be AR 50 AS bos ssn THE FARM AND HOUSEROLD, A Valuable Table. ¥ * The following table, giving the quan- kity of sced and number of plants re- Quisite to crop an care of land, will prove valuable to farmers and gard- eners, and to families generally who may have only a small garden : Asparagus, in 12 inch drills, . 18 Asparagus plants, 4x134 foot Rarley.. ...... Boans, in drills 2g feet... .0000n Soans. Ga, Prolific, ete, 4x3 feot, Doets X-Mangolds, drille 21 feet.. Broom com in dlls... .... Cabbage, outside for transp'y CUnbbags sown ia femmes, | | Cried, in drills 24 fool, (os Calery, Booed, ON .h CURIOS, Celery, plants, § by 30 foot... oo... 25, 000, Clover, White Duteh oi... pounds Clover, Laven ponds, Clover, Alsike via pounds Clover, large rod, with tiny +» 13 pounds Clover, large rod, without timo'y,. 16 pounds Corn, sagar...... : vo 10 quarts, Corn, Bold, ...ioviviniino quarts, Corn, salad, drill 10 inches pounds Cucumber, in hills... quarts Cneamber, in drills, . Hug plants, 3x2 feet, Endive, in drills 23 Flax, broadeast, : : Grass, timothy, with clover... Chass, timothy, without clover... Crass, Orohartl,. ... .vivinsinnss Giass, red-top or hends Grass, bluo ; Grass, ve... Grass, millet Hemp, broadest Kale, Gorman green, 0, .. Lattuoe, in rows 23¢ foot, Leek, in rows 23 feet... JANN EYSSS......................¥ Melons, water; in hills Bx¥ foot Melons, citron, in hills 4x4 foot Quarts, N, 000, bushels, bushels, guaris, pounds, pounds, GUNNS OURNOON, ponds, Guaris, CRLIOOR, [Har CUAYIN, Qua ris, quarts, quarts, quarts, quarts, quarts, ¥ 3 bushels, Onion, in rows for Is Parsuips, in drills Pepper, plants, 3 Pampking, in} : Parsley, in drills 3 feet... Pear, drills, short varieties... Pens, in dilly tall varieties, 1 10} Peas, broadeast........ Potatoms.... 7"... aa Radish, in drills 2 feet. Ryo, broadcast, ...... Rye, drilled mE Nalsify, in drills 3% foot Shinach, broadonst ooo. Squash, bash, in hills 4x4 feet. Dipuash, raonning, 5x8 feel... Sorgham Tureips, in Turnip, Tomatoes, Tomatoes, s Tomatoes, plants, Wheat, in drills Wheat, broades Indigestion of Pigs. It is not a general practice with farmers to give salt to pigs or to mix it in their food. Salt is no more injurious to a pig than to a person, of a pig and its digestive functions are more like those of a human being than are those of shmost any other animal, A hungiy pig wonld probably eat -ghough to injure itself if its food was strongly mixed with salt, just ass gry man would be likely to eat too much of salted fish or meat. Salt is nsed to make human food more pala. table, and seems necessary to supply the wastes te the system caused by the The instincts 1 1 f ating animals lead : x ¢ stomach secretions. and rami O desire 8 aev * licks,” wi natural eray condition it sh to them, and injure themselves much of it. this natal era extent as other animal horses them ¢ 1 state QO \ Hence, in a wik r salt ngs arunle 3 SER spring O : satisfy this a domestieatec © any } 2B shi SIWGYE DE RUOCPSSIDEH never wii too Nor y . } Pigs do not seem to have ine for salt ing 0r saat Fay Rng n 1t to the san animals, but known am to eat | hen given them while in pasture, and also whiie confined in pens, and I have made it a practice to put salt where pigs could help themselves to When pigs are fed cooked food of any kind, and especially vegetables, the food can be improved and made more palatable, so that the appetite may not flag, ing it. The proportions of salt should be the same as for hun {oO ml. Too little attention i Iv n by farm ers to the stoma They are expected to eat am evervthi or perhaps to live a lo one kind of food. tion is the canse of among ES, chief of and constipat salt In moderate quantity phar, wi ¥ CGE to re it by moderately salt- i 6 ag, an occasional feed week), will promote QUOC goo i appetite, and prevent distarbance bowels, is more like without these precautions. T and digestion of pigs doubtediy be promoted if /BOCESS 10 prepared chalk orif a small of magnesia was given them in amount 1 FP sy §¥ y hh fi : + : igs suffer much from indi- Ok the which 0 occur in ! their food. f they bad the remedies accessible their instincts would teach them to make nse of them and thus prevent the frequent resnlt—diarrhea, In snmmer-time, when pigs have access fo the ground, they cure themselves, or, in other words, prevent diseases of the stomach by eat- mg grass, which is laxative, or earth, rotten wood or of charcoal, which seem to check this condition or to pre- vent extremes, The best medicine for any animal is preventive, hence their food and surroundings should be sueh as to promote health. The opposite is too frequently the case, as they are often kept in filth, and their food is prepared for them regardless of sanitary laws, their physical wants or patural instincts, This inconsistency is all the more remarkable when we eonsider that pigs are always reared only for human food, and are the most liable of almost all ani- mals to possess pamssites in their bodies, and are susceptible of a great variety o diseases, and among them those of a scrofulons nature, which may be trans mitted to the human family when the pork is eaten. L never eat random pork, as I am afraid of it. When earefully raised and properly fattened, however, pig meat is healthful food, The omni vorous nature of pigs makes them more dangerous for food than beef or mutton, as neat cattle or sheep will not naturally eat anything but grain or vegetables, while pigs are kept sometimes on putrid food or the refuse of slaughter houses, Cattle may be taught to subsist on fish and be made to consume swill, but the number of such animals which are turn- ed into beef in this country is extremely limited, while “ swill” hogs are much more plentifal. A buteher or any per- son who cuts up such animals can read- ss ils and flabby, If should be made a mis- demeanor to sell such meat, as it is not healthful food. are almost always fattened on grain, and the firmer the flesh the nearer it is to perfection and health. — Correspondence Rural New Yorker, Houschold Hints. Rusty black Italian crape may be re- stored by dipping in skimmed milk and water, with a bit of fine glue dissolved in it, and made sealding hot. Itshould be clapped and pulled dry, like muslin | _ Beeswax and salt will make rusty flat- | irons as tlean and smooth as glass. Tie! 8 lump of wax in a rag, and keep it for that purpose. When the irons are hot. | rab them first with a Wax rag, then