THE FARM AND JOUSEHOLD, Make the Ground Count. We haze learned one mistake we have made for years past, and that is cover. ing too much ground with too few plants. Vacancies nol only make a loss, nt are expensive every way-—iu preps aration and cultivation of soil, in extra expenses for manure, and intovest and tax on land. bitious as to having a great number of acres planted, regardless of thy yield, expense, ete. We will guarantee that, as a rule, persons having the least land get the most fruit. from their Iand in proportion to the number of acres, and make the most money. — Fruit Recorder, A Valuable Table. The following table will show the nuwber of checks or hills contained in an acre of ground at certain distances: 1 foot apart cach 4 feet apart each 3 foot apart each 4 feet apart each 3 foot apart each 6 feet apart hoch 9 feet apart each 10 feet apart each 12 foot apart each 15 foot apart each 20 foot apart each 25 foot apart each 30 feet Apart each 40 foot apart dach Way, WAY, Way, way Way, Way, WAY, Was » WAY, WAY, WAY, WAY, Way, WAY, Cuttings, M. Loiseau recommends that the us nal method of striking cuttings should be altered. When, he observes, a out- ting is put in perpendicularly, the sap, the natural tendency of which is to rise, is expended in pushing forward a new bud instead of forming a root. But if it is laid horsontorly, or even with its lower end higher than the upper, that is not the ¢ aso 3 the SAP pre fers to move toward the highe r end, or at all events is evenly distributed between the two extremities. This causes the callus to form so rapidly that if the cuttings are put into s warm place eight or ten days are enough to secure its formation or even that of the roots, Antumn cut tings taken off a little be To the sap ceases to move, and treated in this man. ner, form the callus so hal Kly that they are ready for planting out before winter. ‘In winter it to keep the cuttings in a gentle heat, or beneath leaves de ep en ough to keep vi frost, and even then a callus will sound to have formed by spring time. 1S Decessar ¥ in he The Grape. Many vine-growers, sars the Cinecin- pati experience a at di pointment between the budding and ripening of their grapes. In spring the leaves and sprays sheot forth aban. dantly and the * blossc ms” appear in gratifying profusion. «+ As summer ad- vances the growth of the berries is at first satisfactory, and then a reverse commences. Some shrivel up, others mildew and many drop off, the curculio takes a share and general deterioration ensues. If the trunks of the vines are large and the branches extensive these changes are only the more remarkable, But larger vines absolutely require to be profusely watered, for the propor tion of water skin of the grape is evidently very considerable, and every drop ascends thro agh the peres of the trank If the vines are near the Sel: ing waste washing water, soapsuds, cannot be poured tco profusely o roots. We have known vines, ete, rescued from 3 drought by the profuse watering r of th ir roots. Again, the paper bag protection to the bunches is well worth trying, Old vine growers ‘near this city find 1t to succeed admirably, There are few noble grape “trees” in this neigh abor- hood which rival in size and production he famons Black Hamburg at Hampton Court, England, but they are well cared for by their owners, although in our latitude it is not necessary them in glass houses. thrivi Ty¥s 8100, {rage fie, ia the y ure He who hath a ing vine yard bath a good posses- a Raising Calves on Skimmilk. A. B. Allen, writing to Wesiors Agricuiturist, gives some advice on rais- ing calves. He says: A friend who has a large dairy in the western part of the State of New York informs me that he has kept twenty-four grade shorthorn and Guernsey calves, dropped the last spring, in the following manner: They were allowed to suck their dams a few times immediately after birth, and then taken away and taught t8 drink milk from the pail. This was warm od fresh from the cows for a week or ten days, and then skimmilk was gradually mixed with it till substituted entirely for the new milk. This was frequently lobbered, in very hot weath er, "before feedin ig, and was thor all the better for as being more easily digested. The calves were put into a good pasture and at a few weeks old began to nibble the grass, The sommer being dry this failed considerably d#ring August; ent hay mixed up with wheat shorts were then given in place of it One may judge how well these calves throve when simply fed, for at six to seven months old they weighed from 500 to 600 pounds each. The cream from the milk of the dams of the eslves was made into butter of first rate quality, stored till October, and then brought a good price. Many think that choice calvers cannot be well raised on skimmilk, and therefore feed all new milk to them. But I think this is wasting the cream on such as are de- signed to grow up for dairy cows anc d that they are all the better for this pur- pose when reared on the quality of milk which is the least fattening and of ves the most muscle. Many a shorthorn Leifer is injured for the dairy by being overfed and kept too fat from its birth up to three years old, when it is the usnal time for it to drop its first calf. As fed above the calves occ asionally teoured, and to stop this some