neck uare, snd s puff, ruffle or tucks at the edge of the short skirt, The idea origi- nated with the Ssthetie club, of Lon- don, and has received much adverse oriticisin outside of artistic circles in Eagl It is the almost universal custom to keep children in white dresses until they are five or six years old. Their short dresses are made of the finest ma- terials and worn over colored slips of silk, flannel or silesia. The neck is high finished with a lace ruflle, or wide collar and a square yoke. with tucks, lace and embroidery. The skirt is gathered into this and finished with one or two ruffles A bea 1 dress of real princesse lace is made into a piam slip. with the pattern forming the sleeves, and upper part with a rufile four inches deep of the same lace From these through all grades of value, according to the material used, they may be had, finished in the neatest manner, the pissin slip of and adroit bank robbers would be considered by these India experts but a bungling amateur. The scientific manner in which these robbers prepare for their raids shows a thorough knowledge of the dangers of their calling, and the best guards against the same, choosing darkness for their forays. When their dusky bodies are least observable they remove their clothes, anoint themselves with cil, and with a single weapon, a keen-edged knife suspended from their neck, creep and steal like shadows noiselessiy through the darkness. If detected, their gre sy and slippery bodies assist them in elud- ing capture, while their rasor-bladed knife dexterously severs the wrist of any detaining hand But the most in- genious device to escape capture is that shown by he Bheel robbers. It often happens that a band of these robbers are pursued by mounted Englishmen, and unable to reach the jungle, find themselves about to | overtaken upon one of thos» open plains which have been cleared by fire, the only shelter in ir is be i sight being the blackened trunks or leafless branches of small trees that perished in the flames. For men so skilled in posturing this is shelter enough. Quickly themselves of their scanty clothi they scatter it with their plunder small piles over the plain, covering { them with their shields so that they have the appearance of lumps of earth and attract no attention. This secon. pished, they snatch up a few sticks, throw their bodies into a contorted posi- tion, and stand or crouch immovable until their unsunspicious enemies have galioped by. When all is safe they quickly pick up their spoil and proeeed upon their way. The Bev. J D. Woods, gives an inter. esting account of these marvelous mimics. I quote the following: ‘Before the English had become used to these maneuvers, a very ludi- crous incident occurred. An officer, with a party of horse, was chasing a small body of Bheel robbers, and was fast overtaking tuem. Suddenly the robbers ra: behind a rock or some sueh obstacie, whioh hid them for a mo- ment, and when the soldiers came up the men had mysteriously disappeared. After an unavailing search, the officer ordered his men to dismount beside a clump of scorched and withered trees: and the day being very hot, he took off his helmet sand hung it on & branch by which he was standing. The branch in question turned out to be the leg of a Bheel, wlio burst into a scream of laughter, and flung the astonished officer to the ground. The clump of scorched trees suddenly became meta. morphosed into men, and the whole party dispersed in different directions before the Englishmen could recover from their surprise, carrying with them the officer's helmet by way of trophy.” entific American. Givest cambric, with tucks and pieits, costing forty-eight cents. Infants’ cloaks sie made with the double cape of cashmere or matellasse silk, with white si'k fringe edging both capes. -Handsomely embroidered, they sre $38. Long dresses are made with | high neck and long sleeves, with a square yoke and trimming on the edge of one or two lace orembroidered ruoflles. The Landsomest are mmde of rea! Valen- ciennes lace and linen lawn, and are valved at $26. Those with robe front of lace and puffing are $35. Handsome nainecok robes, with fine embroidery, are from $2.90 to $20 Co ored flannel long dresses are a sensible addition to An infant's wardrobe, costing from £1.65 to 86. They are white, pink and bine. Embroidered cashmere shoes also in pale colors and are made with flexible soles. «+ Some of the handsomest and most durable of children’s short dresses are made of serpentine braid, crocheted into strips snd msde np with cambric or linen. —N w York Herald. i Wigwam and His Hate, Mr. Wigwam is a farmer, and recently one of those agents that infest the coun- try came along and tucked off upon him An sutomatic gate. The gate was =o arranged that the weight of a person approaching it would cause it to rise, snd when they had passed under it down it would come., This gate was painted red. and the dav after it was ut in position, a cross bull, owned by r. Wigwam, discovered it. A bull somehow hss 8 rcoled antipathy for that hue, and this spimal no sooner dis- covered the gate than it made a rush to gore it. Of course, ss the bull ap- proached the gate, his weight cansed it to rise, and he passed under it, and his failure to hit anything solid, seemed to | affect him about 28 it does a man to go up a dark stairway, snd when he had reached the top, think there is onestair more, and step for it, and bring his foot down so hard that it makes the sole tingle as if slapped by a shingle, and leaves the print of the boot on the floor. When the bull recovered a little and looked back and saw the gate, which had come down, in its original position, he couldn't quite understand sow he got past it. arid what had happened, and ne stood and thrashed himself with his tail, and thought of it for a minute, and then tried it again. Same resuit. Bull wore puzzled than ever and awful mad. An- other trial. Bullonly succeeds in rooting his nose into the gron:'d. Bail aliaost delirious with rage. Wigwam, who is watching him from the houte, in same condition with Jaughter. The bull evident'y made up his mind to bit that gate or die in the attefopt, and he tried the thing seven more times, and yet the gate stoed there, every time, when he looked back. Then having wrenched hintself and sergpei! the hide off his nose, and got quite out of breath, the animal became discouraged and drew | aside and merely watched the gate, But Wigwam hadn't had enough of the fun. He took a mirror, and went | out and climbed upon the gute and gabfnt the sunlight on the mirror, and ed it in Lhe, buil's eyes to madden | him. 1f did. The bull rushed once wore at the gate. Wigwam expected the gate to rise up with him and let the bull pass. Bat his weight held it down. | The bull hit the gate square, Wigwam was knocked forty feet, and got his eyes | and mouth full of dirt, and was badly | skun. The mirror wss shattered. And | the bull caught both horns and one foot | railways and canals connecting it with in the gate, whicl'broKe from its fasten- | the great cities of the Uovion, and its Ings, and he went madly curcering | nearpess to mines of the raw material about with it, struggling to release him- | West and southwest iie vhe coal, kaolin, self, and Wigwam didn't dare go to his | spar and quartz mines of Pennsylvania, rescue, and was too much hurt to do | Delaware and M wy iand, and eastward | anything, anyway, and finally the bull, | the fire and white cinys of New Jersey, | after tearing up everything in reach, | The clays of Onio, Missouri and threw himself and broke his neck. { Indiana, and abundance of fuel, have Loss, $300. { built up East Liverpool, making it the Wigwam lays all the blame on the | ceramic center of the West. For thirty | gate agent, which, perhaps, is natural. | years it has been engaged in the manu. ~ Boston Po:t. | fac ure ot the ordinary Rockingham and | | yellow wares, furnishing the greater | | portion of the two million doliars’ worth | | snnually produced in this country. Tt | ; { was not until 1873 that white ware of | A gentleman informs us that he was in | any d- seription engaged the attention of | New Hampshire last summer, when the | the Liverpoo. potters—to-dsy white following incident came under his ob- | granites, sgemi-chinas and “cream. ! servation: The men were mow ng ina | color” are manufactured in fourteen | field, and accompanying them was a thriving establishments, snd one or two | large Newfoundland dog, who watched | firms are experimenting in china. —Har- | the operations, and saw some moles | per's Magazine. start in the grass; the dog caught sev-~ he eral, digging for them and killing them. 11 at once the dog disappeared and was gone for some time. Looking up the -field in the direction of the farmhouse, our informant saw the dog trotting down toward the men, and by his side was trotting the house eat, the greatest cordiality always existing between the two animals. The dog brought the eat directly to the swath, and soon pussy understood what was up. As Boon as a mole was started she caught and killed lim, and when ons retreated to a hole, the dog scented and dug him out, the cat in this case killing the mole: and so the dog and eat hunted together for quite a time, until they wearied of the sport. We suppose we shall be told that instinet governed the animals, and that they had no language whicit to communicate with each we [ne Oh Fretting. There is one sin which it seems to me | is everywhere and by everybody under- | estimated, snd quite too much over- looked in our valuations of charscter. It is the sin of fretting. It is as common a3 air, as speech; so common that un. less it rises above its usual monotone we do not even observe it. Watch any ordinary coming together of people, and see how many minutes it will be before somebody frets—that is, makes a more or less complaining statement of sowe- thing or other, which most probably, every one in the room, or the stage, or the car, or the street co:ner, ss it may be, knew before, and which most prob- ably nobody can help. Why say any- thing sbout it? It is old, it is hot, it is wet, 1t is dry; somebody has broken an appointment, ill-cooked a meal; stu- pidity or bad faith somewhere has resuited in discomfort. There are always plenty of things to fret about. It 18 gimply astonishing how much annoyance and discomfort may be found in the course of every day's living, even at the simplest, if one only keeps a sharp eve out on that side of things. Even Holy Writ says we are born to trouble as sparks fly upward, in the biackest of smoke, there is a blue sky above, and the less time they waste on the road the | sooner they will reach it. Fretting is ail time wasted on the road — Helen Hunt. ei —————_— ie Pottery in the United tates, There are now eight hundred potteries in the United States, thé total products of which supply fifty per cent. of the wares annually consumed, the chief centers of the industry being Trenton, the capital of New Jersey, and East Liverpool, in Ohio. The former city offered peculiar attractions to the potter, both from its | What Language Did They Use. The Brunswick (Me. ) 7. lcgraph says: Shutting Up a Bachelor, The baby didn’t feel pretty good any- | how, poor little thing; the ear was | cold snd the road was rough, and every- | body else was cross and glum, and the | baby ha only one way in which to ex- | press its emotions, soitericd. And how it did ery! Twenty eight miles of it and no sign of a let up, and the tired | mother just smothering it with baby | talk and rocking the little thing in her | arms. Presently a testy-looking man, an old bachelor if ever there was one, | turned in his seat and snarled: *‘ Can't | you shut that child up?’ The light | that gleamed from her eyed was dan- | gerous, us she hugged the baby a little closer and fired back at him: “1 ean | shut you up a great deal quicker.” Toe | Lowl of approbation went up al over | the car, snd he ‘shut up."~ Bw li ylon | Hawkeye. i i i i i a E | TIMELY TOPICS, | From New York to San Francisco by | the route by the isthmus of Tehauntepeo projected hy Captain Eada, the distance | is 1,500 miles less than by De Lessepa' | mouths of the Mississippi to San Fran. That literature when pursued under tere with longevity, haa been pointed out time and again. A striking ilostm. tion is presented in the onse of Mary Howitt. The rising generation rarely hear of this long time literary worker, who is still sald to enjoy good health, and still employs her pen, She was porn in the last century. Discussing the chances for the Veryl tories becoming Sistes, a New York paper avers that the Territory which will first be turned into a State is Dakota, and niter her in cioge sucees ston New Mexicoand Washington. * I} Dakota should be divided, the northern part, which may be Pembins, wiil not be far behind Washington Next in order of admission will prob abhiy he Montana and Arizona. ldabo, Utah and Wyoming are nod lik ly to come in during the next ten or fifteen years,” eal ed i Ol Great will be the disgust moat scientists as tl ey read the newest book from the pen of the well-known ichihy. ologist, Frank Buckland, who died re cently. Mr, Buckland was an esteemed authority in his special department of sotence, but it appears that he has never considered it nee ssary to acopt any of [@li- poraries have mi haste to treat as facts. He netually qualifies the sacred word ‘evolution by the prefix “so called ;" he does not even spell it with a large E, and he is equally contemptu. ous of * development.” believed that animal life wag perfect of its kind from the beginning, aud evidently de. elined to trace his genealogy back through monkeys, lisards, spails and polyps to protoplasm, After making several hich leaps at diffirent places Sam Patch jumped into the river at Rochester, N. Y., from a high elevation, and was never seen alive again. Emulous of Lis fame, the {ool- hardy