scour with a paper or cloth sprinkled | with salt.] Beef having a tendency to be tough | can be made very palatable by stewing | gently for two hours with pepper and | salt, taking out about a pint of liquor | when hall dome, aud letting the rest boil into the meat. Make a gravy of the | pint of liquor saved. { « Half a pound of borax will drive the | cockroaches out of the house. A large handful of it put in ten gallons of water | saves ten per cent. of soap. It is an ex- | cellent dentrifice, and the best thing for | cleaning the scalp. To remove ink stains from printed! books, procurea cent's worth of oxalic | of warm water; then slightly wet the | stain with it, when it will disappear, | leaving the leaf nninjured. The oxalic » deadly poison: i Eidisim > las invented a machine so powerful that it shocks lis ows modesty, | ew » BE Geb + ; A Wonderful Record of Change, The changes which Peter Cooper has witnessed include the entire series of the national Presidents. What a majes- tic array of national dignitaries! He was born when Washington was in his first term, tho presidential office being the old City Hall in Wall street. He was six years old when Washington re- tired at the elose of the second term, and he was eight when the old hero died. He was thirteen when Burr killed Hamilton, and is said to be the only per son who can remember the latter. He was soventeen when Fulton made his first trip up the Hudson the let mont. The Erie canal was one the projects discussed when he reached manhood, though the war with Great Britain delaved it for ten years, His first vote was cast for Madi son, and he has been a regular voter ever since—a period of sixty-eight years, He was thirty-five when the first railway in America was projected, and he built the first locomotive of Ameri manufacture. His whole life has identified with public improve ment, and he has been a leader in thead vance of the age, having witnessed a grander march of progress than any other man in the human race. Probably the most won. derful of all th: is the telegraph, which will always be one of The next is the New York n of Can 3 aoen entire annals of the S¢ mmprovements the marvels of science of journalism, NT Words of Wisdom, The body of man oppressed by excess bears down the mind and depresses to the earth any portion of the divine spirit we have been endowed with How independent of money peace of conscience is, and how much happiness can be condensed in the hamblest home, The beam of the benevolent giveth value to the bounty which the hand disperses, When mankind estimate the value of truth by dollars and cents it would be good policy to drown the world again, eve A wise man never trifles with nature's laws or gets in their way, but the un. wise do, and their life pays the penalty of their folly. 4 Give expression te avery noble and generous thought. They will vibrate down through the centuries when we are dust and ashes, A tor 3.1 3 VFO ler conscience is an estimable that is, a conscience not only quick to discern what evil, bit instantly to shun it, as thee closes is jtsell against (he mote. Those who speak always and thos who never speak are equally unfit for for friendship. A good proportion of the talent of Listen and speak ng i the hase of social virtues, eI New Fireproof Building Material. The audacity of American invent: says Chambers’ , 18 proverbial ; distains ef in the Impossibl ! fireproof hi ROW earn bwit of co SIraw arid cot Lid In prepa n of menor pianta- . : in large slabs, whereby 1} i r of a house would be ay already 0 paste board. converted int six Ira thus prepared are soaked I : in . T 3 which hardens the f fibers, g compressed nnder enormous power beams and boards of any required size ; and the effect « y sonking is sai vender th of com EE —— HM: xico’s Iron Mountain, One of the great wonders of Mexico, and perhaps of the world, is the Iron mountain in the immediate vicinity of Durango, in the State of Durango. The mountgin is nearly two miles in nd one mile wide, and about 700 Above the surface, uncovered , it shows about two hun y tons of pure ore, ready to Or IX Jed, without ron fnrnaces Much of this ore to ninety per cent., mining, he created at ranges from seven and some is carried directly to the forge. It works very kindly and form of Tl reason to believe ores of sneh rare superi-+ity, when subject to all modern amprovements in iron making, will produce iron and steel unsurpassed anywhere in the world, either in Sweden, or Biscay in Spain, or England or the United States. by ty 1 easily assumes ere the steel. 18 every ¢ onl The First Woman ia Leadville, Alrs. Sarah Ray, the first white woman who ventured into Leadville, is to-day pessessed] of a fortune that pays her an ineome of 830,000 a year. Mrs. Ray has a history which, if published, would read like a romance. She helped to found the city of Leddville; mapped out roads, built hgnses and at one time took in washing for the Leadville miners, Toa reporter who interviewed her recently she told how in Leadville she braved the angers and storms of winter before there were buildings there to inhabit; how her demghter had to be wrapped np in heavy blankets to keep her from freezing, while she pursued the task of building a hut; how, when the place be- came settled, she saw the land that she had taken up turn into a fortune, ete. she owns buildings in Leadville that rent for £2,000 a month. She is now fifty years old, weighs about 140 pounds and 1s rugged and chipper. ———— She Charely Ross. The father of Charlie Ross says that the last spark of hope has gone out, and Le mourns the lost one gs dead. He vs: “I have always believed that my Charlie, although only four years and fwo months old at the time he was taken, would remember his brother Walter, who was taken away with him, and had also thought that he would even have a distinct recsllection of the feeling of loneliness that he must have experienced when he found he was in the hands of strangers and separated from his pa- rents.” On another recent occasion, Mr. Ross said: “The only tidings I have ever received of Charlie since he was stolen, was the demand for a‘ransom of $20,000, If I had paid that, I wonld have had him long before this. As it is, I have epent $60,000, and have not got him." BAYS: or IIo The Chinese Barbers, The Chinese mode of wearing the hair makes the flowery land the parm dise of barbers, and the Chinese barber has not his counterpart the world over From dawn he is jn the streets carrying on his shoulders at either end of a long bamboo, adorned with an effigy of a chimerical ereature, the paraphernalia of his craft. Eagerly on the look-out for any one whose poll is not perfectly as he detects such an one he has him in a trice installed on a stool beneath a large parasol fixed in the | ground. In the twinkling of an eye Ah is ready, and the skull under his man. ipulation soon becomes as smooth as ivory. This done he passes on to the pigtail, which he brushes, perfumes and dresses with great care. Worked Both Ways. “ I have a bill——,” began a man, as | he stood in the door of an office on | Larned street vesterday and looked over | lis file—*I have a little bill which-—" “ Leave it with me and I'll collect it if I have to follow the debtor a straight year,” interrupted the lawyer. | ‘‘ Yes—here it is—Dbill for $10, "It is | a bill against yon,” “Against me! Ah! that alters the | it in. Good-day, sir!”—Detroit Free Pons, hun AN ov bg Ho Crushed roses of pink and crimson will he worn npon spring hats, FACTS AND COMMENTS, The sugar crop of the world last year was 3,422 088 tons, of which 1,843,088 was oane and 1,505,000 beet root sugar. Cuba produces one-thind the eane sugar, and Brazil, Java and the Phillipine islands each about one-seventh, xo that one-half the cane sugar of the world is grown by slave labor vader the Spanish tag, The Cumberiand Valley road, in Pennsylvania, wants to utilise the weather reports for the farmoersalong its hue, during the next summer and fall, by sending up rockets from points iat ‘elock every Iarning I'he f hie weather burean fo furnish the different colors being wed to indicate clear, variable, or miny weather harvest season centml three © s FORA wants POR k« in, Kansas has amended her constitution sO that the manufacture and of In Lguors and bevemges are absolutely prohibited in the State proposition lo } ¥ ine sale ftoxioating introduced in THinois leg to the oO i? § the people an 2 I uN the Western commonwealth adopt this fashion, water will wost of it | rian il, be SUACO Uhieago, \ y « 3 g to the Boston } Rist, H % F tie Acco din é total production eof gold in IBS0 throughout the world amounted to FLIR O00, 000 (880 000,000 of which was produced in Ama Si, UO, 000 {of whiel wal: of silve ry 1p $76,000,000 was pro duced in America): total of bo The largest production one was in 1808—of gold, 000,000; silver, $49,000,000; total both Since that vear the sali, LRRD LK) i any Syed YVOor by , SUNS O00, O00 of gold has diminished { . i that of silvey Good Hope wer A flash « Je LN, Carroll wo in 1863, and 1 8 adopted the plaintiff 810,000 ofits diverted the infringe SLOTS won all the year 80 bad, Meni i. $ In } . 2 3 rst 1 3 TE Y . _ 141 ow 1 wonld be d ng a presidential + CAmpalgn nnpossibile to havea torch nhlicay x epublicans wou cratic demonstration #g minute 00 s00n. Nom missioners of m a steady decry gons confined in penal institutio lay State. The population of institutions oe and county—inclnd- ing prisoners ial, was 4,400 at the close and only 9, 3,821 on the same date last 1 The average for 1874 4,107. } the operation of the new law punishment of drunkenness ort savs: “About n the pers us committed to are mtemperate, commitments for 1880 to all the prisons on sentences 0h3. Of these, 10, 434 were sent for drunkenness and 528 a total of 10,962, Deducting these from the total shows 6,001 persons committed for other of- fenses. About 1,700 of these, or nearly twenty-eight per cent., were temperate, This reduction is il FO The re. per cent. of all the The entire number of imety prisons a id Wee as common drunkards and the remainder were intemperate, A table is given showing that there has been a decrease in the net expenses of the county prisons from 827¢ in 1876 to $202,723 in 1880. ———— Pride, Prov. xxi. 4: “An high look, and a y oud heart, and the plowing of the w.cked is sin.” Psalms x. 2: “The wicked in his pride doth persecute the poor; let them be taken in the devices that they have imagined.’ Psalms ci. Bb: “ Whoso privily slan. dereth his neighbor, him will I cut off: him that hath an high look and a proud heart will not I suffer.” Prov. vii. 3: “The fear of the Lord is to bate evil, pride and arfogancy, and the'evil way and the froward month do I hate” : Prov. xvi. 5: “ Every one that is proud in Lieart is an abomination to the Lord; though hand join in hand he shall not be unpunished.” 1 Bam. ii. 8: “Talk ex- ceeding proudly; let no arrogancy come out of your month; for the. Lord isa God of knowledge, and by him actions | are weighed.” Mark vii, 20-23: “And he said, That which cometh out of a man, that defileth the man; for from within, out of the! heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, HO move so covetousness, wickedness, deceit, lasciv- | iousness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness; all these things come from | within and defile the man.’ A ———— I" The Home and Foreign Missionary society, of the Roman Catholie church, | whose headgnarters areat Lyons, France, received last year for its work the sun of $1,200,000. Fully three-quarters of this sim came from France, Submarine telegraph lines last on an ! average from ten fo twelve years: Alter that time they cannot be repaired, as | they break by their own weight if raised to be mended. FOR THE LADIES, A Woman's Secluded Life, A woman has just died in Berlin, aged eighty-two, who for nearly half a cen: tury lived in almost utter seclusion, a solitary female serant being the only person with whom she had any inter conrse, This strange being, who it is sup. posed was erossed in love, was rich, and never dented herself any luxury fu which she eared, but she never allowed het furniture to be cleaned. She lay in bed all day, rising just at dusk, and spent the night in preparing stmptuons meals for herself and her companion Nhe was surrounded by oats and birds, and caused every new work on goology to be pup for het a SO0n as it was pub She left a handsome I gacy to her servant, and the rest of he property to revert, after the latter's O an asylum for dogs house or IT chased Hished 10 & nies, y doath, t The Queen ‘of Helland. Emma, of Holland, is a fair, pleasant-looking, blue-eyed German rl, not positively pre’.v, but with a sweet, { peculiarly kindly ¥ 4 18 | 1 fad Fhe oldey B the Druteh nobility wer to i \ ) look down upon her, deeming a princess (ueen PA Dressive, faniiies among at first inclined the comparatively insignificant house Waldeck-Pyrmont by no means a tting spouse of their sovereign. But queen contrived to win hearts by he PF RETRCIO0s and wnaffected i ) She is the idol of her elderly spouse, who is ne Yer wie aried of wateh ing over her, and he spends his days in i she on her part 1s perfectly devoted to her lmsband, forming in that respect a marked contrast to the late queen, who was a very ints Heotual, high-spirited wonmn, and resented tl 3 with » VOung has fesy ¢ 5 5 Her society, he an $ contempt which, though natural, was far from being politic The Salic law does not exist in Holland, so that no legal obstacle will prevent the accession of the infant the throne, should the weak h of Prince Alexander to be definitely excluded SUCCLEsION King n VARNIOus pecondillo 5 amount of anger and princess to ¢ of healt cantse him from the spring Millivery. siiall rge flaring round bulk of the first im of spring } 8 BROWH INCAITIn size, nd very BMC 1 51 SiN Mage up the bonnets, are meant : ne and 1a ghom Belgian straws, fancy § 9 i 3 p nt prug RYE, Bhd are of \ lace-hiks that Fhe large « Ail I Summer comes, extravagantly 1 ' wide wl and sewed flat; " h } ' 1 WO aden the + pokes 3 ns on the straight ther cases a very own. Straw nooth pokes, is nsed, or eilge, or on, and studded ie or two rows of silver or ed beads t 3 1 : \ tinsel lace is paaiteq 1.2 goa it are large as bul i i most laced side, and quite low down; then peers from by the often fi ft 8 repeated on 10i8 Auown are similar ¢ with broad and flat crowns meant with Alsad an for instance, a Tuscan straw jet has two loops of Tuscan braid atin and with Mechlin lace Alsac nn bow, while the other side of this bow is made of the white ostrich tips, A faceted gold clasp f the center of the bow; the curtain band turns up like a revers, and has lace upon it; similar Ince is plaited inside the brim, and this distinguished little bonnet is completed by white merveillenx nb strings six inches wide, and than a yard long. An other small bonnet is made up of some of the newest fancy materials, and althongh silver net and jet are introduced, the prevailing color is red-—the pew Van dyvek red-—as this appears in the satin merveilleux which is plaited on the formmdation beneath the jet and silver lace, and also in the strings of ombre red satin, shaded from deepest Vandyek up A cluster of shaded poppies trims the back of the crown like a comb. Another little bonnet, seareely than a fanchon, of silver lace, has for its only trimming a monture of red pop- pies, branched to show four shades, arranged in a huge bow, and tied in the center with striped grass, The round hats are made in large pie- taresque shapes with soft brims not y winter, are for Inden 3 tein \ ‘te tnmmings mt take £ bow sl RAL on he forming one side of an loveliest orms satin bon more to mnl . Fri, frill, or else fully puffed satin; or in contrast to this there is a stiff brim rolled to flare all around, lined with velvet, edged with beaded laces and great faceted beads, and half hidden by the small nodding plumes that fall over it from the crown. The feathers on such hats are massed in profusion that exceeds even the styles of the winter; both small tips and large shaded plumes are used. A novelty in such hats has a! Marie - Stuart point in front. Flowers are mixed with feathers on hats, a wreath sometimes passing along the brim on the inside, snd sometimes outside. White Mechlin and Languedoe laces edging net or mull form scarfs for trim. ming light hats that have pompons of flowers finished with feathers, or else they are trimmed on one side with six or eight tiny ostrich tips, Again, there are large scarfs of satin merveilleux shaded in stripes and plaids of Madras colors, with bars of gold, silver or steel; these wre used also on dark bonnets for traveling and for morn- mg shopping. Yor black round hats there are steel trimmings, and volum- inous searfs of Spanish lace put on to cover nearly all the top of the crown, as well as to swrround it. The acajou, or mahogany red shades, are seen in the Tuscan straw and ostrich trimmings of There are other straws colored the stylish condor brown, which is one of the new golden brown shades, and made into large hats that require the ombre satin merveilleux scarfs of yellow, shading from maize into brown, for trimming; a little straw- colored lace and some condor brown velvet trim the brim, and there is a long shaded plume on the left side. - A crushed youth's revenge: Ambitious boy —* Mother, may I go out West and fight Indians?’ Mother—* No, my and fetch me ip a scuftle of coal,” | Thereupon the heart-erushed lad swore eternal hostility to society and forth. with became on plumber's apprentice, — | Brooklyn Eagle, NEWS EPITOME. mm Eastern and Middle States, At a large meeting of the recently formed national antl monopoly league, held in New by Judge Jeremiah Black, Congressman Reagan snd others, and a York Bp hos wore made long letter fyom Renator Windom, of Minnosts, red Fhe the league & lo demand full protection for the rights of the thie anions of anrporate power,’ was object of elitizen against abuses and ag Phil months ago uf and nothing having been hoand of sailed from five men and a Tux French bark Fannie Havre, with a crew of twenty-one adelphia fur Francs, CRTEO pe trolenm the vessel she Is supposed to have been lost at BR A Tihona of over 20 000 persons witnessed the formal presentation of the Egyptian obelisk in Central park New York, to the city Hon William M. Evarts made the speech of presen tation, during which he sald th cost of transporting the ololisk fin a little over $100 000 ud by William H, Vanderbilt th hat entire wn Alex andria, Egypt had been bau made Maver Grace address of acceptance, and medals commemorative of the Mr. Vanderbilt, brought the obelisk over, and 100 schoolboys event were presented to Commander Gorrings, who By an explosion in 8 fireworks manufactory at Greenville, N, J, seven persons were injur dd, fatally out from LT a bay of fifteen years A PAssENGER train was pulling th i at Pre fal train that eam forty when it was run 0 bohind at the The steam fil | the rear aliled Mm Babeo k, os. Four other pees sia tie aiddlent, Pa. by rat f WB) up miles an hour Hook lasting nearly two board of aldermen has ting as president New Yi su loud in « g hy ele Paty anti-Tammany members, sight Republicans and WEAN ick Keenan, whe received the votes of five three Tammany aldermen, THE twos Y Hkesbary ont I mies Davis, Wil asl Ed McRae, all were seriously injured je Iman Win lon the slope Lie car descond upon them with ity. dave ago ther the New almost to FUE VEX A FEW il ne & scene of ¢ howevey relar 1 New ) ant treasurer of $10,000,000 une i onder Wo y purchase by th nt. bonds the market ix UO, Havoex banged at Wind at Derby was hdd ded tog them Ix ae showed 2 sted soon after th Western and Southern States, Tur beautiful town of Edenton, the ancient capital of North Carolina, has been visitod by a h destroctivencss that it swept away le of the b of the ndiariem in a minose pari wriginated ln ince unll town of Liverpool, Olio, there stood until a few days ago a four-story frame house occupied by Sloan Brothers as a drag store and by snother man as a feed wor Mr, Sloan's family consisted of his wife and His Mr he house on 8 visit, About Mr. Bloan seven children, brother-inaw, Riocls, was also in t 1:80 o'clock the other awoke and found the morning house in fame He im nae his thre lately woke all the jumates and picking uy year-old danghter told the others follow him, The stairways were by this time burned away and escape by that means was Turning to the front of the buikl. who had an and the children to follow him and then leaped to the ground, The wife and children overcome by the flames. and thus cut off ing he told his wife infant in her arms wipe probably stifling fumes from the drag store, for they all failed to leave the building, Mr. Sloan hoped by jumping first to be able to catch the others he broke his log in the leap, hobbled around, orying out piteously for the othere, The bodice of Mra. Bloan, hor six small children, and Mr, Bkeels were found burned to a erisp. A TerrinLe case of destitution was found in 8 house on the outskirts of Mileankoe, Wis, The inmates of the house were thy mother, ill from giving birth to a child eight davs before, and which had been dead in the bmse for two dave, and four children ranging in age from ten years down, The family had had so food for (hit hours, other than serapsags from an old swill-barrel, which had formerly been in carrying slops from a distillery. The father, Ernest Lotz, is in jail awaiting trial for the theft of an old harness, A TRAY wag thrown from the track between Longview and Gladewster, Texas, and twenty forty used persons wore more or Joss severely injured Foun strangers and the proprietors of asaloon near Santa Fe, N. M., quarreled while playing Pistols were drawn and the strangers Cares, were shot dead, Joux Voxpenurior, tweniy-four years oll was hanged at Shelbyville, Ky., for the murda of Rebecea Johnson, a little colored girl, last July, Ar Rioux Falls, Dakota, and vicinity, fuel is so scarce that people are burning telegraph poles and railroad ties, Tar loss of cattle by th thi geecat Western ranges sovera weather on is estimated at 500, . HK head Fa of Colan' 1 Potter xg Gurrenno, implicated in the manda in Now Mexieo, was taken fem antes onl haneed jail iu Lh nergu by wig in the place where hin secomplicos were hanged some time ago. From Washington. Turne are sixty-six postmasters whose « a» missions will expire during the month: of March, Tue faneral of Fernando Wood from his late residence in Washington was attended by nearly all the membors pf Congress and prominent government officers, The paii-wearors were Senators Tharman and Bayard, Speaker Ran- dall, 201 Representatives Morton aud Loving, Judge Swayne, ex-Mayor Berret, and W. W. Corcoran, After tho funeral services the ro. maine were taken to New York, in charge of an addermianie committee from that oity, and thew buries l in Mr. Wood's family lot in Wrinits cemetery, Mouse, My, Carlisle, from the commities on ways and moans, reported a bill reposling all laws imposing taxes on bank checks, drafts and arn wank deposits, friction mstahes, medi eal preparations, perfumery, cosgiotios, dologne fhid pe thin go Mre. Tadher offered resolutions, which Were sdeplal, providing that as 8 mark of respect to the wensnry of the late Fernando Wood, and in order to dndlde members to attend is funeral, the House ad joura at two o'vlock,,, The conferences yo. wrt on the army appropriation bill was agreed Tus postofilos authorities report that letters from the United Bates for places in Caba should be prepaid by postage stamps, and not by stamped envelopes, se the genersl postoMee in Havana does not recognise the stamped anvelope A vew days after the passage of the fund. ing aot twentvAhvoo national banks withdrew $4,700,700 of thelr outstanding elrenlation iy direction of the President a general order hits been bned by the wir department pro dhiting tb » of logic quis at mili a hibdting ik sale of ploxicating Huo at " Martin ofered an Smandment a She dgrieulturd] spprogeistion Wil appropriating $10,000 fur the continndtioh of experiments in eotinectidn ith the manufidtore of gar from beets, and for the cultivation of beets for that purpose. Adopted. Mr, Belford moved w mereass the approp letion fur the reclamation of arid and waste lands in certain Western Kates and Perritoriea from $10,000 to $506,000, Agreed to, The conmitiee Shon hua and ro. ported the Lill to the House Ye smend. went which was adopted in commitiee increas. ing the appropriation for the reclamation of arid and waste lands was defeated in the House, and the bill was then passed, On motion of Mr, Davidson the Benate bill wis passed directing the seerclary of war to investigate the claims of the Bate of Florida against the United Bates for expenditures made in suppresdug Tudian hostilities, On motion of My. Cos the Baate bill was passed request. ing the President, in the heme of the United Hates, to invite all foreign gOvelsanents to be 1 presented and take part in the iternationsl exhibition to be held at New York in 1883 pro tary posts aud stations, Hest DD. Coons Grant the govergor of the Distriet of Columbia in 1871 died st Li fesddence in Geergetown, D %., at about the sare hour thst Benstar Carpen place, aged fifty-six years, In associated with his appointed hy General fers death too 1561 My brother fn the banking honse of Jay Cooke & {a Uxirep Braves Bexaron Mary H, Canrenren, of Washington, died at his home in Washing: ton a few dave ago aged fifty-seven years His death had boop expected some time, Mr Carpenter was born at Moretown, Vi, in 1834, Oltaining an appointment to West Polat in 1843 Cooke becan be romalped there two years and then entered the office of Rulus Choate, and was admitted to the bar. He took up his residence in Wis in I84n there. He held the office of prosecuting ator ney of the Bate for several years Tu 1889 he was elected to the United Biater Benate as the of Mr. J. R Doolittle. At the expi ration of his term 8 warm contest ensued, and he was defeated by Angus Cameron, by the ¢ united votes of anti-Carpenter Republicans and ha pened to a New Mexican mountain At the expiration of the term of rai Way train fell to the lot of Conductor Mr. Carpenter wes | Blessingham, Thursday afternoon at . threes o'clock, on the west slope of Glorietta Summit. The tmin com prised thirty loads, and as it was entirely upon the descent, Jack Brown, the engineer, threw on the water-brake, but found that it was broken and would not work. The train gained momentum to such a frightfol extent that the switch cables and books lying on the pilot base in front were hurled from their places into the air, breaking one of the loco. motive's guard rails. Drown called for Tix village of Brevieres, in the department | Drakes, but the train men had already completely do. | 86t every ome, and realized that the Fifteen persons | Pain was beyond their control. Beeing that nothing conld be done to stop the mad course the train was running, Brown jumped from the cab while going at the rate of sixty miles an hour, landing seventy-two feet distant, actual measurement. Blessingham, who was Aly injured on the caboose with Pawnee Charley and 5 published prohibiting the | Wife as passengers, fearing that the train was going to destruction, ent his way snd ham fin United States car loose, and checked it with the Mu Passeos addressed an immense mosting brakes, while the train continned its in Clara, Irel ttondad by more than 20,000 | veloeity down the long grade. The people aud prosided over by » priest with the fireman stood at his post like a hero, snd while the engine was plunging tural socioty of Pars has adopted down the flight at a giddy speed, he hist the ministry | CAWled out on the footboard and poked aeautiations with the United sand through the sand-box, thinking that it mig t assist the wheels in get ting a grip upon the rails. As the train | sped around Material curve, which is “ ghort and steep,” the velocity was so great that that the locomotive ran on one rail, and overbalanced so greatly that it came within dn ace of losing its equilibrinm, The brakemen on deck were obliged to lie flat and eling to the parlinment for | mapping boards for safety. For six ik the Liverpool schooner | miles those badly frightened men stuck ff Belfast. The to the ship and faced the horrors of Mr, Biggar was a pas- | death. Below Conocite is a natural steamer when she foundered | basin, with three miles of level track, and it was on this streteh the runaway wus ape again on the warpath in the | train was mastered and stopped. Some Mexico, Two bun. | of the cars were laden with iron for the a settlement nesr Cor. | front, but they were unloanded before | several women sad | the train stopped by the material being dered the place hurled in all directions. Just how the nresident has been | train held to the mails as well as it did » is a mystery the doctors must solve— we can't.— Los Vegas (N. M.) Optic. consin and practicad his profession vided that the United Btatos shall sot be hable, directly or indirectly, for Biiy of ths Ee ] attending such oxlubition A Traw’s Frightful Position, The most hair. rising episode that ever SNCCossOf Democrats, Howe, in 1879, for his old place and was Menatof again a candidate sucedssful, Mr, Carpenter was recognized as a able thie of electoral lawver, and he had a large practic United States supreme court, He one the counsel for the Democrats Ix fore the in 1877, and made one of the arguments on their side lu the yory before wan COMMON wae of Louisiana, Forelen News, of France, has ben stroved Savoy, by two avalanches were killad AT 8 masi omy of Is ¢ uf the students of the Aoad Munich the costume of a . when he rushed in dinmay In burned to death, four fatally stadent « Amon 1 atin maskers, four sia ounsauencd and Kk Atl mpaGriaty E has be LL France of salted pork, bacon i the American flag waving above him, Tur Agri a resolation demanding shonld commence the revocation of an alleged deelsion of the United the of French text Matos for States forbidding landing wines at American ports op the Pri The decision is simply in they are injarious to health society s hint he reprisal for the interdiction by France of the lation of American bacon wr Devdale, with Me, Big. bapoy Pare Belfast sean gar, hom yher of Cavan Doris a f crow of the Daris was 1 shuahiue vakiod tiv Bh Ki reviously vice lent of the Swiss Confederstion in M. Anders Bavier has boen declared vice-president, the pl wt, deceasod; and M, pe ——— Subject of debate by an Arkansas agrienltural society: * Was Samson as as a baneh of red onions ¥- BRLEFY Nas sett 8 d Petersbars CRAY Gexenal 8Sxo praration of Mi BNHONNe | | strong Lmison 10 thie p Os abive shocks of earth juake uch. the IIIA. {8t. Louis Bepnblican ) It is we ry rare that the Rey ablioan consents to editorially forward ‘the in- terests of advertisers of what are known as patent medicines, as it does not fre quently fall out that we can have posi- tive knowledge of their merits, How- ever, we take pleasure in saying of St, Jacobs Oil from individual experiment, that it is a most excellent remedial agrent, and as such we can heartily recommend ®t. THIRTY-SIX ea sired at Bt. Michael's, in Asores, 290 bhoness have fallen in wis have been killed, ordered 20,000,000 cartridges oh and doco i - The Mechanicsville (Towa) Pres re- lates how a man named Seth Wilson, a cooper of that place, left his second wife recently to die in distress, and when the funeral took place the sound of his hammer was heard all day in the shop next door to the Louse. who deel vy Mr. Gladstone they would prevent his WORN it for sone Gave ed Hlchingen, & Preneh of i Chatillon, dead hits t and a phtol in th at Ney was born fu Pards in uf the famous Mar. { under Napoloon, and was the [Galveston News | The Madison (Wis) Democrat, in en- deavoring to treat the wounds received by the candidates for the presidency, wisely prescribes St. Jacobs Oil. Of course wo could not expect our worthy contemporary to do otherwise than re- commend that famotis Old German Remedy, which “heals all wounds bat those of love” and soothes all pains save those of political disappointment, II 5535755. vase he deserted roval | join his chief on his return from exile ~ n Ells, + Co, trade, London merchants in have failed for about Lyars India JaNes th Fant $1,250, 000 Prue has asked England, France and Italy to | mediate in regard 0 the conditions of peace with Chile, Ax international monetsry convention will be | - in held in Paris on the twentysoventh of Aoril A recent estimate of the Inmber tribu- tary to Duluth, made by a gentleman of wo Dritish | experience in the lumber business, puts in South | the amount at 11,000,000,000 feet. THE MARKETS, ch time, and woof | 2 i Calves Shee NEW YOuRR, Beef Cattlo Mad, Nat, live wt, Good to Prime Veals, | wien © and Afeor wen the whi ann ho gave ond they wo forced to Many British sind wrted to have of uy wigsded only 10 of he aro Presse 1, city Ex. State, good to fancy Western, good to fancy, No. 2 Red, , ,, . No, 1 White... aped : about triching Flour in American pork | parts of England, and in 3 the eonmtry districts paragraphs appear in the 0 host Wheat Rye Bay ley Corn t Two-rowed State, | has boen booked thoroughly. Nnguadod Wantern Mized . . i Southern Yellow A codrraxy is being formed in Canada for the | ogie. White State purpose of laving & eable across the Pacific | ocean, connobting Canada with Asia, € look] papas setting forth the danger of eating } K hi 90 53 5 558 oh a 8 44 43 Ge Hay Medium to Prime, Tim'y 310 @ Tur marriage of Princs William, eldest son | Biraw Long Rye, perewt,.... 115 @ {th wi prince imperial, and the Princess Hops—State, 1880... 15 @ ¥ row w HY Ti Jn 3 Wor A 1 pring ny al, a MW i Pork Mess, old, for export A158 1s Augusta Victoria, of Bchloswig-Holstoin, haa | Lard—City Steam... 33 @10 boon celebrated in Berlin with royal splondor | Refined 1085 @10 Ihe bride mmrived in | bs fh DY Gb Berlin two days before the wedding, and the | Butter. State Creamery. 9% bg i Dairy 20 folly three-fourths of the population turning | Mesiora Lun. Creamery 22 . i Factory 2 6 welcome her, Escorted by the erown ne ors hi ” . i way she passed to the Kurfurst chamber 6 (¢ 10 G2 20 235 Gt any pork from United Slaton, even after it fa and much festivity, eh next day made her formal entry into the city, Gb oil} 1a Choco prinea, the tract was signed, in royal palace, where the marriage con n the evoniug the city was : . In the evening the city wa State, bi Early Rose At the walding the ' BUFFALO, next day all the members of the Gorman roval | Steers. family and roprosontatives of other forsign | Lambs. Western... | Sheep Western Hogs, Good to Cliciee Yorke, | Flour C'y Grom, No, 184 mony was brought toa close with the weird | Wheat No. 1, Hand Dalat] Corn—-Na 2 Weitern | Oain-BIats ,......0o00ivnvasen Barley Two-rowed Slate... BOSTON, Western Moss L050 @29%3 Live anes 646 634 City 8 6 8 : Potatoes brilliantly illaminated, 350 . a0 473 6 5m 135 41 ai 83 cd “h ed og After the marriage a The Cero. SOUrts were present, wang reception and banquet took place, of Bansn “e oh 6 te fackeltany (torch-dance), a traditional perpetua- tion of the hymeneal daneos of Greece, long in vogme at the courts of Prussia and Saxony, * wr bend wd Hous Hogs Pork Flour Corn CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY. GH ¢2 800 lee 60 i479 @ 53 Spring Wheat Patents, | Mixed and Yellow... Oats Extra White, | Rve-Rinte |, | , 4 ml100 Wool Wasdied Comb & Delaine 47) 42 Unwashed “ Hu WATERTOWN [MASS CATTLE Hecf Cattle Nheap Lambs unen tases bi te Hoge oc... ‘e Senate. The credentials of SBenators-elect Johnson M. Camden, of West Virginia, Howell E. Jackson, of Tennessee, and James G. Fair, of Novada, were presented... Mr. Bayard, from the finance committon, reported with a substitute therefor the Benate bill to Repeal all laws that impose taxes pon the capital of and deposits with banks and bankers, and apon bank chooks, The bill was considered, on motion of Mr. Bay- ard, who stated that the substitute reported by the committee, provided simply for the repeal of the tax on bank deposits, The substitute was read and agreed to, and the bill as thus amended, passed, : Mr, Conkling, from the committee on judi. claky, reported favorably, without siendment, House hill corferning the settlement of bownd- Wd MARKET, Live weight, ..... 41.4 ac fe Glyn Flour Penn, good and fancy, , 5 & Wheat No, 2 Rad, 114 ive Mate, wi Corn-Ntate Yellow, .......o0 Oats Mixed , Baas Butter Creamery Extra, ,.... 8 Chorse New York Full Cream. 13%] 14 Connecticut, Passed... The fortification ap- | Petroloum- Crude. ,.iouvivien 8@ 4 propriation bill was taken up, The amend- Refined ov viveen 8 ‘a Dig ments of the Senate committee were agreed to i — i: as read, and the bill was then read a third time | and passed... The bill providing for a new. building for the congressional library was taken | up and passod by 39 yeas to 18 nays, The credentinls of John Sherman, Senator. | slect from Ohio, for the tern beginning March | 4, ware presented, read aud filed, ,, Mr. Beck | introduced a bill to authorize the issue of legal- | tender notes, to circulate as mdney, on the de. | posit of gold, ete. Referred to the committee | on finance, ,,. The agrionltoral bill was taken | @ 5 Ras teRaRs committee on alleged frauds in the late elec. | 3 and ordered to be printed. i. Mig Barnsjide spoke stropgly in favor of a | vesohition declaring that the United State insist that its consent IW necossay to the siraetion of an Isthmian slip canal river and harbor appropriation bill was passed | by a vote of 32 to 12, Eh an a man wants a wife, and every woman wants a husband.” But the dif. enlty, Mr. Cler; , in that the woman the man wants won't have him, and the man the woman wants wants some other woman, Or somehow that way. containing no poisonous droga +l toar down su alroady debilitated sys One bottle conning more that Is, more real hop strmgth, thas 3 ordinary beer, Every druggist in Rochester Ais tisem, and the physicians be them.” Tochester Feentng Lrpeen on Hi Biter. Bome of She fnttuns of Rasota, h Min, have ground cane seed anid say is of good quality, Griddle cakes made from it are said to be quite, if not superior; to those made from buckwheat flour, budld it up, “ ork, and sick with ny alors oF Foam wroie Mr, Alexander Ferrin, of Chepango Forks, x recently, He used Warner's Bafo Kidney Liver Oure. Now he says, “1 cheerfully recommend it to all persons suffering in the BBWART _ ci— The Baptist mission in (iermany re- port 184 ehurches, 26,606 membe 1,467 stations, and 11.818 Sunday. school seholors. The churches raised $65,000 last year for church purposes. Hides! Big Lies ™ Kot a fast, mov friend ; for if vou would ses the strong, beshthy, blooming men, women sad hildren that have ben raise! from beds of sieknoss, suffering and almost death, by the nse of Hop Bitters, you would say * Truth, glorious rath,” Boe *Tratha,” in another column, The excursions of bees to collect honey are variously estimated at from one to three miles each, and they are per day. - popular use and the testimony in its favor, The Bx of Dr. Bull's Cough Byrop is bamense and the testimony volaminous, We are informed by the immortal declaration thst all men are born free and equal. How is it with twins? Does a twin have sn equal chance with the Catarrk! Mewrs. Ely Bros, druggists, Owego, X. XY: For se past thoes winters | have boen afflicted with Catarrh and cold in the bead. I spplied several remedies without good resndis Last winter 1 used your Ceesimn ) to secomplish all you ted. T. Fr MeCormick, Judge Common Pleas, Elizabeth, N. J. Angosi 25, 1880, Messrs, Ely Bros, droggists, Owego, X.Y I have been afilicted with Catarrh for eight years; have tried almost annumbered vem without auy relief : relief in one bottle of your Cream Balin than in all the remedies 1 have used put together, Charles A. Cromwell, 27 Bouth Bixth street, Drookive, B.D, X.Y, Aug 17, 1580, Price, 50 cent Owego, N. Y. Will mail i for 60 cons, For Dyspepsia, INDIGESTION, ! i $ by petients reoovering from fever or other it Las uo sonal A IAN — The Greatest Discovery of the Age. For over thirty four years DX TOUIAN'S VENETIAN LINIMENT cr warmstied fo cure Cronp Colle, Seu i tore, skeen Nternally, and Sore sickness has Doarriea and B sonte b at 3 ww Limbs, Chronie Ri s GE hes wea a bodtle, Bold by druggists events. Depot, 423 Murray Sires, how Yori, STRICTLY PURE. {This engraving represents the Lungs in & heal What the Doctors Say! DR. FLETCHER, of Lexington, Missouri, says recommend your * Hales ® | other medicine for ootighs and ool —— DR. £. ©, JOHNSON, of Mt, Vernon, lis. writes of 3 "” DR. J. B. TURNER Blountsville Als a physician of twenty-five yours, writes © Jt prepuwration for Consumption iu the . For all Diseases of the Pulmanary Organs, it wil exerlient Remedy AS AK EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL! CINCINNATI, 0, For Sale by all Druggists. Sold by McKASSON & ROBBINS, New York. Mend us your Addross ON A POSTAL CARD. AND WE WILL SEND YOU OUR INTERESTING AND VALUABLE PAMPLLEY FOR LADIES OX “Shopping in RewYork” EHRICH BROTHERS, 285 to 295 Eighth Avenue, NEW YORK. : Sebdues inflammation, Uentrols ail Bemorrhapm, Aowte avd Cheon, Veonees and Mucous, INVALUABLE FOR Calarrh; eae neni ammOs Care (75 conte), specially pro pared to meet serious cases, contains all the curstive sropertionof Pend’s Extract ; our Nasal Syringe 12% conte), invaluable for use ix catarrbal affsctions, in simple and effective. sare Threat sul Longs, Chapped Hands and Face are greatly benefited by the Extract. Frosted Limbs and Chitblantaw are promptly re. Uavad aud nitimately cured by Pond" A = Ext - # It is npsale to pee othor artiches with our tions, Tass! on having PONDS EXTRACT. Refuse all imitations and subsiitatos, a CELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. Representing the choicest selected Tortoise Shell and Amber. The linhtest. handeomest, and strongest known, Seld Ly Opticians and ewelors, Made by SPENCER OPTICAL MFG. CO, 13 Maiden Lane, New York, TED ! Holders of worthless (snpposed) and non-paying Rail road Stocks and Bonds, and of ated Town {ny Soupty and Sats Hani, Way oo focidally fot van by a ¥ ORale Orinh {irec), to address F. O. Box 1584, New York City. ARYLAND FARMS 87 to per Acre AE Short winters, hrosgy snnimers, healthy ellmate, Catalogue foe. Ho P. CHAMBERS, Foderalsburg, Md. / LLEN'S Brain Fosd- olives Nervous Debits & ‘ake of Goperative Organs, rugKh , Send for @ir, to Allen's Pharmacy, 313 Ist ey Learn Telegraphv. Earn $40 to 8100 YOUNG MEN Learn lerzaniy. Ear bi to pin paying offices, Add’s Valentine Bros, Janesville, Wis, $350 ng Articles in the wo sample free, Jay Bronson, Detroit, Mich. 7 7 Outfit Free, dress _% 8 PO VICKERY, Augusta, Maine, BERRY CRATES jd Buksis, Iu usc on Sune for Fres Circular, N. D. Batten 8999 her MANE Fan LE hua die os ———— GIFT Kairos a0 Wes & So. 0 So rich 3 for Consumption ix alse PISO'S CURE | Cough M the best edicine. el % § i 3 i ¥ Containing an findeox of Diss eases, which gives the Symp. toms, Cause, nnd the Best Treatment of each. A ‘Fable givingatli the prinot puidroage used for the Horse, with the ordinary dose, efTeotn, and antidote when a poison. A Table witli an ngraving of the Horse's Teolh ot differs ent ages with linle= for tells ing the age. A valuable oonls lecilion of Roeecipis nek much other valuable Infors mation, : 1 05 Oaeh BR rai » uk any ads. érossin he Jnlte inten ap Cilalet 55 CENTS. CLUS RATES: Five Copies - Ten Copies Twenty Copios One Hundred Coples Thre cent stamps received, New York Newspaper UiMonm, 148 & 140 Worth St, X.Y. wont poste $1.00 1.78 3.00 10.00 - - - . o Tio suse whaneorr on Teel : ier, : tale o Bitterse’ "MORE THAN 100 STVLIS OF THE MASON & HAMLIN 3 mee ean ryan: BE rT me reno ey Red River Valley! 2,000,000 ACRES Wheat Lands beat tn the world, fur sale by the 1 Pal, Minneapolis & Mauitoba R.R.Co. Band cia on Tr alicwed the stir Lu hreal D. A. McKINLAY, Land Commissioner, nt, Past, Misw, tt EE ois AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ICTORIAL HISTORY ome WORLD ng full and authentis seer crery yp ni ahd wo F the Gre ma isdudine a Pires, the middie ages Th ea a 1 Tent of the Naw World. the discovery and settee It co a aa vings, and is th Swnpicte Watery of tue Word coer pulh oe a apertny 1 pages and extra terms le en NATIONAL PUBLISHING Co, Phiiladelyiliin, Pa. Hair DyeistucS a FRESE ani BEST, 1 acts neat teensy yeoduneing 1 . patmal clusles of 11 sek rows; does NT STAL the SAIN, and I sasiy applied. It wm oa som prepa ation aed » favorite onevery well ay polntedtols letior RISTADORO'S MPLOYMENT LSA OR Troreime ARY permenth, AHEXPENSE Xa Wika Seympily pala, IOAN 2 + 208 George St. Cluciunail, O. A Agesta Won el elallne made = tellingors VATE FAMILY ice, ai Ba : pn a. ; SC Tunail, Oh me mt pt Hat LE Lu, LN Used and approved by the EUROPE and AX 25 a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers