THE TURCO OF THE COMMUNE, —— A War Sketeh, Transinted from the Froneh of Alphoose Daudet, He was a little drammer belonging to | fhe native sharpshooters. His name | was Radour. He came from the tribe | of Djendel, and was one of that handful of Turcos who had thrown themselves | into Paris in the train of the army of Vinoy. He had gouve through the en- fire campaign from Wissembourg to Champigny, darting over the fields of | battle like a storm bird, with his iron | drumsticks and his de rbonka (Arab | dram), so quickly, so restlessly that the alls could not hit him. But when winter came on, this little piceo of African bronze, reddened in the fire of canister shot, was unable to bear the nights of guard duty and motionless. | ness in the snow; 80, one January morn. ing, they found him on the bank of the Marne, twisted hy the cold, and with his feet frozen. He remained a long while in the hospital. It was there 1 gaw him for the first time, Sad and patient like a sick hound, the Turco looked around him with at, gentle eves, When addressed, smiled and showed his teeth. This was all he conld do, for our language was unknown to him and he with difii enlty spoke the Sabir, that Algerian dialect composed of Provencal Italian and Arabic, made up of variegated | words gathered like shells all along the SOAS, To amuse himself Kadour had only bis derbonka From time to time, when he grow too impatient, it was brought By his bed and he was per mitted to play on it, but not too loudly, becanse of the other sick men, T hen his poor dark face, so dull, so faded looking amid the yellow daylight and the somber winter landscape visible without, grew animated, grimaced and followed all the phases of the music i Now he sounded the charge and the {flash of his white teeth gave place to wild langhter; now his e yes moistened at some Mussnlman strain; his nostrils dilated, and amid the nanseovs odor of the hospital, the vials and the com. he again saw the groves of Bliaah loaded with oranges and the young Moorish girls coming from the bath enveloped in white and perfumed with vervain., Two months passed thus. Many things had happened in Paris during those two months, but Kadour sus pected nothing. He heard the retuni army, weary and disarmed, pass be neath his windows; later he heard the cannon dragged about, rolied from morning until evening; then the toesin, the cannonade. He anderstood noth- ing of all this, except that the war was yet in progress and that he could now join the fray, since his limbs were cured. He departed, his dram on his back, in quest of his company. He did search long. Some communis who were passing took him to the place. After much guestioning, as he could draw nothing from him bat ornintelli- gible phrases, the general in command gave him ten francs and an omnibus horse and attached him to his staff There was a little of evervthing in those stafls of the commune, red ccats, Polish cloaks, Hungarian jackets, ma- rines' Blomses, gold, velvet, spang and lace. With his bine vest, broidered with vellow, his turbs an his derbe nnka, the Tuoreo complet tad masquerade. Filled with joy at finding himself in such fine company, intoxi- cated by the sv anlig the cannonade, the noize of the stree the con n of weapons and uniforms, persuaded, in sddition, that 1t was the war against Prussia which was continuing “with he kpew not what accession of life and freedom, th i | BO 5 not 8 nt m 431 gles em- and snc ie hd ad by frig is Lass wy is unconscious deserter joined innocently in the great Parisian riot and was a cel lebrity of the nioment Evervwhere upon his passage the com munists received him with acelamations and feted Ti ommune Was so proud to possess him that him, billed him, wore him ade. Tw times a da sent ham fo the Guerre, tha Guoen the Hotel de Villa. It had been so ¢ teusively said that the com marines were counterfeit marines, artillerisis counterfeit ertillerist 8. least this msn was, without di genuine Ture To be convinced one had o ly to glance at that awake face of a voung spe and al suvage of that little agitating i the huge hose as in whirls of the tasia. Something. howey complete Kado ur's wished to fzit, to talk. Unformnately, mune as ncder the seidom went not engaged in flying trips par- ades, the poor Turco passed his time in the Plac ¢ Vendome or in the conrt- yards of the ministry of war, among those dicordered eam) ps full o casks of brandy, always on tap, hogs- heads of bacon with the hea is | knocked out, of feasts in the open air at whieh was again felt all the hunger of the siege. Too good a Mussulman to par- ticipate in these orgies, Kadour kept away from them, sober and tranqml, made his abliutiops in a corner and supped on a handful of coarse meal; then, after alittleair on his derbonka, he rolled himsal? in his bournous and fell asleep upon a step by the light of the bivounaes. One morning in the month of May the Tureo was