astrin- gent medicine had to be given in their food. But if a heaping tablespoonful uf oilmeal, gradually inereasing to a pint for each calf as it grew older, had Leen made into a grueland mixed daily with the skimmilk, it would have pre- vented scouring, kept the bowels in good order and made them relish their ciher fool more heartily. Flaxseed boiled to » jelly answers the same pur. also if ground mixed with oats, one-fourth of the former to three fourths of the latter, and then a quart «r more, according to the of the calf, fed daily, is a good substitute for tho oatmeal. the ju ent it, jose, age Recipes, Sweer Aprue ProgLes,— make delicious pickles ; peel and gqnar- vinegar add two pounds of sugar ; thie vinegar and dissolve the sugar in it; add cloves and cinnamon, and pour over the apples while hot. Craxperry Ronn —8tew a quart of g anberries in just water enough to keep them from burning. Make very sweet, #‘rain and cool. Muke a paste, and when the cranberry is cold spread it on ihe paste abont an inch thick. Rell it, 1ie it close in a Hannel cloth, boil two | hioura and serve with a sweet sauce, ptewed apples or other fruit may be used in the same way. Ax Arperizixg Disg.—Onpe of the most appetizing dishes that can be which may tempt the appetite of one who isn’t hungry, is made in this way : ‘fake one dozen ears of corn, grate it, tir in four eggs, one-fourth of a cup of flour, a little salt, and fry in hot lard ; 3{ the corn is not ‘milky add alittle milk | u¢ cream. une side turn and do them on the other, continuing to do so till they are thor oughly done, which will be in about a quarter of an hour. Make a gravy of | some trimmings, which put into a stew- pau with a bit of soft butter, an onion, a roll of lemon peel, a blade of mace, some thyme, parsley, and stew the whole over a slow fire for an hour, and | then strain it; put one ounce of butter iuto another pan, and when melted mix | the gravy by degrees till the whole is mized ; + boil it five minutes, then strain it through a sieve and put it to the Some browning may be added, | together with mushroom or walnut cat | sup, or lemon pickle. To Duy Povpexins. Take ripe pump kins, pare, cut into small pieces, stew soft, mash and strain through a colan der, as if for making pies, { this pulp on plates, in layers somo half an inch thick; dry it in a stove oven, which should be kept at so low a tem perature as not to scorch it, In abou! a day it will become dry and orisp, The sheets thug m then be stowed AWAY in a dry place, and are alws avs ready for use, either for ples or stewing, The quick drying after cooking pre vents the souring which is almost al ways the case when the uncooked pieces are dried, while the flavor much better preserved and the after cooking dispensed with, On going to use, soak portions of the article in a liitle milk over night, when it will return to as de jdiotous a pulp as if made of a pumpkin { when fresh. cutlets. Spread | Wie CAN is John Chinaman Gets Along at School, Ww the 4 hing OT) h aad On 8 tablished FP biladelphia, Times of that city tells how hh man is Impro ving the shining hour Mr. Sois forty vears of age, and al though he has lived in America five Yoars he hasn't even m ast ered the sim pl le beanties of * idgin go gli sh. He 1s the dolt of the sehool. but that fac 3 doesnt seem to disturb him a ps and the look of pleased astonishment his face wore Yossie rds AY W hen he was told for the twentieth time the first letter of the have driven any but a Chin to distraction ‘“ H-e-n" sdid the teacher, ashe wrote those letters on the blackboard an ax re ceived an approving le from Mr, “What does that spell ? a the instructor, The pupil smiled, scratched his Jeft side and reflected. “That 1s hen—a teacher, “Me How A school article 15 smi chicken.” said the sabe hen,” replied Mr ocdolly as though the information not by any means new. adh oll, write it.” said the t« acher, thrusting a piece of chalk into the Mon- golian’s right band. The idea of ask ing him to write struck the othe } ite So, as Wis I Seexers knowle dge a8 €xire mely fan ny, nd Sam Hing Moi Kee and C h ang Lang giggled like o Vergrow: schoolboys. The slow pupil smiled, the writing on the blackboard oritieally, grasped his crayon firmly and to the astonishment of the Caucasians in the room executed an almost perfect imitation of the yer's chirography of the word hen. : “ Read i.” said the teacher. “Chlicken,” was the nonchalant re- the pupil, as he moved TY OY 18354 Gee, 3 teas sponse of toward his seat. ‘““ Not chick en, structor in correction. “ Alle same hen, alle same ehlicken,” r. So, philosophically, as he dropped into his seat and fanned his fevered brow with his primer. A lady a: 1d gentleman were the 118 sch Ye §1¢ rday. o Ah How, wl and Jawne d though he was said the ¥ ” han 103, ¥. Y repiioa : teachers i in th . 