fellow who jumped into the Harlem river from the High bridge last summer, and who has since made ap engagenent to jump from the Niagara Falls suspension bridge next May, is sure to give the newspapers another Sam Pateh tragedy one of these days, uniess some way is found of heading him off. If by incredible good luek he should get out of the Niagara undertak ing alive, probably the next thing would be a jump from the foot idge over the East river, New York The paper from which we obtain this item of news says that “men should not te permitted to risk their necks in this way for money. Oue Sam Patch is enough.” } i aa i $ » He 3 * it bv ¥ x i —— he director of one of the largest State lunatic asylums in Germany main. tained at a recent meeting of physicians that much of the notorious increase of insanity in Germany is attributable to the excessive amount of work imposed upon thie pupilsin the national schools, In order to noquit himself creditably, a pupil of average ability must, it is ealou- lated, in addition to attending punctually and working diligently doring school bours, work at home at least two hours daily wien in the lower classes, three hours when in the middie and four or five hours when inthe upper clrsses. A boy, therefore, say of sixteen years or upward has to work ip s¢ hours and at home twenty-four hours a week or, with the exception oi Sundays, for ten hours every day of the week. Several doctors in private practice, who took part in discussion which followed the reading of the paper, also spoke ol the increasing frequency of morbid irritability in clitldren, the re- sult of overwork, which, although it might not always drive pupils into the lunatic asylum, ofts lastingiy and prejudicialiy affected ir constitn- tions. ha elt the § i 0 thei Industrial Secrets, A century ago what a man discovered in the he concealed. Workmen were put upon an oath never to reveal thie process used by their ; Doers were keot closed, artis out were searched, visit ous y excinded ars 1 mission, and false operations biinded the workmen themselves. The mysteries of every craft were hedged in by thick-set fences of empirical pretensions and judicial aflirmation. The royal manufactories of poreeisin, for exas were carried on in Europe with a spirit of jealous ex- clusiveness. H jesty of Saxony wus especially circumsg Not eon- tent with the oath of secrecy imposed upon his work-peopie, he would not abate his kingly suspicion in favor of a brother monarch Neither king nor king's delegate might cuter the tavooed walls of Meissen. What is erroneously cailed the Dres- den porcelsin—that exquisite potte ry of which the world Las never seen its like i y fron i 8 1 De, iy i is & cess so secret that neither the bribery of princes nor the garrulity of the opera- tives reveaied it. Other discoveries hive been less successfully gusraed for. tunately for the worid. The manulac- ture of tinware in England originated in a stolen secret. Few readers needed be informed that tinwsre is simply thin iron pisted with tin by being cipped into the moiten metal. In theory it Is an easy matter to ciean the surface of iron, dip it into a bath of boiling tin, remove it enveloped with a silvery metal to a place for cool ing. In practice, however, the process is one of the most difficult in the arts. It was discovered Holland, and guarded from publici y with the utmost vigilance for wore than hail a century. England tried in vain to discover the secret until James Sherman, a Cornish miner, insinuated himself master of the secret, and brought it home, The secret of manufacturing cast steel was also steaithily obtained, snd ia now within toe reach of all artisans.— Trade List. in How to Npeil a Child, 1. Begin young to give him whatever he eries for. Ta k treely before the child about his smartness as incomparable. 3. Tell him that he is too much for you, that you ean do nothing with him. 4. Have divided cousecls as between father and mother. 5. Let bim learn to regard his father as a creature of unlimited power, ea- pricious and tyrannical: or as a mere whipping machine. 6. Lot him learn, frem his father's example, to despise his mother. 7 Donot know or care who his com- panions may be. 8. Let him read whatever he likes. 9. Let the child, s¥hether boy or girl, | rove the streets in the evenings—a good school for both sexes. 10. Devote yourself to making money iemembering that wealth ia a bette egacy for your child than principles in the heart and babits in life: and Jet him have plenty of money to spend. 11. Be not with him in hours of recre- ation, i 12. Strain at a gnat and swallow a camel; chastise severely for a foible and | laugh at a vice, 13. Let him run shout from church. Eclecticism in religion is the order of | the day. 14 Whatever burdens ot virtuous | requirements you lay on his shoul”ers, touch not with one of your ringers. Preach gold and practice irredeemnble greenbacks. These rules are not untried. Many | parents having proved tuem, with sub- | stantinl uniformity of results, If u faithful observance ot them does not | spoil your child, you will at least have | the comfortable reflection that you have | oi 4 Ambergris, The largest lump of ambergris ever | known was in the possession of the king | of Tidore, and purchased of him hy the | Dutch Eest India company. It weighed | 182 pounds. Another enormous pices of 130 pounds weicht was tound inside a whale near the Windward islands and sold for $2,600. The true ambergris, which is a morbid secretion of the smell when a Lot needle is thrust into it, and it also meits like fat, but the counterfeit often sold instead of the real thing does not present these features Men engaged in whale fishing are on the lookout for ambergris, and usually find most of it in the torpid, sick or very lean fish, conseque.t.y it would appear to be what all medical practitioners say eased liver. FARM, GARUEN AND HOUSEHOLD The Pig Pasture, We always have the best success with breeding sows when they areallowed to feed on grass, This ia the only food they require until the young pigs are a week or two old, when milk or meal of some sort may be gi en to them to inorease the flow of milk 1 they require it, Sows thus managed are never ugly and never | destroy their pigs, Why? Heonuse they | are in a natural and healthy condition The grass also increases the flow of | milk and is, quite often, sufticlent tood | for a sow while rearing her young. | Young pigs soon {earn to eat the grass, | which is alike natural and healthful for | them, We never have a case of soours or thumps among young pigs when run. | in pasture. The grass serves lo fleet of corn, and many | counteract the pigs on grass ean be fed heavily with | this food without the injury which it would do thems if confined and | deprived of grass. Our experience has convinced us that no farm is complete without a pig pa ture. Clover is the best of all the grasses for this purpose, and next to it we prefer oreliard grass for the