awakened by a te Feibil 8 fasillade. The ministry was in comm tion, everybody was running, fleei Mec hanical iy he did like the rest — leaped npon his horse and followed the staff. The streets were full of wild bu- gle blasts and battalions fleeing helter- skelter. People were tearing up the pavements and erecting barricades, Ev- idently someth extraordinary was going on. The nearer one approached the guai the more distinet became the fusiliade, the g greater the tumult, Upon the Pont de le’ Concorde Kadour lost the staff. A little further on his horse was taken from him; it was for a kepi, with eight gold sods, in a great hurry te see what was passing at the Hotel de Yille. * Io a state of I the Tareo be- gan to ran in the direction of the con- flict. As he ran he loaded his chasse- pot and said, between his teeth : ¢ Macach bono, Brissien!” as in his view it was the Prussians who had jnst entered the city. Already the balls whistled about the obelisk and among the foliage of the Tuileries. At the barricade of the Rue de Rivolt the avengers of Flourens hailed him: * Ho! Turco! Turco!” But twelve of them were left, and Kadour alone was worth an entire army. Standing upon the barricade, proud and gaudy as a flag, he fought with leaps and cries beneath a storm of can- ister shot. At one moment tla cur tain of smoke which rose fromthestreet parted a little between two cannonades him 18 © AR ad hi : &4 enty u Annis yO 1bt, lof 1 Foy 1 the he Ay tbus fan- QvE raeuts ise af non E41 omn Arab al Tha + 20 : raw fo anted to hay piness. He mike he powder under the empire, the into the eh was 4 . Sislis 2 When fi y or ng. inz i Details of the Terrible Land Slip In Switwers | lana. A correspondent sends to a New York | paper the following g Eaphie account of the destruction of Elms, Switzerland, through a land slip: The end came on the evening of Sun- | day, the 11th in the ‘Saints | Calendar,” current gome parts of A MOUNTAIN'S FALL, | i i ! ns, in of Switzerland, marked * The day of Felix, { saint of luck and happiness,” During | | the early part of that ny the people of | | Elms went about the in the usnal way and without any antioi- | pation of the terrible calamity which was 80 near at hand was well attended, hearty dinners were eaten, and aftorw and, as was tho custom, most of the people, old and young, walked through the meadows the monntain side. at 0 o'elock the evening, while many of them were still out was heard erving, look hose who fol are still alive s seemed to them “Look at the 'la the direction hat for a moment 1t as if every peak above the slate quarry was in motion ; the there came a ru like far off thundey An in a moment they wore bli nded by econld see ag slice of earth down the T houses and ot Men and wot straggling amor from all relatives Platt ttenberg !" at theo owed ay NOISY, GL] and Un \ > sides, friends, neg hbet rs hurried sath death. gaged the again, hand, slopes were seen to sink, A great the grassy cloud of dust valley; hurled throu gowen NE wing thing bafore it. orash, a sound ts, and all and smoke cles in a ¢londl far as the blooming from moraine, dirtan he thou » Wore of madly-ro 1 fel was stil, red away, tl ases, with dozen were bur tO | bro ad cas dred a: ware sw At las rrmen - lot th Hn ieces b It was useless } fall in th ny who fell in that Far out se, with ng h > 1 goverad ne VOears au agen Every io a 1 in the pa 3 Wera but alive. overtake: was ever Durie Fifteen lamps of fles] I, MASSER O of form, were taken in a grav man for can feas Hawed my Lowe Wid i Is ide, ous old man ar their only ¢ the mot down tc were swaliow el 4 id¢ an dl si. 3} DHAIO8S WW, chat i oon ¥ié Q ers Wao fathers, n saved Yow 1 anv 1ih QOWDH ana covered iil great mass of the 1.500 feet wid at 1808 above e village. Ylattenbe t 2 {) least fect hig h 1 according to th engineers, fre sixty to 100 feet deev, fell over npon the village, its farms, gardens and meadows. Tons were dashe d é Cross the and now rest ¢ 0 and high upon t The pressure Te houses were lift p from their founda tion: carried a hist ance of 1,000 fest. A barn built of heavy logs, and filled with hay, was carried entirely across the valle YY and overturned 200 feet high on the mo au O pposi! @ the Plattenberg. An iron bri dge which crossed the Sernf was torn carried scores of feet away from its abutments, and now rests on end, more than half buried in 1d and loose stone. The whole valley, as far as it be seen from the village inn, whic is still standing, very closely resemb les the bed of a glacier which bas receded. As I havealready sta ed, the roasses of stone and earth whicl have fallen sre eve ry- where piled up to a height of very many feet. At least 500 acres are covere d n this way. The river Sernf has made for itself a channel through the debris, and has flooded end ruined much of the land below, land which not directly harmed stone. So in one whole valley has all hope of repair. The loss in prop- erty will reach not less than 2,000,000f. : at the lowest estimate 123 people have Jost their lives. The State engineers, fearing further land-slides, have for- bidden those who have escaped to re- turn to the houses which are standing, and in consequence more than 800 men, women and chil .ren who, but a few days, were prosperous and well-to-do, are now almost without a roof to cover them. t} 1 o> Wie valley, an & yrTY pA vidi aah juieti : hillaicds ie nDiisde, at valley, $100 feet alr- a ti 80D of up 0 » i Se + ¥ sts un Can h all i i r Ly new was by the avalanche of way or another the injured beycnd by #0 ta i——— What is Patent Flour ? Patent flour is now coming into gen- eral use, and many of our re aders may be interested in reading the follc wing or ng made, tuken from the Prairie Farmer ; Until recently the best flour was made from winter wheat; or, racher, the flour made from winter wheat sold for the most money because it was white. But it consisted for the most part of the starch of the grain, while the most of the gluten (the most nutritious part of the grain) went into the middlings. In grinding spring wheat so much Then everything was confused again. - He thought he had been mistaken, and aig his powder talk in its loudest Euddenly the barricade grew silent. | The last artillerist had just fled, after | firing his final shot. The Tareo did not #tir, In ambush, ready to leap, he firmly fixed his bayonet and awaited | the pointed helmets. The line arrived. Ais the hollow tramp of the charge | the cflicers called out: “Surrender!” fied, then he sprang forward, his gun in the air. “ Bono, bono Francese I” cried he. Vaguely, in his wild way, he thought | this was the army of deliverance, of | ians had expested for so long. Hence | how happy he was, how he laughed at | them, showing all his white teeth. In | an instant the barricade was stormed, | Cadour was surrounded and seized. “Show your gun.” His gus was still warm. *‘ Show your hands.” His hands were black with powder. | The Tarco showed them proudly, still | laughing. Then he was pushed against | & wall and ram went a bayonet. He died prithout understanding why thoy killed | too dark to suit the taste of the con- samere. Bat the middlings, which sold at a low price, has become the most | desirable part of the grain, Miadling puritiers—by which the bran is separated from the middlings — have made a revolution in the business of milling. By the new process the wheat is ground as before, exce pt that the ¢ florts of the miller are directed to obtain the | most middlings possible, and these are | placed upon large horizontal sieves which are constantly agitated, while, at the same time, by ingenious devices, a | draft of air is rushed up throngh the | sieves which carries off the bran. The purified middlings are then re- ground, and the product js flour, containing the glutenous, or most | nutritious portion of the grain. consin and Dakota bring the highest | | price in the market, whereas only a few | | years ago they eommanded the’ lowest | | price. newspeper writers if given a text could | often write a better sermon than some | ministers. It would be bad for the newspaper business if they couldn’t,— Philadelphia Bulletin, NEWS OF THE WEJK. Eastern and | Middle States. Tue New York Damooratio Btate convention, held at Albany, was presided over by Freastua Brooks, There were three contesting delega tions from New York city, County Ix the the third Irving Hall, One reprose nting pecond Tamraany Hall OOraay, and The comumitie: wm represonting the County Demooracy, : Halls delepatic to the exclusion of Tammany and Levin I'he foll stata iH owing ticket was chosen: , William Parcell; for co Lapham; for attorney | an Maxwell: for State engi judge of the I'he platior pla were defrat de by a false oo tary of Uieargo : nentar: for treasurar, . Thomas Evershed court of pe of 187d tion; n d it 8 At a fire in a Phila sixty-two WAS al WO 4 } Tt He was assist Mrs, Borla ) two-year-old grand head from lis ntly insane, From Washington. Howing nominatior 1 ent to the B to: Wil be commissions : ke, of Rhode Island, t sommissioner of pensions; fia . B. Walker, deputy commissioner of !, McFarland, of Kansas, « neral, land office; Indian stas Brosius, of Punnsylvanis, t , Great Nemaha Ag Nebraska; Addi rown, of York, to be United States ict judge, Bouthern district of New York; ree M. Duskin, of Alabama, to be attorney of United States, Southern district of Alabama by Prosjde im H. toyy Charles Illinois, to be inspe o be Indian (eney, New Goon minstions he laine, of Maine, tl f state; Mark 8B. Brew -general of the Unite of Ps 1rd assistant seer nder Jourdan, nnsyivania, conan 3 Edmund Johnson y the United States at i of New ur H, nited States a Santander : Win B ird, of Alabama, of the nited States at Laguayra ; Robert Holley Yermont, of the United States H wrbadoes ; James W, Siler, of