1 lady «devel John Lun ool oted herself t an BE looked on regular intervals dreadfully bored. Ah How, however, appeared to take great interest i studies. The m ale teach er greater part of structing Quong i the latter being student. “The or the teacher, reading from “The fox has a hen,” pupils, spelling out the words * This is the pic " sa pointing to an engravin Me sabe flox, m Ah on, eyeing the * What fol lox hi quired Quong, “He the teacher. “Bell ly good flo 3%,” Was tions criticism of ( Ju 0 gravely at the de ently unprepared for osophical utterance and did not attempt to reply to it. About this time the at nearly every one in the room was tracted by the suppressed laughter Moi Kee and King Gee, who were joying the fluttering of a paper but! fly, manufactured and set afloa Hing. The artificial tured and the course : teachers hear the pupil separately are under the eye their preceptors the pupils are as and stadions as any one conld wish, but their other movements are not op nt in stu ly — that is, to any great exte The teachers, however, are loud in their praises of the scholars and say they learn with markably rapidity. ns spelt he 8¢ hoo 1 Wh tn ire, sabe hep ’ pieiure. mn im hen? i . H] *y examining the woodoeut oy : at it, answered wants to e the senten. wlio was evi- Vy teac he Ty consequen tention mnsect f st ie 80M! HB BO long as they Of re- How Sponges are Caught, A correspondent of the New Haven (Conn.) Register tells how they fish for sponges in the Bahamas: When a ves sel arrives at the fishing ground it anchored, and the men in small proceed to look for sponges in the water below. The water is a beautiful light blue color, and so clear a sixpence can easily be seen on the white, sandy bottom in thirty-five to forty feet of water, Of course when there is no wind, and the surface of the water is still, the sponges are easily seen, but when a gentle breeze is blowing ao “sea- glass" 1s used. A sea-glass consists of a square pine box about twenty inches in length, a pane of glass about 10x12 inches placed in one end, water-tight. To use it, the glass end is thrust into the water, sai the face of the operator is placed close to the other. By this means the wave motions of the water are overcome, and the bottom readily seen, Sponges when seen on the bot- tom attached to rocks, look like a big black bunch. They are pulled off their natural beds by forked hooks, which are run down under the sponge, which is formed like the head of a cabbage, and the roots pulled from the rocks, When brought to the surface it is a mass of soft, glutinous stuff, which to the touch feels like soap or thick jelly. When a small boat load is obtained they are taken to the shore, where a crawl is built in which they are placed to die, so that the jelly substance will re adily separate from the firm fiber of the sponge. These crawls are built by | sticking pieces of brush into the sand out of the water, large enough to con- tain the eatch. six days for the insect to die, when the { sponges are beaten with small sticks, and the black glutinous substance falls off, leaving the sponge, after a thorough washing, ready for market. To the fishermen generally the occupation is not a lucrative one. I am told the wages will hardly average three dollars per week, besides board. There is but little diving for sponges, except for a particularly fine bunch which cannot be got with the hook. The sponge is formed by small insects, and is the | hive in which they live. Different quali- ties are found growing side by side, although in certain regions the finer and more valuable sponges are found. a — In Good Hands, | He was a young country fellow, a lit | tle awkward and bashful, but of ster- | ling worth of character. She was a Oin- 18 + boats i appreciate his worth despite his awk wardness and bashfalness, and was his | fiancee. last winter they were standing in front of the window in the parlor of her home { on East Walnut Hills, watching the | snowflakes rapidly falling outside. | was not up in society small talk, and | { marked as he watched the snow falling: | a ue, will be hard on the old man’s shee | “ Rover mind, dear,” said she, slip- ping her arm around him, «Twill take care of one of them,”— Cincinnati Com. | FOR THE LaDIENS, Fine Hends of Halr, A New York hairdresser, spoaking of the glory of women, says the most mag nitlcent head of hair she ever saw was that of the Marquise Ounception Mont salvo de Quero w of Cab, Was a guest at the Fifth Avenue hotel with hes husband last winter, 1 oy IAT] Rise herself was a very beautiful woman, but her hair-it was just itself, It was over two yards long, tremendous ly thick, of a beautiful In loose fell 1 to the floor in WHves The ma juise liked and wore the platnest coir ble two ive h or sh ipod head diamond dagger; fow short, wavy locks stand Mra, Heilsted, cinnati editor over Wis & labor 18 light brown extreme, bu it tha who loveliness OW, and when rippling pmplicity, great LIAS brads wound roan fastened NE and with seven of } 8 COROT, § t the ie t 1 Was lmposs: HS arrangenmen to Mrs Rl Of ig hte I TOY MAL SAF nearly 508 For plain nnets, fe carded last for col iS those small bonn ii sealed 1 by feat! Large it ow Naphe 1 felt 108, fants of p else they entire ¢ dg Mother s 1 #is0 the Hubbard shes Bernhardt dn AUR th nmmer, t p Kes with the . front forehea the wea peasant ¢ taperin alk is WRIKIDS cluster are so thick that 18 not 1 1 ieced ’ make ther ers are made match the gl shaded plushes with whieh ¢ combined. To make up the feather ornaments boxes of birds are imported, the feathers stripped from t gs and breasts, and are paste 1 together in bands and coronets, and new colorings are thus made up. There are whole boxes filled with meek little doves in their solemn drab shad contain dozens of tiny humming while great wooden filled