reason that it starts up promptly alter being eaten off is the earliest in the spring and is relished by the pigs. It is ROL necessary to have a specin’ field for the pig pasture, bu! they may be al lowed to run in any lot if properly in closed. There should be water in the | field and plenty of grass. A pateh of sweet corn sowed in drills will be found convenient to supplement a short pas ture in the late summer, also be another patch of turnips or other riols into which the pigs may be turned for fall breeding With the three nuxiliaries of pasture, sweet corn stalks and a root pateh, the cost of rear. ing and feeding pigs may be reduced to + | 2%) t' ey are confined and fed in pens, say nothing about their better condition for food, — Rural New Yorker. Hapid Charning Undesirable As a rule the best butter is produced by using a moderate motion in churn ing. The operation at the commenoe- ment should always be slow, in order that the oream shall be well mixed to- gether, After this the motion may he faster, but its rate of speed should be struction of the churn. The objection to very fast churning is that the larger butter globules come first and are gather ed into inmps before Lhe smaller ones are churning is stopped at this point, and if continued under a very rapid motion the butter globules that come first areliable to be injured. We have never seen any of the so-called ** three-minute churns that uniformly made good butter ly churning in this short time, Of course there is a difference in oreams; th 5 Re t narily churn more quickly than cream from the milk of corumon cows, Bul under anv circumstances very rapid motion tends to do injury to the cream, apd especially is this the case when the butter begins to come. In churning, the object sought should be to have all the cream churped alike and in about the same time, and when the butter appears in & granular form the churning should cease. O! course we shall not pretend to say that inventions and processes for chnrning very quickly cannot be broug ut out, and which will make uniformly a first-class butter; we can only say if there be such a churr—one that 1s made to do its work, for instance, in three minutes, and can in that time produce the best butter—we have not yet seen it. ~— Dasryman, The Difference, From actual experiments made it is demonstrated beyond a doubt that the grinding of grain adds one-third to its value jor feeding purposes. This is a matier of & good deal of importance to the agricultural community, and, in fact, to all classes who have animals to feed. As far as dollars are concerned, perhaps it is not of so mueh moment in the Northwest, where grain is so cheap and so pirnty, as it is in other portions of the country, where less grain is raised, but it is we roy of the consider. ation of those who have not full bins of osis and corn. Since the introduction of cheap feed mills, it is the province of every farmer lo own one, with which all grain intended for the stock on the farm could be ground. itecipes Goon Waite BreaD. —Ha.f a pint of nice light bread sponge, one heaping tablespoonful of sugar, stir in os flour ezough to make » stiff batter: let it rise, then stir it down and put it into the baking tins, let it rise again, then bake a iittle longer than white bread. Use good yeast but po soda in this bread. Caear, Goop Sroxae Cake. — Whisk together four eges, a large cupful of powdered sugar, i lemons 10 taste: also three tablespoonfuls of water, half a iarge cuplful ol! flo .r, with two tea spoonfuls of baking powder in iL. Fhoroughly but lightly mix, adding more water if required. Hake this in buttered tins or fancy molds. BARLEY Sour.—Boil one pint of pear! barley in one quart of stock till it is re duced to a puip, pass it through a sieve and add as muen wore stock as will be required to make of the consistency of cream; pul the soup on the fire; when it boils stir into it, off the fire, the yolk of an egg beaten up with a gill of fresh butter, and serve with small dice of bread fried in butter. Imise Porars Pig.~One pound mashed poiatoes rubbed through = colander; one-half-pound butter, creamed with sugar: six eggs, white and yolks separalely; one lemon, » sued nutmeg, and the same of mace; two cupsiul. white sugar; bake in open shells of paste; to be eaten eold.— Come mon Sense in the Household — Marion. EE —————————————— No Fascinations in Snakes. I have seen, says Nalure, a guinea- pix, after finding no piace of exit from the cage, quielly settle itself down in the midst of the coils of an Australian con. strictor, shut its eyes and go to sleep, l'en minutes afterward the snake had moved and the guinea-pig was washing its face with its paws. Not once, but a dozen times, a rabbit has nibbled the nose of a River Jack viper in a pretty, inquiring way, heedless of the strong blows the reptile would administer with its snout to the impertinent investigator of that queer-looking object, For fully ten minutes one day a rabbit sat gazing at the poised and threatening head of a puff adder, now and then reaching for- ward to smell the reptile’s nose, and ears, and again returning to the * fas- cinating "" object of its inquiries. If, was 80 soon released from that condition as to be busy itself about its toilet, The birds show no more recognition than the in which they are pinced. picking lustily at their scales; sitting on the branches preening their feathers and behaving themselves just as though no 5 such dreadtul (or pleasing?) sensation of a snake twisted round # branch and preening itself. By.and-bye crushing folds around it. The delib- erate approach unconscious attitude of the 1 about its private affairs, liever in ** fascination.” on feeding. It muy be a sudden rush, when the vietim has no time to see its the reptile; in either ease the doomed victim betrays no suspicion of danger, at east so far as 1 have been able to of hours contemplating the snakes in the A Phosphorescent Lamp, This simple method of making a phos. to a red heat for half an hour, separate the clearest parts, and put into a cruci- ble in alternate layers with sulphur. Then heat to redness for at least an hour. When cold, break the mass, and separate the whitest part for use. If inclosed in a bottle, the figures of a watch may be seen by the aid of the light emitted. To renew the lumin- osity of the mass, expose the hottle eacly day to the sun or other strong light, The sulphide of calcium will thus be made to sbsorb light, which NEWS OF THE WORLD. Bastorn and Middle States, Lary your 337 871 foreigners came into the United States through the port of New York, OF the total emigrant arcivals 112.119 went two the Western States and 63 868 to the Kastern New York Among the nationalities Go many was represented by 104 M4 emigrants; Ireland, Kngland, 83.708; Sweden, 38 217; Italy, 11,190, Bites have been intredooced in both houses of the New York legislature 10 prevent the recent comsolidation of the telegraph oom. pauios Oscar A. Ruos has been arvested in Boston with the embesslement of ————————————————————————— about while employed as internal revenue collector at Haton Rouge, La. , four years ago. of General Hewell to the United States Senate by i I'm vole at the el otion Wil. | Ham J Benate House-~Sewell, | i the Now Jersey |ogislatme stood 13; Raadoiph, 6. 