Indians, o Town maul of the Ur Harico. sul ¥. consul B of the United Btates at Cap f Missouri, of at Port Stanley. It is propos~d a Garfield Memorial wpital in Washington by pia in ror the world, TSU : Fliouey 8. Lasar, « ted States to erect subscriptions from At a meeting of the i mittee, General Sherman in the chair, an appeal to the: contributions was submitted by Mr, wlopted, Cc licited, and Teme a Gilfi who has « fund. untry for Blaine and unanimously miributions small and great be 1 troasnrer of the United Stas are may remitted to th ian, nsented to act as troasarer of the her dav sexator Manone was arrested the of at the of who feared that the Benator way proceed to Richmond for the purpose of fighting a duel with General Jubal A. Early, Senator Mahone in Washington instance a citizen named Strong, about to released on his personal bond, At a mesting of the bar of the of the United States, held in the court room at the capitol, Senator _— Davis presided, the HI resolutions of respect to memory of the ta Justice Clifford were passed. Brief culo gies were also pronounced by Montgomery | Blair and others, i | Foreign News. | Tag British steamer Corsica, from London | for Bombay, has foundered off Cape Roca. Part of the erew wore drowned, A commission of experts appointed by the Hungarian government has decided in favor of maintaining the prohibition against the im- { portation of American pork, Tug Irish land league has ordered the tenants throughout the country to put a stop to hunt- ing, and many well-known landlords, who have spent enormous sums in supporting packs of hounds and hunting stables, are broaking up ing countries in England, Mu. Panxgny, chief of the Irish land league { and member of the British parliament, was ar the English authorities in Dublin was made en two warranta signed by My chief chargos him with netting | rested by order ol | his bedroom at & hotel in The arrest Fors rant | of | thie roland Ono ware the rent justly due, i ter, saoretary for intimidation and fonants from paying ating tenants nd net, fair rent, other with intin the benefit of the la by applying to the i Mi Intense Ireland 1 had i Parnel ham jatl 0x parts of Mi Arron ie i ile § Horie aitement when Parad bao a prepared for an } i ‘ nent will break ithority of the statu : so tho ng Bead Or + Chadd an ad Are Now race fur tad with he Land a rod lean wham and tents aoainst fachester, Glasgow hom aniendl 1 i } and the membe severe Droughts. droughts as far back as the landing of the Pilgrims. How many thousand times are observations made like following : “Such a eold “Such a hot season!” dry weather!” or “Buch “Such high winds or ete. All those who think the dry spell we have had this year is the longest ever known, will do well to read “Buch In the summer of 1621, 24 days in In the summer of 1630, 41 days In the summer of 16567, 70 days In the summer of 1662, 80 days i succession without rain. In the summer of 1674, succession without rain. In the summer of 1680, succession without rain. In the summer of 1604, 45 days 81 days 62 days In the summer of 17005, days succession withont rain. In the summer of 172 succession without rain, In the summer of 1728, snecession without rain. In the sammer of 1730 succession without ran. In the summer of 1741, succession without rain. In the summer of 1749, succession without rain. In the snmmer of 17565, {, 61 days 61 days 92 days | 72 days 108 days 42 days In the summer of 1762, succession without rain. In the summer of 1783, succession without rain, In the summer of 1791, succession without rain. In the summer of 1802, succession without rain, In the summer of 1812, succession without rain, In the summer of 185¢ succession without rain, In the summer of 1871, succession without rain, In the summer of 1875, succession without rain. In the summer of 1876, succession without rain. It will be seen that the longest | drought that ever occurred in America | was in the summer of 1762. No rain | fell from the first of May to the first of | September, making 123 days without | rain, Many of the inhabitants sent to England for hay and grain, 123 days 80 days 82 days 23 days 28 days , 24 days 2 days 26 days oN > rd v J Tt = UNITED STATES SENATE, Extra Sosston, Upon motion of Mr, Edmunds Mess, Aldrich, of Rhode Island, and Miller and Lap bam, of Now York, were sworn in, Mp Me | Pherson presented 8 petition from eighteen members of the last New York legislature against swearing in Messrs. Miller and Lap ham, setting forth smong other things thal they wore not elected by a majority of the leg inlature ; that Mr, Miller had, while a Cong minh, against the i #, urged a continuance i of the duty on tp, of which ho was turer, mint Win n tions of il Hanya and pe He BUHOER wibery in the election The petition was la i the table Mr. Kellogg offered a resolution calling « socrotary of state for all papers on file in pent relating 0 the sie