with brilliant impions that are as large as turke ¥8, and are on ly found on the ighest mounuiain pe aks ; many of the green-blue feathers and those of flame, colors are taken from these mammoth birds. The feathers of king-fishers, herons, merles, paroquets, guinea-hens- pheasants, and peacocks are taken apart and fancifully rearranged. The breasts of humming-birds form medallions on flame-colored impion turbans. The eyes of peacocks’ feathers are massed to make the Argus turbans in which Eng- lish girls delight, and Mercury wings of a single dark color are added at each | side of feather bands for crowns. The odd Parisian eaprice i8 for a minature On One sae. Fines {cs alii rious de sigus to up We and IY Are are win their les ; smaller cases birds ; chests are the body, with the comb, and some rs’ plumes for the tail. This is the se arle t ibis for and hats, and is said to be as popular now in Paris as turtles, lizards and beetles were formerly. Venvers, Erc.—Plush prom. the favorite fabric for millin ery, both for maki ing the itself and for its trimming. Glace plush is one of the new changeable fabrics of which there is great variety, showing two colors, one forthe background, half obsenred by pile of another color. Ombre plush is shaded, the new shading repeats itself twice or else four times across the breadth, shading Prusan, ises to be bonnet and instead of one oxte nding across the entire width as it formerly did. The point ille, or dotted plush, is very pretty and light. The moleskin plush is very rich, having thick, short pile like velvet, i stead of the long, shaggy pile peculiar o plush, P lowed plush has lines across the breadth like furrows, while the striped plushes are in most varied widths, and in combination with several different fabrics, such as satin merveil leux, moire and surah. Tiger plush is repeated from last season, and a new clouded plush is labeled nebulous. The rich moleskip plush is beautiful in the piece in artistic bronze shades, in steel, ciel blue, in gray shaded to black, in the orange hues which now prevail in all yellows, in brick red and cardinal, as well as grenat to cherry, and in the white shades, viz, the eream-white and blue-white. Velvet is shown in solid colors, stripes, moire, and in all the shadings deseribed for plush. When very soft stuffs are used for trimmings they are Rhadzimir silk, which has reps that are flattened, and the twilled satin surahs. Watered silk will also be largely used in the new French mark- ings that show smuller ripples than those of moire antique. Glace satin surahs are beautifal changeable stuffs, showing new combinations of colors. iisBoxs.—Ribbons are wider than in seasons, The novelties are the glace surah ribbons, glace watered ribbons, ombre plush ribbons, and a great va rie ty of striped ribbons rib bons are scarcely to be found in the first importations, Boome metal lines, either of gilt or silver, are effectively ntroduced in the ribbons that have broader stripes of plush or velvet, The glace surah ribbons show OTH EY changing intoolive, blue with green, red with blue, green with red, and times down one selvedge there ‘will be stripe of plush of one of the colors used in the sumb Fringed edges and surah ribbons the ribbi some irders are al netimes {1 side of In atin | watered i) O61 ' th)e h un AL 8 1 will changeable and Ale showy, red with olive, gold with four yery fre isl | § 41 he other 18 £ Liroeks, f tha It is said by travelers in i ¥ K+ Y CArgx I 3 rave ls tha ny FAavelinr, Lhe pre Al essenty salutation between J Dave nx ina ther 44 day it was \ town rt, was a | Fie) t &nit SOL OOO people } jy exeltement Was very ht wind blowing After the balloon got up and ma vhe that far utl ’ they droy ped the ) Was a li should say so. where I lost crowd was th he ina - Jusl mi ink the erowd would . suggested taken i | too audience, ““ But just wait, Of course the crowd made a break out of town to scrape up the Temains, and I rushed home to get my fishing tackle, be to go fishing for a day or two. fore I left the house, however, arrested for murder.’ “For murder ?” “Exactly. A lot of the boys, accom- panied by the sheriff, rushed in collared me, They claimed that dummy had fallen on a farmer I was the and his boots. They said that the balloon. atic had turned State's evidence, the chances were 1'd be hung by before night.” “That was rough.” “Well, so 1 thought, scared plum to death, and iu mob I was just ponied up fifty dollars for legal penses, and they bid me in the garret of a neighbor's housa, They kept me there ten blessed davs, not a day but they struck twenty or two for contingencies. night the whole gung came around of beer—on my money, mind you said that they had concluded, tional precaution, hide me in the hollow of an old oak tree about three miles out in the woods, 1 saw through the whole business then, and drove 'em out with a elub. It was a good square ease of the biter bit, I know, but they never let up calling me ‘Dummy Skiddy ' after that, until they drove me out of the town, and I had to emigrate to this jumping-off place of creation,” and the captain shook his head with a disgusted air as he walked out, —San Francisco Post p———————— shrewd Pike, The California pike seem to be shrewd in regard to their own interests as the human ivhabitants of the have the reputation of being. Not long since they formed a barricade of their own bodies in the BSscramento river, resting just below the surface with their noses Mp stream, and were for their ingenuity with a feast of the small fish in the river. These, coming in contact with the bar- rier, were frightened, and tried to get away; but few of them could. The pike were very nimble ; they snapped up the little fellows by the thousand, despite the efforts of many to swim over their heads. The barricade con- tinued three days. Boys were out in boats and captured many of the pike, which immediately reformed the line. me full and as addi- to A This — consumes 14,880 barrels of kerosene oil every night. A DOOMED CITY, Danger of Submersion, A Bt, Petersburg correspondent of the London Times says: Against the of the summer dust, which swoops day and night over Bt, Peters , all the pumps drawing waterfrom all the four branches of the Neva are inefliciont I here in nothing for it but to turn + back upon it; and that manage burg : one in what wn does who it the avery i The Gan City 18 left to a few hor priests, Hritaunio are on a week's and the Hotel 1 1OWH, 18 Iu ing ed like a Lon for this is rsbhurg, and thing how Jike id half Amstar \ cHIce i nrge, suas an immense alligut hall nw out of a dan, SHOCCesR1I0N and digit and i IL were, magnificent dis of walls interminable to allow run out of hes, convents and wonu grauite and slylos | u Finals or lines m grand at surface, laid out the pictur i sirewn over space vy flat i HOwiiere with no Rag if at all ut of si gh tL, miles of islets, of of river, It is ndaation was a Wo rk add under incessant ! Pe ter wud he could, p rami ds. and that some unsafe $1 @ walters rose 3 TORSONO, whurg in Caviest a st Ori Han be- pes- Ker: conjure up, Allg pat ie skeptic al 3 i COL Bye to the an y dreaded itingency, EI ——— What a Gentleman Is, ssential characteristics of a An not an JOrican essavist, outward inward qualities, drover was a gentleman at heart, 1 alo, of whom this He was driving cattle day when NOW n the highway. The lady to turn out road and tread in the deep snow. “ Ri wlam,” said the drover, off his hat, ° it the cattle knew as well do, you would not ane to was drove of the tho hould walk in the snow.’ Charles Lamb tells a story of Jo seph Paice, Bh Lion don mere hant, who rey erenced womanhood in every form in “I have seen him,” writes the genial “stand bareheaded, (smile, if please), to a servant girl while she has been inquiring of him the way to some street, in such a posture of un. her in the acceptance, or himself in the of it, “1 have seen him,” he continues, cort a market-woman whom neountered in a shower, exalt. had © with as much earefulness as if she had been a countess.” These anecdotes show what genuine It is a kindly spirit which expresses itself kindly to all. Of one who possesses it the remark never made, pleases.” As Mr. Mathews says we wish the boys to memorize ing-—*‘*He who can be a he pleases, anything else,” IR — Sell«Control, is and the say- gentleman In some people passion and emotion are never checked, but are allowed to in a blaze whenever they come. Others suppress them by main force, and preserve a callous exterior when there ave raging fires within. Others are never excited over anything, ont Very much can be done by eulture to give the will One of the very best means of eul- the mind from the subject which pro- duces the emotion, and coneentrating it elsewhere. The man or woman who persistently permits their mind to dwell agreeable themes, only spites or herself, Children, of course, bave less solf-eontrol, and parents und teachers must help them to turn their attention from that which excites them to something else; but adults, act like children, ought ashamed of themselves, 'Lhe and distress, rather than it a mastery a ———— Powder, when exploding, exerts an | force one thousand times the | pressure of the atmosphere, East and Middle. Y.) paper publishes detailed of that Bhinkel, the Cornell was in league with certain betting men the th that arrangement, wig clews recely Ax Ithaea (N hares to the effe Vieuns rece in accord that he sold file mysion ed 8 Now olive agency was led to belleve that TY. Blowart was buried in an gamatery, and a but with a Hrooklyn was lnstituted, ilaliste are 1asing underground rapid win yout N.} pvention n 8 Howe iisaiia 1 and at Wo minated a rooster, pudiaie monopolies in, eld is Greenback to the previo Ar the convention of the Pennsylvania Ass ciation of Deaf Mutes at Harrisln Hoyt An compl ITE address Governor and ex delivered by both of tho vernor Cartin, wi fen ted ilies on le in mastering the silent language. ibition Alliance, through H Thompson, 1. D, President on the Pr Mra, M, McClel has issued & call Hoy 0 toket, aud secrelary, i Bro of 1 r & national © New York, October 18 and 18, Use of tl uildings of Watson, Barrell & Ca, g nearly a ton of fine sporting po the bul win, "taburg, a, nierence f the j manu fa at Warren, Me wowder ther day, the demolishing ends of the packing dis Hed win} and bl in Wing other ba IRE Nn Mank, of Warren, wailding, was blown nearly 400 feet r killed sand barrels of beer and other pr (00 destroyed by fire in s se and of two wider, Bamuel who was st were Musgrave Alpaca o Mass ppeared, and Dunn, out total loss to the sliows that swindled his of mor tions, will amonnt to making an iperimental test with lights a! Union square, Now York broke and the five men below HIting wack iamnps placed igh pole fell on flicting \ and seriously injury fatal injuries on two men ing three others, Wed of New and Hartford line, FICK on York, of the on her way slonml Niate willie & BLOM] ¢ § sl and san rily afterward, i her passengers had | yh igen i hoe def BOT Gel LAY Wil place and 0 fragments os Todd him in They rate man, met Jam 1 & witness against shame ther Todd § was shot we v Hany risburg and rg, LEXAR the fools tallentine, ape On & © i af Bleabenvi boys wore thrown fa nel iui Wie Howard in wl named ped 1 hiidren have died. 3 i peat troubles are the assigned for the d eed, the West have suf . Coplo wight partial relief. 8, beloy 0D Oe Kio Grande for a long , Were Texas, by officers, the Pus Crops in portions ¢ fered severely from drought 1s ah wover, br four horse thiev i WETS have, hi Wainer ng to an naive gang whioh laws i : along fan to Brackets, tacked near the town of Do party WAN & lores, and all of the Al rie pork-packing ss of about $1, 0 re the building contained thioves wore killed, destroyed Johan C, establishment, At the time of the 1 4,000,000 pounds of ng at Chicago } O00, bacon and 15,000 barrels of pork citizens of Alaska are ivil government and represenlation in nEress, Arn t seventy in Indians. The soldiers pursing of Apaches had fifteon fights with the Indians campaign opened. Ohio, thirty cars partly loaded about Leen massacred by fizens of Eurcka, N. M., have he oi number Nana's band since the At Cleveland, with merchandiss, a large planing mill and a lumber yard containing 500,000 feet of lumber were destroyed by fire, Foun hs and damage pearly $150,000 resulted from C. oom deat amounting to a heavy hurri- at Charleston, 8, the al the average vield, Cant It is stated that crop in the West will nearly eqn Firry-oxe the entire business part of Plano, Texas, have been de. buildings, comprising stroved by the flames, entailing loss of about $100,000, A Termine bh an aggregate which resulted nee destraction « The for northeast, II { Savannah, Ga, gity from the few minutes the lace y was in darkness O88 ware rans and house s, HIV WAS pros fully one Hing-houses | warehouses lost their roofs and many mtaining was blown into river and five ple were drowned, 1s person living on wal Teland be there was life 1 WAS rep drowned great loss of among wm the rhborhood FIArY plantations of the was wrecked, ity, and the soaped, a number being braised The collision bricks and plaster, the Mist and sunk, pilot boat with a and soveral tughoats were ol cams In mer irexd id three A house was swept down tho river, of its kes and her two children Engineer Richard Fitagorald, H. B. Plant, David Bowens (eolored), tarrified occupants Mrs, were drowned, of the The family of comprising seven por- A colored woman and her steamet was drowned. me, wero drowned, four children were washed away in their house, from their Several were sunk and a large num- On Island, every Fhe ships in the river broke loose IMOOTINgS, bor damaged, Tybee Savannah's Coney Island, nearly Ono house took fire after it fell, con- suming Mrs, Georgia Wolfle, her child and her little brother. Other dreadful soenes are re. ported at various river resorts. In Savannah the depots, wharves, elevators and large build. ings suffered great damage. The Savannah Meaning News building was unroofed, and the house was blown away. The beautiful trees for which the city is noted are greatly damaged, Business was paralyzed and over $1,000,000 loss has been incurred. 1 Ag killed and three more injured, Manvin, the man of many wives and numer. forgeries, was arraigned at the Richmond police court the other day, and claimed that he was not the man wanted, He was {den- titled by the clergyman who married him to a Richimo iady, and by several others, Marvin is charged with having married fourteen women and deserting them one afiéf another, I'w i nd young tolographie advices from sbout sixty corre. ndents stationsd at different polots in the ith, estimate that the cotton crop this your | ba bel ge, From the data at wnmand they estimate that the entire ww of 1 pad 5,000,000 bales, or 0,000 below that of last year, ow the ave M1 will pol ex i i From Washington. sin Howgate, charged with government, a elvil case of Caple pent from the irshial’s officers, Guonar W. Rioas, the well-known Washing. banier, “ra Foreign News, Tur body o ia balloon un Montpelier, was found a fow ve afte ward on the sea coast, frightfully pox dispatch says that the Archbishop ere | Lhe clergy to offer spacial Liarvest as there is in many ! 4 imntry reason for mach anxiety, i d BRlVEeS Are i Mia, i 8 landslip in the village of Tatarind, ra 84 Bangkok, BVIA, MEIY-Hive Jun 8 wore lost sn Central railroad, and # of track have be CANADA'S total © al year ending June 30, L174 THe insurrecti a pompleted, i Unio 188], Tanis OT mounted Arabs Hammamet pn of the Arabs in A body of 12,000 the French tro alsed with a loss of fifteen near a 2 % nded, est in England a Lon- is almost ruined. | more than lu if a p could be saved, { farm and landlords are in despair, s will emigrate ie of land, already seri. ted, has gone ray t in all the churches in England, parliament has been prorogued, ers have { Tue English i Tux village of 84. Jean Baptiste | been i HE «1 of Tel partly destroyed by fire and the 1 by another earthquake, ere than that of tants are in despair, oEie 3 visi Vare sd 1 the inhabi have rains in ¥ngland been Lsastrons 10 Lhe crops, nEAY siir has been caused in Paris finan. f M, Pelix, ling bank, the Union Finan. the ies by the disappearance « ] } Ook mtents of ed that he | “In What Language Shall We Sing?” | askes a writer in the Boston Transcript, | That dep ends, | the filing of a eross-cut saw, or is as | musical as the average tenor in travel. | ing opera companies, we advise you to | sing in the deaf and dumb language, | [Troy (X. Y.,) Morning 1 elegram and Whig Rubbing the Midnight Cil | In the Philadelphia 7Vmes, of recent | date, we notice an item referring to the | miraculously quick cure of a prominent | gist of that city, Mr. J. M. Hig- Germantown road and Morris who had an awful attack of rheu- matism of the knee. He applied St. | Jacobs Oil at night, and pext morning {| was well and in his store as usaal, Ir: The scales used for weighing gold in the assay offices are so delicate that one glance from a squint-eved man will | throw them off balance. i drug | gins, | sheet, (8%. Louis Chronicle, Advice is cheap- dreadfully cheap | But we must trust to our instincts of | humanity and tell our suffering friends i se Bt. Jacobs Oil, and surp rise their | rheumatism and themselves also at the iresult. J. D. L. Harvey, Esq., of | Chicago, says: I would be recreant to | IY du ¥ lo the cled, did I not t t raise my voice iu its praise, , 3.999, | women are slowly bor being killed, by ex. sd of sine ye, that no . Who can easily Bitters, made of Mand Dandelion, ele > re, simp nless that the cakost invalid or soallest mw. Will you be saved by lumn, se afl) , 1790, the tubes was daily HOWH what it 18 10 wl saved by H rake s P There are eighteen Methodist churches in Cincinnati, with a member. ship of about 4,000, Warner's Safe Kidney and Newt Cure. Barrels were first made in the cooper age. Pere Con livers, on the Co.,, New York. sweet, Dat et ’ it to all ers. Ph in h superior to any of the other Veaerine — When t ¢ blood becomes lifeless and stagnant, either from change of weather or want of exere regular diet, or | from any other cause, the rive will renew { the blood, carry off the pt mors, cleanse | the stomach, reg and impart a { tone of vigor to the whole O11. made from selected , by Caswrry, Hazard & absolutely pure and iaken it prefer ave decided it oils in market, Laven Leash i of climate, ine, ix Yi triad ulate the bow is, body fes and Mosquitoes 150. box ** Reef on Rats’ keeps » house free from flies, bod bugs, roaches, vy mice, ote. 25 Cents Will Buy { a Treatise npon the Horse and his Diseases Book of 100 pages, Valuable to every owner of he Post ne stamps taken, Sent post | paid by New York Newspaper Union, 150 Worth Street, New York, CARBOLINE, 8 natural hair restorer and dross. Hing, as now improved and ted, is . { nounced by competent anthoritios t » be the Be 1 article ever invented to restore the vitality of youth to diseased and faded hair, Try it IRON, peri : TH GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR NATISH, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO BACKACHE, i G-OTUT, SORENESS Or THE CHEST, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS AXD FROSTED FEET AND EARS BURNS AND BCAI.DS, I} General Bodily ain, TOOTH, EAR AXD HEADACHE, AND ALL OTHER PAINS AND ACHES. No Preparation on earth equals 81. JA00ns O11 as a SAFE, | SURE, SIMPLE and cuear External Remedy. A trial entails | bat the comparatively trifling outiay of 50CeNTs, and every | ene suffering with pain can have chioap aud positive profef {ta olnims. {rg ECTIONS IN ELEVEN LANGUAGES, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE, A. VOGELER & CO. Baltimore, Md., U, 8. & Inmotivity. tnaotiviig ol 1 the 6 aye serious) all proxi hon inactive excitants of but they Hostottor's The diuretic proportion of the Bitters also serve another good rpose. It is by the efficient vital current, removing from it those Impurities which beget rheumatism, dropsy and othe It endows those organs with vigor, snd prevents them from lapsing into & siete of disease, The Agricultural department esti- mates the annual yield of wine in the United Btates at 23 458,827 gallons, devoted to rape culture is 151,683, ow to Get wick. Expose your if day and night; eat too much advertised, and then you will want to know How to Get Well, Which is answered in three words—Take Hop Bee other eclumn, Mr. Barnum, the showman, doesn't HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE Cuts, Brojses, Sores, Ulcers, Tetter, Chilblsins, Hiheam Chapped Hands, Get HEREY'S CARBOLIC BALVE, ss all DR. GREEN'S OXYGENATED BITTERS neve, Liver, Skin, ele DENTON'S BALSAM cures Coughs, Colds, Bheu- Can be used exieor Bally a8 a jdaster Use HED HORSE POWDER for Horses and Cattle WARRANTED FOR 34 YEARS AND NEVER FAILED Basins, Diarra, Drrsenter bea Mirkness, taken internally, and GU AKAN serioctiy He Fr and xi barmbess: alse externally, Unite, Bruises, fhe uma 5, Ud Boras, Paine in in the lise Back & resuedy is De TOBIAN sent Vista INIMENE §# No one ones trying it will ever be without it 25 Cents will Buy a Treatise upon the bores, Postage stamps taken Bent postpaid by NEW YORE NEWSPAPER UNION, 156 Worth Btreet, New York, THEM ARKETS, NEW YORE, Med, Nat live wi, 4 jood to Prime Veals, | SM; oy 10 fancy fancy Drassed, Fx. Blate Western No 2 No, 1 Hiate SrA. Pworowed Bate, ngradedWesteraMized Routhern White Bate Mixed Western, Medium to Prime Tim v. Nao, 1 Sale Mess, good ” wi Ela a CH xl to Fld as White, = oh a OL ww a we a = 2 Wl .d a - On wy 15850 new, for export, 18 ST Petroleum é Re fined ,... Mate ( Ream td Ds Butler iry.... 3 In 1 10 Sate rr Peon. 2° on Early Rose, State, ‘bbl 150 BUFFALO, Ext... Western - re , 600 z2ER rood to Choloe Yorkers, | ay ound, No in 675 o, 1. Hard Duluth, i 4 A wl Oe SN Eyes a Twor wed State. 90 BONTX x Extra plate sand family, AYE, uur snais City Dressed .......... Extra Prime per bb 5 Spring Whe at on RE Mixed and Yellow, . 6s Extra White 53 Mal © vo Vashed ( omb & PDeiaine p42 Unwashed 4 pa WATHRDOWS (MASK, } CATTLE MaonEeY, atti Live weight. . .... 1 ®& 4 @& hE 5 © 18 00 @16 ¢ i 2048 pe o- L @1s h 00’ “ 2 9 @ @ Shanes “hen NG PHILADELPHIA. .. Family, good 6 5 Tue Caray Bisoo Puminer WiLL CURE Ia, Serofnlous Humor, Cancer, sor, Ervsipelas, Canker, San Rheum, Pimples, of Humor in the Face, Coughs and Colds, Ulcers, Broschitis, Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, Rboumatism, Pains in the Side, Cone stipation, Costivenoss, Piles, Dizgle poss, Headache, Nervousness, Pains in the Back, Faininess in the Stomach, Kidney Complaints, Female Weakness and Gen» eral Debility. This preparation is scientifically and chemically combined, and so strongly concentrated from be ris and barks, that its good effects are reall mimwediately after commencing to take it. There is isease of the human system for which the Voce. r *¥ canpot be used with PERFECT SAFETY, 88 it does steontain any metallic compound. Foremdicating i o system of all impurities of the blood it has no equal. 11 has never tailed to effect a cure, giving tone d strength to the system debiiftated by disease, Its wonde ih il effects upon the complaints named are rising to all Hinny have been cured by the W KGETIXE hat have tried many other remedies, can well be called The Great Blood Purifier. ——— DR. W. ROSS WRITES. Rheumatism, Weakness. H I Srevexs, Bosto I Lave been practicing madicine for 3» as a remedy for Serofu wi, Rhieumatiem, Weakness, and all biood, 1 have never found its qual. 1 Ba Vegotine for seven yoars, and have ne bottle returned those in poed of au hiood gt Di ROSS, September 18, 1898, Vegetine. PREPARED BY H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists. WATCEES GUNS Rovoivers. Catalogue free. Addie, Crest West. Gun Works, Mitsbureh, Pa Ch day ath Samp! $5to $20 per day at home, 3 pa worth & free, $72 RIE at rifier, , Droggist, Wilton, Towa. Address Stixsox & Co. Portlan Outiit free. Adds’ Ta 7% & Co. Sarusta, Hats, healthy action of {hoe bowels, RTE Y mailed to eny + sale by all dru DROWN Cx ®@® plete cure, stamps, Fo wisi at FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGINTS, . Be 1 sick but if you § use Lem at once. And Wholesale Depat, js FULTON ST, BROOKLYN. hd np MOST MARVELOT SRA Wiiximla® Hak They cure EV Euy YORM OF DIREASS to mas. without medicine, changes of tion 0.00 “PRONE, oor | rid iT SIOHED } ED HEALTH. heeks und postafios ardent witsow 48s poli BRR, to WILSON, Send for cidow iam. pris st and other memorands i i - NT . Vey Gee Sie staf the thousands of © WILSONIA™ patients the {oni boy ni PRESENTATIVE REFERENC Hon, Horatio Bejour, | Achaia a Cooper. Hon, a ow Weed, ~ de dt 3 dt risen, Genera! w x Y City; 4. B, oT an Ph a Dy PaliwestBer. Ry any B. Stimson (merchant), - 5 Sk Hall, 184 Clinton AN Clark, ME 40th 8 ; re urer), Brooklyn: Mr. Rot sas off St. B'kiva, en Sl ‘War. The great Library of Universal K now completed, large Tape ¥ topics in every department of Baan eo der oont. Inter than Chass RN ™ Pos cone ain. 10 pero rer larger than Johnson's, at of pe rea’ ot tet ost, Fifteen large De lave Vi Pages, complete iy Pes th binding, $181 ®ia, t in full Hheary sh a terms to at . $10,000 REWARD Br ad A a a ARunt Send hak) i the Jomx B, Avvex, Manager, 3 OONTRASTED EDITIONS, the 01d and New Versions, tn % best and ¢ iy of the Revised New Testament. MI walt lous py you oy eoptains 3 wood. TH 4 This i the only Ra iNT Fan SED. ney 1 be Si Add Ay TONAL PUB Go Con Invest Your Earni d of the Denver Land and Ime In the sto C pp Almolu De HA 1 to aky + & of i ur | of on reoelst of wo gi" £ 3 gif £ A H Estes, Teearwiers M13 GEORGE E. LEMON, Att'y at Law, VW ASHINGIOK, 3 nls AEE CE To. JAKE ro, en 3 honest way, and Without Traveling o or ES iS regu No bn SePriY ri Lock box ——— son — olumbus a on, 1 HEAPEST_T)ORKS I THE TOAD wry Log) Berm oth oul PRS ny iors J) nha MANHATTAN BOOK 00. 10 W. 14th 80. X.Y. P.O. Box sta. Our WELL AUGER Bat Chua oldest and largest firm in Americas, Adds 0 nited Mis Cy Couspaa aoe. Ti 1. Te bane bound. for YONG Li poke you i learn etl in four months, and be certain of a situation, address Valentine Bros, Janesville, Wis, LL EN'S rain Foodeoures Nervous Debility & Weakness of Generative Organs, K1-alld 1 forCirculsr. Allen a pHa -X5 A GENTS WANT {X Selling Pictorial Bool 31 per cf, a week res, r Day to Ag'ts, os roe. New business, Rapids, Mich. A sents wanted. V, aluable & saleable ey Book, 43 0 Hill's Manual.” W. Rhepara, 338 8 Bway, N. LX. with fail directions for a com. nine threo-cent The most Valuable Colds, Bore Ty