38; Randolph, 40, Ar the Empire mines, Wilkesbarre, I's, the largest fll of top-coal and rook ever known in that region wok place » lew days ago, burying two miners—~a father and son “3 Seweil, Tae destrootion by fire of K. Fisher & Son's | faney cotton mills at Grulton, Mass., caused a | loss of about $125,000 Mus. Eminy Cansixss, of Philadelphia, was 80 prostrated by grie! at the death of her | husband that before the body was cold she | | shot herself with a revolver, then bsoame a | raving manne, made other attempts upon her { life, and fnally died from the effects of her i i scli-inftioted injuries A BROKEN rall caused two ours 10 jump the | track and overturn Middleburg, Pa. Hoth oars onnght fire and the passengers ia. | side were taken out with dimoulty. Fifteen | persons were injured, five seriously. ! A ranry of citizens trom Kinzua, Pa., went | to the woods to see & well * torpedoed.” | Forty quarts of nitro-glyoerine were put in a | barrel to be thawed by steam. It exploded, blowing the eugine-house and derrick 10 Andrew Laster, the engineer, was | alain Postmaster J. O, Coshing was | killed by a missile while viewing the scene | from a distance. Three other men were | strack by fiying tragments and dangeroosly injured. So Pan six-day * gowss.yon-please ® pedes. trian matoh im New York for the O'Leary ehampionship belt was wou by John Hughes, | who covered 668 miles~the largest score ever | made ina similar contest. The highest previoas | Hen i iecos and i sore was 508 miles, accomplished by Rowell | last November ia London. In the match for | the O'Leary belt thirty competitors started, | the last day only five were on ihe | I'he individoal scores made by these | bat on track five, with the mmount of gate money received | Ly each, are as follows: Hughes, 668 miles, | O'Leary to the winner in the event of his | beating the record; Albert, 558 miles, $2,400; Vint, 80) miles, 81,200; Krone, §9 miles, $5800; Howard, 510 miles, $400, AR — Western and Southern States, A SXOW-STORM is #000 an unusual event at Wilmisgton, N.C. that when one occurred the other day the whole city was excited over ladies were in the streets snowballing. SEVERAL years ago a besotiful young lady living in Pike county, lad, died Recontly ber family received an seamed Eads su ldenly. anonymoud letter saying that the body was stolen by Doctors Joseph and Thomas Aust, of Winslow, Ind., and two others; that the jewelry buried with the body was thrown into burned and the body dissected in a barn near Winslow; that the bones were set up in skele. ton form and were then standing in the office of Dr. Thomas Aust. The relatives on open. ing the grave found only the coffa and the In Wisslow they took possession of the skeleton from a of Dr, Aust, where they bad olien seen it without Dr. Toomas Aust bas baviag been a fugitive pi low the om Thomas sooty now been from justios for the cold-blooded murder Lis brother. Ar Beneoa, 8. C., Benjamin Schnell was married by a justice to a girl only eight years old. The marriage was witvemed and ap. | proved by the girl's mother. Tux Wisconsin legislature has elcote! Inlotus Sawyer, and the Texans lepslature has re-elected Samuel B. Maxey United 8 ues Senators ine leginture of Wost Johnson N, Camden United States Senator to succeed Frank Hereford, A pIsraTen from Pensscols, Fla , says thet kill ing the eapiain, engineer and freeman, sr wmnned aley went to the bottom. Ox the twenty-ninth ballot of the Tennes. Jackson, & State su WLS ongin, arrested of Virginia ¢locte the stestoer Minnie exploded her boiler, see legalsture Howell E Credit Democrat, was elocied to the United States Senate, receiving sevenly voles to twenty five for Maynard, Repoblican. Atone time Mayoard was within a few voles of an election, the Demoorats being divided on the question of State Anances. Fuene has basen an unprecedented mor. tality smopg the lawyers of Harrisonburg, | | Va., not less than five of the profession out of thirty-five having died within the past fow months, BY a milroad acoldent in Texas the en. gineer and an lod an were killed and another Indian was soalpad, Bopy-Searcuens are at work in Richmond, Va., two graves in a colored cemetery having been robbed of thelr bodies Mose ovlored, was basged Waynesboro, Ga., for the murder of William Driscoll, white, last November. Frank Twiggs, his brother, condemned to be hanged at the same time for the same orime, was respited by the governor for three week, Twicas, io | Tux soven persons—including two women | on board the steamer Benga! Tiger were all i more or lows severely scalded by the bursting | of her boiler on the Ohio river nine miles above Cincinnati, IT has been discovered that for the last ten | or twelve years two brothers, tellers in a | Detroit (Mich. ) savings bank, bave been em. | | bereling the fund: of the institution to an | amount exceading $25,000, A¥ immense amount of damage has been done by floods along the Pacific coast. Heavy | rains canted a number of rivers to overfiow, | and much railroad property was washed away. The towns of Napa and Watsonville, Oal., were flooded, and a portion of the Saermmento valley for a time presented the appesrance ol a vast lake. Ix Chicago last year there were 10,462 deaths out of a population ot 503,000, Coroner Tuomas Burorp, who eighteen | { months ago shot and killed Judge Klliott, at | Owenton, Ky., has been seguitted of mur. or | by the jury on the ground of insanity, A Fire at Madison, Ind, destroyed W. | | Trow & Co.'s flour mills, entailing & loss of | £125,000. Fraxx Maaratu (colored) was hanged at Georgetown, 8. C., for the murder of Josie Small. Gexknar Jous Love, a veteran of the | Mexican war, died a few days ago at his home | in Indianapolis, Ind, From Washington, | Ix 1867 the eollector of internal revenne at | | Springfield, 111, made distraint upon the | homestead of the Hon. William M. Springer of that city, now a prominent member of Con. gress, for the purpose of collecting an income | tax which Springer had negleoted and rofused | to pny. In March of that year the property wis sold dod was declared by the collestor to | be purctased by him for the U.iul Sates. Mr. Springer failed to avail himself of the | provision of the law which allowed him within one year after the sale to redeem his prop. | erty, and in 1874 the collestor executed a deed of itto the United States. In 1875 suit was brought by the government in the United States gironit gourt at Springfield to vjeet Mr, Springer from the premises. It resulted ina decision in tavor of the United States, Mr, Springer thereupon appealed to the supreme ooutt of the United States, which has affirmed the judgment of the court below, Srantey Marruegws, of Ohio, was nomi. nated by the President to be aisociate justice of the United States supreme court in place of { | i will be available throughout the night, Justice Swayne, resigned. A oruririoats of the death of Mrs. Sally Hunter (colored), 118 venrs old, has been reosived by the oMocials at the health offen in Washington, Mrs, Hunter wat boro in Westmoreland county, Vieginla, in 1706, belonged to the Washington edate, and was one of the servants liberate | rom slavery by the general's will She lived in tha! until the war, when she snd her ehildres onme to Washington, where she bas siooe lived. Bhe ls sapposed to be the last of the sarvants of Googe Washington, Tue Canudian trade and pavigation returns tor Lhe past year show an lnoresse of tafe with Great Britain over that of 1870 of $13. DIB 438, and a deorinse in teade with tie United States of $8,207 863, Inexk are now 1,347 persons employed by the census bureau in Washiogion, of whom 060 are males and 678 females. There are ninety -oight messengers and sixtesa The total number of snumerstors employed in taking the census was 31,208, Goty ise foreign affairs, reported back resolution oalling on the seoreiary of state fur sil formation in his department fn relation Halilx fishery award of $6,600,000 paid this government 1 treat Britain, cislly that relating to the alleged Sotitious statistion and porjored testimony imposed oa the arbitrators, and on which evi the award was made; and also as to whether this government bad Ben soy steps 10 proours a verifipation of the recently-published # ute. went of Professor Hind. Adapted... A joint resclotion direciing the printing of 50,000 ooples of n special report on discasie of swine waa adopted. i Consideration of the North Ceielina eon. tested election cae of Yeates aguiist Martin, the sitting member, was vesumed, A vole was taken ou the minoriiy resolution declar. lng Mr, Martin entitled to his soul, and was rejected -—yens, 110; saya, 117-8 party vote with the exoeption of Mossrs, Fellon and Stephens, of Geog, win voled wilh the Republicans in the aMrmative. ‘Ine Green. backers also, with the exception ol Mr, Laid, of Maine, voted in theafinmative. The ques. i tion then recurred upon the majority report | Tae excess ol exports of merchandise over Fou Tbe sxoess of impor of gold 230. 822, and lor the 86,877 344. Previous year if was Forelgn News Tig tial of Parnell and the other lik land leagut leaders at Dublin resulted in » disagreement of the jury, which was dis. ehrgaed alter being oot some time. The jucy is said to have stood ten for sonvistion to two The result orented great excite. from court Ine manager of the same paper has been seutenced 10 one year's imprisonment been sentenced to two years’ unprisonment and & floes of $600. A REPORT bas been received irom Singapore that a Joonl trading vessel bas capsized, Seventy bodies were recovered, while many others were carried away by the current. A poAT used for harbor work at Cherbourg, France, has foundered with her crew of e'ghteen persons. Tux Russians have captured the stronghold of Geok Tepe from the Turcomans alter nine bours of desperate fighting. The loss of the Turcomans was 6D0OTIDOUS. one aged three fears and the other a baby of seven wonths, st Whitevale, Ont, and then Cruorfas LAaCHANCE was banged at Atha, baskaville, Canada, for the murder of Miss Diesilet at Balatrode last October. Heo made s tull confession before his execution ux first regular engagement between the British troops and the insurgent Boers of Bouth Alcon has resulted in sa delest of the tormer with heavy loss. SEVERAL serious cocounters have occurred in Lavcashive, Kngland, between the military sud police oa une side and striking miners on the other. Alter s meeting which was at. tended by 20.000 miners at Leigh a crowd went to the Atherton collieries and a des. perate riot ensued. Hussars, iotantry and solioe were on the ground. The riot asl was i E Several hossars and oolliers were severely iaved Tug Earl of Hardwicke, formerly master o: $1,200,000, Gurar damage has been done in Spain by heavy floods, Turkey by rapidly forwarding troops 0 the Turkish trontier. Tuners bas boon a serious riot in the town of Balinrobe, Ireland. were Hluminated w sommemorsie the re. Many of the houses joicings over Lhe result of the Irish state trials, Those houses which were not lluminated were allacked by a mob, the windows broken snd the iomates assaulted Forry.siX lives have been lost by the wreck of twelve Ssbing smacks in the bay of Biscay. A srecial oable dispatch says that the British government has received information of plots to destroy the arsenals at Woolwich, the Hyde Park magerine and Windsor castle, and that st all of Plymouth and Portamouth, these places the guard bas been doubled and a strong force of troops detailed to defend them Tae ollowing is given 6s the Chilian con. ditions ol pesos with Pera and Bolivia: cession of Antolagasta to Chill; the surrender indemuity of $30 000,000, wheveo! Peru shall assume §20,000,000 and Bolivie $10 000.000, full payment of the indemnity is made. A AAAI. CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY. Senate, Mr. Morgan introdooed & bill to extend the postal service 10 loreign countries... . Mr, Oail iorwarded to the clerk the oredentials of his term commencing March 4, 1881. Referred and filed... The postofiioe appropriation bill was received from the House and relerred to the committes on appropriations, Mr. Book made a sprech in favor of free ships and tariff reform generally. Mr. Blaine toilowed in opposition... Bills were passed authorizing the {sae of an Amorioan register to the EK; und Iga neross the Niugara cons ruction mainte railway Lr) paval appropriation bil was considered and passed, The credentinle of Senstors-eleot Hale, of Maine, Platt, of Now York, and MeMilisn, ive amendments the bill for the establishment of a bureau of animal industry and tor the sups pression and prevention of ocontagions ds. ensas among domestic animals... Mr. Kirk. wood introdoced a bill to aid the United lines... . Mr, Blaine introdoced a bill for the establishment of the United Sintes ocean Mr, Blaine viding tor the election Vice-President directly by the people. bill relative to Revolutionary baitlef ids. ments by a contribution of one dollar for every February 9 {un the Senate chamber was taken ap. party vote—20 yous to 17 nays. Flouse. appropriating 30,000 for the erection of a Schuylerville, N. Y., com. memorative of the battle of Samioga.,.. After had been proposed, and or rejected. the bill was passed... Mr. Spoor, rom the committes on tested olection case of Yeates ngninst Ma tin from the First Congressioual ditrot of North Carolina. It declares Yeates the contestant, Mr. Wilson, from the committee on fi aflairs, reported back adversely the bill an. for the colonization of colored persons. Laid on the table.... Mr. Money, chairman of the commiltes on poagoiiiuga and postroads, re- ported back the resolution directing that comtnittee to inquire into the expediency of establishing a telegraphic posiat system the government of the United Sistes, and also into the cost of re. prodacing facilities for transmitting tele- grapnie messages equal to those now pos. eo ned by existing oo porations, and into the cus of opergting the 8ame; and granting to thai © neainitiee leave to send for persons and papers. Put on the oslendar..,. Mr. Bicknell oniled up the resolation proposing a joint iule for counting the electoral votes, A motion to tuke up the resolution was suo- ocastul by: vote of 119 to 110=a striot party voto exoopt that Mews, Stephens, Felton and Speer voted with the Ropublienns in the neg. alive. Mr. Conger moved that thers be a call ot the House, which motion the speaker des cided was not in order, Mr. Conge: appealed from the speaker's decision, aud as the Repube licans re'used to vote upon Mr. Blount’s mo tion to lay the appeal on the table, no action could bo taken in the matter, although nu. dogluring that J. J. Martin s not sulitied to | the -ont. Agreed to -yeas, 117; nays, 106. | The resolution declaring J J. Yeites antit el 0 the sent was ndoj ted —~yeas, 115; nays, 10 aud tual gentleman appeared and took | oath of office. The Chinese Lily, With the Chinese the lily is the na tional flower, and many superstitiors | attach to it. Bhould it blossom upon | New Year's day it is regarded as a | most happy omen, presaging the best of | | iuck to the fortunate owner of the pling, | | For this reason = good deal of care is { bestowed upon the lily by the Ching i man, in the hope that Si put forth | its flower upon the morning of the an. {niversary 1'le Chinese lily is different | from any other variety, It is grown by | placing the bulb on bis of window | | glass, stone and china, and giving it a | liberal supply of water. The Hower is | | white, with a gold colored center, some- | | thing between a daisy and a narcissus, ts fragrance is delughtiul.—Hariford | Tomes, the | i 3 i i A575 A Mad Stone, | There are many persons in the West { who believe in the enrutive powers of | | the mad stone. A iosn who was bitten {by a mad pig near Tecumseh, Neb., traveled nll the way to Savannah, Mo,, | to try the famous mad stone owned by | old Uncle John Neilson. The stone im. | mediately adhered to the wound, whieh i is sald to be proof positive that ihe | patient's blood was poisoncd, and re. | mained clinging to the sore trom early | morning un il sundown, wh nit dropped cff. The patient departed terling thst he ind been cured. Uncle Jolin Nelson has owned his mad stone since 1548, | and has used it in over a hundred cases | where men have been bitten. He avers | that it never failed to work » cure R095 Charley Ross, i Christian Ross, father of Charley, is | still energetically lookiag for his jost | iboy. He said to a reporter recently: | | No, I have not recelved as many letters | | within the past six months or a year as | | formerly, but I get one or more every | few days—enough to keep me busy— | | and where it seems necessary or there is | {a shadow of hope I visit the parties | who write me and thoroughly examine {into the matter. Noneof the lettersare | made public, because I do not think it | is prudent to keep the sir full of rumors. | They are all of the same kind and torn oul equally fruitiess ¥ & : i 3 i i i i | Thereis a young men studying law in {a Galvestdn lawyer's office, and the | | young man is not very regular in lis | tabits. Yesterday the old lawyer said; { “ Why didn't I see you in court, yester- day? “Because I wan't there, 1 {reckon. | was confined to my room | | with the woothache,” was the response of the incipient Blackstone. * Come, | | now," said (he lawyer, pood-naturedly, “stop that. You will have plenty of | time to lie after you have passed your | examination and been admitied to the bar." Galveston News The public debt of the United States | is $688 per head; of Spain, $1564; of | | France. $138; of England, $117; of ' Holland, #117: of Csaads, $38: of Mexico, $30; of Switseriand, $3. {La Payette Daily Journal.) Anxious te Kise. There's plenty of room upstairs, as | | Daniel Webster said to the young law- | | yer anxious to rise, but despondent cf | is chance to do so; but no one need injure himself either in climbing the | stairs of fame or those of Lis own houss | or business place. The following is the | int: Mr John A. Hutchinson. Supt. | wner's Kerosene Oli Works, Boston, Mass, writes: Mr. Patton, one of our | foremen, in walking upstairs last week | sprained his log badly. I gave him a | bottle of 8: Jacobs Oli totry. Heused it and an almost instantaneous cure » BE effected. ————————————— A very slight declivity suffices to give the running motion to water. Three | inches per mile in a smooth, straight | channe; gives a velocity of about three {miles an hour. The Ganges. which | gathers the waters of the Himalaya | | wwountains, the lofiiest in the world, is, | at 1889 miles from its mouth, only 800 | feet above the sea, and to fall these 800 feet in the long course of the river is | ‘ said to require more than a month. : {Chicago Tribune.) i | Thomas O. Thompson, BEsq., the | | Mayor's Secretary, who, some few days iago, slipped on a banana peel and | #prained his knee, writes that St. Jacobs | { Oil “acied like a charm." | A stock farm in Texas has been fenced | in an original way. A man bought a | | peninsular of 940.000 acres, projecting { into the gulf of Mexico, and built a | | board fence thirty-one miles long across {the neck, and in the inclosure has | 30,000 head of cattle and sheep securely | porraled. It ix Worth a Trial “7 was troubled 10r many years with Kid. ney Complaint, Gavel, £5; my blood be. | came thin; I was dull aud issctive; conld | hardly crawl about, and was sn old wornoat | man all over, and could get notaing to help | me, unl Tgot Hop Balers, and now I am a | boy again, My blood and kidoeys are all right, and [am as active as a man of thirty, aithough Lam 72, and I have no doubt it will It is worth i i | do as well Tor others of my age. the trial. — (Fat her ) According to a statistical report com- | | piled under the authority of the board | jof delegates of American Israelites, | {there are in the Upited States 230257 | | Hebrews, of whom 12,546 are connected | | with 978 religious societies or congrega- | | tions. : A Cure at Last. Specifies without number | | for the care of Catarrh have beon extensively | advertised, and doubtless there is some virtues | in all, but the evidence is overwhelming that | E'ys Cream Balm goes more directly thanany | i other to the seat of the disease, and though it is a comparatively new discovery it has re- | sulted in more cures within the range of our observation thn ail the others put together. | Witkesbarre{ Pa ) U 1ov-Lrader. | Having been afflicted with Catarch and cold | In the bead, 1 tried a great many remedies without any beneficial elleots; at last I weed | KEly's Cream Balm, which effec: unily oured me. i 1 consider it wu daty I owe sulfsring humanity to recommend it to others sallering from the | same, almost universal, American disease, W, | H. 1. Hillard, dentist, Bordentown, N. J. Price. 50 cents. Ely's Crean Balm Co, Y. Will mail it for 60 cents. i ward. Deadwood, Dakota, a piace that | | had po existence a few years ago, now | | pays $60,000 annual interest on ita city | { debt. Wicked for Clergymen. “1 believe it 10 be all wrong snd even wicked for clergymen or other public men to | be lei isto giving testimonials to quack doctors or vile stalls calipd medicines, bat when a | really meritorious article is made up of gom- mon valuable remedies known to all, and that { mil physioiuns use and trast in daily, weshoald | { trecly commend it. 1 theretore cheertully and heartily oumnmend Hop Bitters tor the good they bave done me nl my iriends, firmly be- lieving they have no eqoal for iamily nse. I will nos be withcut them.’ , Washiagton, D. QO. A game of basebu.l is like a buckwheat | cake—n great deal depends cn the | batter. Co : A challenge to Sawing Muchive Mm. Tie | United States Munutiotu ing Company, of Chis ono, Lik, elim that ther sawing machine will enw dogs ensier ant tester than any other machine in Aweriea, and t i President of the company has deposited $1 000 ia the bunk ot Preston, Kean & Co., of Chionro_ us » chale lenge agains! any othe: § wing Machine made, and a like dipodt Toere are several other Sawing Machines, bu so far none of them have acoupted this challenge. | { { i { GREAT HORSE MEDICIVE. DR. TORIAN' VENETIAN HORSE LINIMENT tn int bottles at 0» cents; 32 years est bh dished. It is the font in the world for the cu o of Colle, Old Sores, § peaing, Bruises, Sore Throats, ete. TOBIAS CuND "10 POWDERS are warranted to cure Distemper, Fever Worms, B 48; give a fine coat; incre se the appetite and cleanse the urinary organs, Certified 40 by Coli D. McDaniel, owner of same of the fastest running horses | merous roll-oalls were had. in the werld 1,000 others. BN cents. Soul by drags ©} Bate. Depol—d9 Murray Street, New York i -— #0 want H 0, ROURK. Rahway, N. J. In Cuba there is » little insect, n nest underneath, depos mieroscope to. detect it. They nlense itohing, and, of courses, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, BOFYORE (aosirg. tion snd all forme of genom! debility relieve (by taking Mussman's PerroNiesn Ber fume 5 the only pv ration of bee! contaioing its entire ior tien, It contains blood-making, fores-generatiog aod lesostaini ng properties; is invaluable in sll eufesblod cond tions, prastetiog, oNeturk or uty disenns, par. tieularly resulting from WMONATY Bom. plaints. Caswell, Husard 8 Oo., proprietors, Now York, Oneof the New York tenen ent-hiouses people, Ag a perfiet’y reliable and soonomios! rem. Price 26 cents a boitle everywhere, Ont ot every 100 inhabitants in the United States sixteen live in cities. A a ————-—- IE RABKET FEW YOLE Boss Osttio- Med, Nelives, live wi, Dalves— Good 10 Price Veale... .u00 Bhotdi, cosnussrresverirsns svspnnntn ss aie FE EEE RR EER ENDSS HRREAES BEBRES Poge—Jadve, ues sosmnes or srunn Direased, ,oo00 Sage sRRAnEE «Ey, Ktate, good to faney.... 4 Weslory, to faney...... Wheat No, § Bad, oo usneesrsssnnnas No.l Walle .cosnsersransmms a Barley -~Twodowed Biale. .....00., Ooru--Ungraded Western Mined, .. fonthern Tellow AER ERE Res 0 wat ~ 16 oe 8s ON £6 5 iw FREER a ERSSEERSS As cssspsusstnr cssnarosnasie tes pd - = Btraw-—Long iiye, per OWhepuunersre Hopa-—-State, 1880 ....cunmeeennnns: Pork Meas. oid, Tor export. ....... Lard-—{lty BOOBS. oopnsonvsensose ss Petrolsnin—O0mide .ue.. avs Foasrnssnnnnne ss: Weslery FROLOTY. » suvenvennns Cheise—Blate RAs0rY us a a] a eh we BEERS tt iE : i SsuumsgETEE ; - » * Weslern. ...cc «orssncannune Eguo—8iaie 808 Poul. coves corpses Folstoss —Stete, bhi Early BUFFALO Bore XE Re. oor oss son snsmnesssin Lambe Wollers. .ooo consis. Rhee ~ Waslern. . vu ees Hags, Good 18 Choles Y uty Wheat No. | Hard uth wg 3 ZAUESE BSRE YEBDEEERSSY EEluassan vrassunn GTReTS., .. 0. 1 .s 3 » § 4 : 4 i oe Eee cEvens Dte—SS0000., «vous vs eaun snvinn ss ennss huis 4 EuPNEuTRY Byrds ow Re ewees T ” TAARERERE GE CRB ARRRE ens ue floge—City Dressed... ...ocuosnveee EK Pork—Extrs Prime per bbl ,,...... 1280 Misa Pat... 7385 «> ” 82 SEBEL ES SHEBEOS WATERTOWN (MASS ) CATTLE Outilodive weight. 5 sewn eswe o Fe ARBER EES ERE Lambs... Swe HANES S BRIAN sana ses cs DO BORE, vos css nsisesssnssansesasnians: BB PHILADKLFHIL, Fiour—-Penp, good snd faney.......0 B® Wheat — No, 2 Bed....ovnenens sone. o 1 38 By e-BIhlD, . sum »05 + avtunssssnsnnss Dorn —Siate YolloOW, covsesnssonss:. Oats ined. pone. Butter] capes BETEL 00 Cheese Rew York Full Cream. ..... Ore... nuees 6 OT i DrBULLS : rl eh OCTAVER i» TEZEE AYD a QUART . WALNUT CASE decommd with GOLD BRONZE EAERBE FRECHE MA HAMLIN ORGAN A ALIN Roan TORK ; 146 Wabash Ave, CHICAGO, @ Burns and Nis wipe Lungs, Eyes and Threat Chilblains. RHEUMATISM AND NEURALGIA. | S—————— No remedy so readily and eSbctually arrests the brite Gon and Jischarpes from Ostarrhal Affections ss : POND'S EXTRACT. COUGHS, COLDS in the HEAD, NASAL sad THROAT DISCHARGES, INFLANMATIONS and TIONS in the LUNGS, EYES EAKS snd THROAT, RERUMATISM, NEURALGIA, 8c, onnnol be cured so easily by any other medicipe. For sensitive and severe cases of CATARRE use our CATARRE OURE (3c). Inall cases ume our NASAL SYRINGE (33). Will be sed in lots of §3 worth, on receipt of price. Note that PONDS EXTRACT fs put up only In belles with picture Trade Mark on outside wrapper snd words “ PUXND'S ¥9 Our New Pamphlet with History of our Prepacs- tions, wont Tres. LADIES Head pages IS, 18, 1 and 98. POND'S EXTRACT COMPANY, 4 West 14th Street, New York. EICHT REASONS WHY WE NEVER SRLL PONDS EXTRACT IN BULK, BUT ADHERE YO THE RULE OF SELL. ING ONLY IN OUR OWN BOTTLES IN- CLOSED IN BUFF WRAPPER, ON WHICH IS PRINTED OUR LANDSCAPE TRADE-MARK. 1 oelt Imnsuros the purchaser sbisining the GENUINE article. 2. --1t protects t he consumer In buying Popdy - JI “This is the King of Saw Machines, ™» Saws off & 2 foof log In 9 minutes BO,000 in uss. - The : Chiongo, 11, ann wager hatte above sawing wil sw zasies and rasves han say other & Americs. 2,000,000 Acres Wheat Lands best Ln the world, for saleby the §t. Paul, Ninncapalis & Manitoba RR. C0. Thres dollars par sere slowed these tier for break tag snd coltivation. For particalars apnly to D. A. McKINLAY, smmisstoner, 8, Paul, Tine, Complete Manures FOR EVERY CROP. pQomtaining just the plant food and tn on Pan J CE dome a few years ago, when we were induced to ferpish 3 elt protects the consumer Mom anserepy- 4. «=11 protects the consumer, for Ni sovaafs Extract. B.=lt protect: the conswmer, for it is not agreesbie 0 be deceived and perhaps Indured br wing other articles unter the directions for Ponds Extract Geo other a: ticle, manufacture of imitation has fhe offect