y Rebello, aa Italian, in the city of New June, 1881, by one James Mooney all papers relating to the subsequent ion of sald Vincenzo Rebado, As My ule re juest the resolution was laid over A message was received from the Presi dent transi fiber of nominal Bl80 & MeasAg« iting a communication from the secretary of state gly the text in both the Eagliah and French languages, of th proceedings of the Intern nal Maul iH : 1a Was! th pith 0 thie his departs nre of one ¥ inven thi Rn Bis in oh, win ary § Galtean Arraigued, pal phive After iresmod the nod w ashington, read ain the aid of vot boon BLOCH how ov application of der to allow the examine the statutes sd 1 which ie h ad aby ment was boing out of court brought in, and was pt it int and driven back to the the marshal and his assed he following erence { wn wl to him. ii the same Ho was har ried way he had been » & hack in wa the custody read jail in oan's ¢ court el awkwardly raised hi his hat, It ti effect was producs stands on end and is cu osely in irdanes leathly i Guid WHS f which yoars to rid themselves, were wild and rolling, and he looks a nervous, terrified sort of way, Be seat, and before the handeuf he tarned himself fally upon mass whie m cowardly, shringingly a shudder, as though to minke sure that gor with a “ball-dog” was not also Satisfying himself apparently that crowd was orderly, and seeing the officers massed about him, he became more calm and to judge. His ironed arms were unbound and he took his seat, a miserable ab ot, seedy-looking wretch, the Presi Bo murderer, Death in a Barning Mill, I'he fire in Landenberger’s mill, in Philadel , proved more disastrous in the loss of life ited, The fire started in the finishing-room on the second floor, and spread upward through the building with amaz rapidity. About forty-five hands, twelve girls, were at work on this floor, in the spinning nts on tho upper floors, [he wooden stairways at either end of the build The bridge connecting the building with another mill was shut off from ap- proach by fireproof doors, and in the absence of any firc-eseape & panic instantly ensued the men and women confined within the They rushed to the windows, crying to the crowd below to save thom, was proposed by the crowd to form squares the street and esteh the men and girls a4 but before anything could be young woman le aped from the fifth Sho was instantly killed, After this the imprisoned people seemed to and though the crowd out. side sought to encourage them by shouting that help would speedily be there, they began jumping from the windows like sheep. A man flung himself headlong to the street, Others followed, until in a fow moments eleven per- all unconscious, with fractured skulls and broken limba, were being carried to the 1 about in fore taking leased, looked the dense almost with aven at his back. i tho phia ing were in a after body was Iaid until vehicles were pro- cured to convey them to the hospitals, When the firemen were able to enter the | building they found, on the third floor, the bodies of two girls burned almost to a cris and a man badly scorched and dead; but before | they could search further the fourth floor, with | ite heavy machinery, came crashing throug! y, | and they barely escaped with their lives, Ten operatives went down in the blazing ruins, | The number’ of deaths will probably exceed | b twenty, | Yorktown Monument. of the Yorktown Monu- ment, A Deseription atain : First, an Where the Horses Went, Farmers in the neighborhood of De Witt and Brunswick, Mo., recently { Tt was known, of course, that the ani. | mals wore being stolen; but where the | thieves took them the vietims had no | idea. Roads were guarded all night, | horses continued to disappear. A fow days ago a hunter penetrated the depth | of a forest of willows that grow at the | mouth of the Grand river, The forest | covers an island of some 5,000 sores, | and so thickly interwoven are the limbs | of the trees that it is extremely difficult | to enter. The sportsman hoard the | neigh of a horse far in among the wil. | Jows, It ocourred to him that the Nigh | had some connection with the m | of the missing animals. A half. Shey | hard work brought him to the heart of | the forest, and there he saw forty or | more horses quietly feeding in a barbed | wire inclosure, The thieves had a se- | eret path to the pound, They had been | removing the horses at pl easure during | night by means of a Mississippi flat | boat, On the evening of the discovery | they were nabbed. Or Daily Press and Knle kerbocker, | Abandoned, We perceive by one of our Massachn | pelts oxi shanges that Dr, Lorenzo Waite, of Westfield, an eminent physician of larkahive county, strongly indorses Bt. Jacobs Oil. W ith it he enred a case of Beistion that resisted all regular | (Afbany (N.Y) ro Homach, kw & voluntary martyr fo une life, and ne a un! apoakablo pains and penalties. No malady is more diflenlt to cope with, none in its chronic form so obstinately rouinta madiostion. Bu Buy tackled a its dnceplan a atau Blomach Bitters, dyspe carrying with it the Faron synpios Aynploma which attend it, and which in changes inspire more a gins ing their cause than those of any other disease, hoartburn, water brash, Wind on the sloth, z kei mipitations, pain after sating, 8 Hon at the oil of the ‘stomach between mala; these and many other harassing indlola of the complaint make a speedy exit when Lg stomachic is persistently It im- proves the appetite, utrengthons the nerves, countersots tho effects of fatigue and expo. pa sure, and is » reliable antidote to the poison of malaria, al spapers have become teachers. orm and give direction to the pul iv mind on all public questions, the Pablio view them as the work of men who stand above mediocrity in educs- tion, genersl soquirements and natural ability ; snd they should onsequently be edited with ad ity, securacy and ability Boi their high office, — Peoria Transcript, Lady Beautifiers, Ladies, you cannot make fair skin, rosy chorks and sparkling eyes with all the cosmet~ ion of France, or besutifiers of the world, while in poor health, and nothing will give you such soon] health, strength and beanty as Biv fore, A trial is certain proof, another ssional treatment, and that had in act been abandoned as incurable, A A New York Sun correspondent, in a letter fused Ruby C amp, in Elk mova. tains, Col, says: * Probably in no mining region in the world have the | | pioneers gone through so many priva- tions as here, It was early in 1579 when | | the rugh began for the Gunnison coun. { try, | feet in height, of the Elk Mountain Pilot, informed me | that his press and types wereb lockaded miles away in the mountains. The press was taken apart, packed piece by piece bae ks, de rs and carried papers | of type in their pockets, until there was | material enough in Ruby to print a neat | paper nearly as large as the Sun, The | on me n's the first six numbers aggre. " $50, and gated #150, 3 T3555 {La Payette (Ind Our city druggists report an immense | sale of Bt, | mand is based npon the popularity of its success. Wherever it has been used, t has proved its value a thousand fold, Sunday Timea. } ¢ Hi . Chri #- 5, ont io Grasses, Naval apoake, var, ] i i ebruary 6, 1778 | States of Amerion ng of France, of ond Alliance y mainiain nectively Boy ndependonos, Of the said in mail roves Meroe fonal Articles of Peace, « 1873. of Peace, ors of te i States of Amerioa orge 111, King of Great 0 and Irel and, His Britannic United States, viz How Raiminiiir, Massachusetts Bay, Rhode Island, and Providence Pl Connecticut, Ne w Y¢ Pennsyivania, Dh laware, North Carolina, South ( To | Free and Sovereign aad Independent Slates antation, rk, Now Jersoy, Marviand, Virginia, Molina and Georgia, en——— Plenty of Game, Common people, who have not re- ceived the proper amount of edneational | nutriment, are apt to be careless in the use of their mother tongue. Bome folks ask a question in such a way that you really don't know what they mean, while the trae scholar BAYS exactly what | he means and means exactly what he | says, For example: A gentleman with | a gun over his shoulder, while wander. ing through the * rheubarbs ” of a far Western hamlet, met an unfledged Mil- ton, and said: ‘Sonny, is there any | game in these parts?” He did not ex- | plain that he meant elephants or tigers | or grizzly bears, and so depended upon the native genius of the youth to answer his question correctly, The | boy, who had spent most of his time in a miner's camp, and had made himself | acquainted with the pastimes of that | simple-minded and bucolic folk, replied | at once: ‘‘Yes, sir, there's plenty. n The hunter took his double-barreled | weapon from his shoulder and put a new | cap on, and in a very enthusiastic way | asked again: ‘‘ Well, what kind of | The rustic sonny re- | plied: ¢ Well, siz, there's considerable | ' euchre,’ but then it's mostly ‘seven | in these parts.” We can, without hesitation, say that Dr, Bulls Cough Syrup has given the best satisfaction, | Wo bave sold an immenso amonnt of it during | iho past winter, WALLACE, HILTON & CO, uggists, Lock Haven, Pa, | { { { i { those who have tried it. i ——— hs... Only what we have wrought into our { characters during life can we take away | | with us, We Believe ud use H 4 £100 fast Bitters fre ely | as and misery Baw I Joss 83 0 BI g weil at a trifling y sallotry il 0, & The annual raisin production of Cal- PRIA, nervons $Y I lHeved by Beer Tox ng is entire I-making, Jood nervous proastration particularly Caswell, Lime ne HArY complaints, rs, New York i of shy whist we g Ualsam, E10 hong who r anny throst or lung ony afforded, we have art ae, 24 1 hie fatal ¢ LE oe, Lung —— gy a proprietary we shall take “ Rough on Hats” gists for il, bugs, flies, vermin, insects, 15a new hair grow use oontiy H roslly produce Dew 25 ¢ Cents Will Buy the Horse and his Diseases ) pages Valual ie 10 every owner Try Posts tamps taken, bent post y New York Nex WED per Union, 150 Worth Ne w 3 i aoket Beale, 250 ] Howard Mfg Co, N. X is acknowl. LysiCIRDs and rer and cleanser and thousands BrEAx recian? URANDS and carios to bi aise who boalth, RESCH ED ¥ ROM DEATH. nti J. Coughlin Somerville, Mass, say In of 18 £ I was tak 3 OYA NS 1 was ng of the Jung Jost ney appetite and y bed. In I87Y 1wes ad The doctors sald § had & hole H-dolla Atl one time a re gave up hope, ere « g fifined tom ia was dead Hh , when, 10 my surprise, ie this hoping every iH take Dn Wal ol that o« 5 positivel iy say ! the other lungs wi hau al medy icknons ines I have WARRANTED FOR 34 YEARS AND NEVER FAILED Diarrhoea, Dyseatery and ternal alo © xo roally, Cats m, Old Sores, Pains in the a remedy 8 Da Tob TAS will ever be without it sin Diseases + Book of 100 pages. Valuable wner of horses, Postage stamps taken amid by Ni w YOR REI AVER UNION, rib Street. Now Y¢ every « 150 WW A GRAND STEEPLE CHASE. | ient excitement these meetings on sc with a grand Of race com r race, with ger which the sport flen receive Cit practi- Al least » slate affairs until owners of fine stock began 10 freely wong Orn, the Great German and This invaln-. wn into efficacy | dom animals, especially tit would be difficult indeed men unacquainted with | The Philadelphia | it suffi bines g BO EI menal | recent issue save important developements Jacons Ory, is the discovery | —— which are benefic ial mal human h 8, of late, been in active des mand among livery men and others for use on horses suffi from gpraing or abra- gions. The most prominent insta nee known ina Of ie most concerning that it Jn = to the am t ag weil as to th Fiyiir ing { David Walton, a well I-kr nown Friend, who Mr. Walton valuable lu McClure, th shred h states that he belonging {io resident of Weeks ago ined his was RO lenjamin | North Twell [iLO 1 A few bindly ST. JAC on the {nan one ons O11 and found within k a8 Fever, ise SYRUP a8 we Ha column, | A French scientist claims that he has | succeeded in reversing the result ob. | tained by Professor Bell in producin | light from sound. He has deseri an experiment to the French Academy | by which he contends a transformation | of sound into light is produced. ————. THE MARKETS, NEW YORE, Beef Cattie Mad. Nat live wi, | Calves Good to Prime Veals, | i Bleep i a ! Hogs ' @ | Flour i x. State Ad © faney 65 Weste mn, & ad to choice 6 5 | Whest—No. 2 . i Nao Bye Barley i Corn Two-rowed Bate Ungraded WestoraMixed Bouthern Yellow, ,.... | Oats White State . Mixed Western, ..,.. IN MANY HOMES. 1 cule thet inghodienss 20 hart AEE AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL! IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM! J. N. HARRIS & CO., Proprietors, CINCINNATI, 0. _ FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. _ el 1x | O—43 — whenever ¥ That Toul mysem he RRA take Mo Bitters” | Hay | Btraw | Hops State, 1881, . | Pork—Mess, new, for export. , | Lard-City Steam Hefined Timothy 0 “ a 19 fi | Petroleum | Butter—State Creamery Dairy, ya ostern im. ‘Creame ory | Choose Ntato Pactory. i | Eges—Bae and Penn 3% {| Polstoos--Early Rose, state, bbi 2 50 BUFFALO, Shonrs-— Extra Tambs— Western | Bhoep—W | Hogs, Good to Cholos Yorkers, | | Yiour-C "y Ground, Neo, 1 8pring 6 75 | Wheat No. i Hard Dulath.... 1 5 a { Carn--No. 3 Mixed. 5 {| Oats-—-No. 2 Mix We wt {| Barley—Two-rowed State, , BOSTON, Extras plate snd family. 1450 @15 00 : va B Bia $ LIBG0 ies 875 @ @ 6234 toe! City Dressed Extra Prime pe Npri ing Wheat P alanis. Mixed and Yellow E stra White SIME enn v } Wool 0 ashod ¢ Jom ba Delaine 44 : Unwashed * - 30 i WATESTOWN (MASS) CATTLE MARKEY. | Boef—Estra quality, .,.....,. 662%¢ i Shoep Live weight . ., i gx, Northern : sanan PRADEEP, Penn. Ex. Family, fair, No. 2 Rad Flour Wheat Rye i Carn i Outs Mi nod Butter Creamery xtra Pa, Choose New York Pall Cream, Petroleum i 18 @ ol 16 vi? JG A ————— ‘Vegetine ACTS AS A TONIC. Vegeline also sols a8 & most powerful and grateful <. and this fostue Is most poticsaldy experienced by persons recovering from acute disoases, and by women who have } ig hoes afflicted with ils peculiar 10 their sex alone. Juvariabiy has it been found 10 werease (he tone or power of the nervous system, by whick, in turn, all other porting of the frame ars wire the wed, and the quality of the blood improved, To man, woman or child it will impart strength when strength is wanting. It will revitalize the sys. 1 of the poor overworked being whose life is ¢ Irittered away in endless cares apd ansieties: i use the strength of iron and the rosests » the Weak spews and Bloodiess ance of women crashed by ma J hardships i w {i oppressed by the dangers of chil fp 1 give new life to the § atid and cmaciated a { «h ase appetite is gone, whose movements are fo ale snd nerveless, and whose whole system is one of | Jet wy and debilitation, VRGETINE is & true fonds, | and not a decepti ve stimulant; the good that it fam. i to-day I Bot succeeded by injury to-morrow, ris to calth in a | Vegetine. | Rev. T. Walker says: re R. 1, 164 Transit Street, Srevess, Easy bound to ire a with my signature the high oe upon your Veornye, My family have the fast two yoars, in Nervous Debility i able: and 1 recommend it to all who may | feed] 80 3 invigorating, ren ating tonic, | J.T. WALKER, r of Bowdoin Sena C url, Boston. Vegetine Bosrox, Mass, Jan. 18, 1877, e H.R Steves wr Sir] have been using Vegetine for some with the greatest satisfaction, and can highly mumend it as a great cleanser and £ fier of the J. L. HAN APORI 3, Pastor of Rileston on Square « & Chure Vegetine. PREPARED BY | Formerly Pastor i ’ a is Sold ow 41 Pruggists, Sold by druggists or sent by mail. Ad. dress DR, L. IH. HARRIS, Pittsburgh, Pa. | (1HEAPESY, TNODKS IN THE HfroRLY of England Iiteratare © id ry % fee 18m0 vols om ol hand nie Pa, cloth; only REG bound, for only oe Free FANHATTAN BOOK OO. 18 W, 16h BL, N.Y. PO Box ass The Strongest, oapest and most Durable WIRE ANDT CRET FENCE. N atented Jule, 1881. Steel Poste for Nire or Board Fenoos will last a life. If you we a save Hn or desire employ. Address ODD, RA N. XY. SAVE THIS! A peverdaiiing romedy or Neuralgia, Nervous and imi an %, Relieves in 90 minutes, Sent by mail on rece 5 nts in postage stamps, by Ww i SN WELLL 39 N, Bond St, Baltimore, Md ‘AG ENTS: ANVASSERS AND FAIR MEN SEND YOUR ADDRESS to Sole Man. ufacturers, 330 Jth Ave, N.Y. WANTED to sell Stationery Goods on commission PHAENIX ru B 00. Warren, Pa. A YEAR AND EXPENSES TO GENTS, Outfit free. Address S 1 1 14 Eo "6, Vickery. Augustn, Me. C = R (A MONTH—AGEN SWANTED—-9O na. soiling artle a e world: I sampl Tel Address Jay B ronson, betru ot Mice wor day at home. o. Sam RE — $510 $20 Adress STxson &0Co. Portland. portant 1 The Tnvalids of America, i YETie The MOST M bei wo CAKE soins Libs, w are HI PEROSR in Co Seda UE ; re ES ee WIL send for eine arding the “Wi RIA. " dig the assnds of ~ WILSONIA™ patictta th AENTA ty ii ey Nr Hen Hon. Tin Weed, Camtnodore C. +d PoE B. Hort mee Tes Sprues BL, Fg wirwosther, ( b : mn. N a :" Calon at | es CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED! wHALL'S 10 SBALSAM LUNGS res Consum drcnia. Bron Brouck 1 jentmencss, the 1 , ag, jullne Allche Sh ae be FULTON 8T Hon i oper, . 4 E 2 nd which accompany pr EE SS a ———————————————— ms. Payne's Automatic Engines. Relialide, Durable and wl horse power with 34 dose Fuel and walter hon a% Ewgine ouili, not Bited with an Automatic C hd for Iiustrated Catalogue “J, tor Information On, BW. FaTae & Bose, Bok S01, Corn. BE : p nthe. iH tae - each roam} restored to sound heal SE such ok TRIN a 5,000 Agents Wanted for Life of It Sontaine Ihe full history of bis noble and ow of peorie Ife and ¥ Rasa ination, waiting for this book. The best chance Hie to a honey. "Beware of = * oatch eit” - = ¥ Penifens i Son for tations. This is the only authentic tad 1 life of go 5 ONAL fPrBLISHING OC 00. ® philadelphia. Pa Pa. For Soldiers, (mer Moher entitled. Pensdons for any wound or ah entitled Ww tions, GELSTON & Box 795. U. 8 Cram Arromsevs, W aonb. C. Fac-Similes of U. §. AND NATIONAL BANK B Consisting of nine exact imitations of United States asury Notes, and nige of National Bank Bi as Hal ak of various Sentutination, As a rare neous Mate o counterfeit monay if detecting = TR YHEW & CO. Now York Gato, P.O. Box is eA only IES l Per Bair rood and branch, manenily disesives ruporfivegs in Sve minutes withoul pain, BY ingfury. Rend Tramps far tenis, TEs WnoosCwnmicas, Prerasarsos Oo, 602 Sproce Philadelphia, Pa, LLS, a WELL-BORING, and bow 10 ues, 1a fully ftps 1 ad Mighty Beniefin ‘phmerineg 4 Pe recom Re, 108 re 455 hon or oh p for ining price i or hove Essavater 02, 29 Rime Sane, Sew Ho oven and Wissed will fe pi wih nae, a and pace inte of musing. returned to all mr a Martin, 30 Mest'y PL. Boston, Mass. \ 7 ANTED AGENTS for the authentic and Life of Janes A, GanrieLd, from child burial, by Col. R. H.Conwell, with introd Excellency John I). Long, Gov, of Hr Book: Address Is you would learn four months, and be LLEN'S Brain Fooad-ctires Nery ous Debility & WATCHE ei ia ta GUN Revolvers, Catalogue free. Address, Great West. G Gus Works, Works, Pittsbargh. Pa. Pa. $72 A WEEK, Nia fap at home easily made, Costly Outfit free, FET vE & : Co. A Augusta, Maine, Weakness of Generative Organs, 81 alld Pharmacy, 313 Firstav.. -*1, ENTS \ WANTED for the Best and ¥ ding Fic “torial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced National Publishing Co., Philadelphia, Pa. a week in your own town. Terms and $5 out free. Add's H, Harrerr & Co. Po ad May is A oS 4 cont send faa ops anid wo will ae York. a posta,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers