FOR THE LADIES, i ——————— Fashion's Latest Freaks, | Dainty little pail oases have become fashionable as presents. and are even geen among Wedding gifts, when the in. struments are mounted in gold and silver. Ope given last week was made to order in Paris, and inclnded a button. hook and glove-battoner. 1 uise blue satin. owadays, if you go to call on a young you find her lolling back in an easy- chair, with her rosy finger tips immersed in a finger bowl of scented water (the first step in the process), or else oha- polisher in hand, carefully and Iaborionsly rubbing her nails wit h'a fine pink powder that eventually makes them shine hike diamonds. The other day, having a desire to write np the process, I visited the estab. I was impressed with the growth of the now fashion, being askid to make an intment three days later, owing to the rash of onstomers. I noticed that only ladies were present, but when I commented on it, Mrs. P. showed me a small office, entered from the back of the house, where were seated some gen- tlemen, one a congressman, all looking rather shamefaced at being there “ They have not tha courage to be soon entering,” said the mar nioure; “so Ihad to arrange a sort of b ek door. A at many gentlemen cone here, nota- ministers and nctors, as in their respective professions they are given to using their Lands fre ely, and like to "have them as effective as Possible, “ Then fashionable young men have taken up the idea, snd many of them We regu onstomers, and pay #0 much # month to have their nails taken care of. My two most fashionable patrons are a Brooklyn preacher ar 1d a Wash ington politician and orator.” * And how abont the ladies ™ “Oh, you can see for yourself,” and the manicure took down a blank book in which were inscribed the autographs of her lady patrons. Among them were the pames of several well known se- tresses of stock companies and of an American prima donna. Amusing to relate, the list of mairons was longer than that of young ladies. But to the point. When my turn came I sat in a row with five other ladies, in the easiest of armchairs and with damask napkins in our laps. Fin- gor bowls of stained glass on plates of painted French china, filled with tepid water perfumed and containing an acid to soften the skin, were given # and solemnly we sat and soaked our fingers for fifteen minutes, At the end of that timo an “ opana- fore me, dried one hand, posed it on a satin cushion, and with a fine steel nstrament quickly serapad away all ODDITIES OF INTERMENTS Nome Curlons Huppoulnes at Recently Re= ported Funerals, fell A widower, blinded with tears, into his wife's grave at Decatur, Ill, pulled out used such language that the clergyman had to re- prove him, A constable in Franklin county, Pa, served a writ on & man as, with other members of the family, the debtor was standing by his father's open grave, At Templeton, Mass, the Rev, Ger ard Bushnel died on Sunday, February 27, aged seventy-five, His wife, two years his senior, had died on the preced- ing day. They were buried in the same grave on the following Tuesday. In Paris the percentage of eivil inter ments varies from 9.6 per cent, at Pasay to 87.4 at Menilmontant, As the fu. nerals become humbler tha rate in- creases; rich people are buried from the chureh, but of the funerals of the ninth--the lowest olass— more than one- half are conducted without religious Caramonies, New attraotions are lent to one's fu. neral by a Baltimore undertaker who by the use of chemioal agents makes the cheeks of the corpse to bloom like the rose. The late Mr, John San Francisco, after arrangements for his faneral, wrote as + I desire that there shall be no adjournment of court, I desire that the funeral shall be fixed at 1 o'clock p, Mx, 80 that the members of the bar who wish may attend it without interfering with the business of the courts. There 1s no good TOASOn why the business of tuelve courts of record should be interrupted for a day because a lawyer, even the most dis. tinguished, happens to die." At the funeral of a resident of East Prussia recently, his wife caused the ocfliz to be filled with pipes, tobacco, cabbage, bread, salt and other articles of food and laxury. Mr * Barefoot” Walker, of Oalem, bas, Ga, so called because he had nc worn shoes for forty vears, had been laid in his coffin and was about to be lowered into the grave when, as the mourners were bending over him to ob- tain a last view, the corpse arose aud asked, “ What they meant by such treat- ment." Lord Truro is a believer in simplicity of funerals, His wife was buried in a plain and light wooden box, constructed s0 as not to arrest the progress of nata. ral decay, in a grave dug by himself in the lawn fronting his residence, the spot having been selected by Lady Truro herself. Bishop Corrigan, of New Jersey, will not allow services to be performed at funerals where there are more than twelve carriages present. Cardinal Man ning, in England, discourages lavish expenditure on such occasions, and is opposed to Sunday funerals. The Arch- bishop of Cante swrbary has also come out Ww, Dwinelle, of prescribing all the BO A filed it into a point at the top and olipped the sides with sharp scissors, ther she rubbed a red salve over it, wiped it off and procecded to polish with the diamond powder, using the palm of her hand until the nail fairly glittered, and finally warm water, castile soap and a soft brash loft it clean, smooth and shining, finger, and in half an hour for the sum of $1.50 was finished, and the result was ten pink and bn Iant weapons of defense , so sharp and pointed as to sug- gest the advantages of peace. The fashion of wearing these long and pointed rails has become so exsgger- ated. that it necessitates long-fingered gloves and extreme care to prevent their breaking off. Fashion Notes, Basques are worn as much as ever, The poke grows in fashionable favor. The pou! in back draperies is not Ridged plush is at a premium in mil- ery. Skirt draperies are more elaborate than ever. Deep, dark red is a fine color for plush trimmings, Puniors are not bouffant, but cling | close to the hips. Furs will be much used this winter, | whe'lier the weather is very cold or not. Two or more materials combined to aver. Long visites, dolwan eloths and cir eles will all be worn for midwinter Wraps. Light-colored nlsters of heary cloth, trimmed with undyed sealskin, are very fashionable. One of the most effective stripes in new colors is of orange with hair lines of gold and edged with black. Broad Byron collars, trimmed with | Tanis lace laid on over the linen to look like embroidery, are worn. All sorts of felt, plush and furry beaver hats and bonnets will be worn, | but pokes are the first favorites. Jackets are giving place to long dol- | maaus, French padour or Mother Habbard cloaks. Moire and om are frequently com- bined in the same suit with one or more materials, and trimmings besides. Pendant pockets of white satin and moire trimmed with Spaaish lace make Jrotty additions to evening demi- | Ombre watered silks come in two or three contrasting colors, such as dull | red, or seal brown, with blue and olive; pale pink or brown with red and gray. Lilies of the valley and white roses are much worn by brides; lilacs are also mingled with orang’ blossoms in the floral garnitare of a bridal costume, Fine all wool goods are nsed in Taking u handsome promenade cos- me of the patterns give both & the baysdere and perpendicular | stripes, Wide flounces of Spanish lace, ar- ranged in four deep festoons near the | bottom of the garment, are used as an | : Sycanding.y stylish trimming for black | plush cloaks. Beaver hats are gotten up in a showy | style; the brims are remarkably wide, | some of the designs have the front tolled buck considerably, which style 3s only gy becoming to a youthful face. Tinse} pl lush Lolds a prominent posi- ery ornamentation and this ton 'ta has on with it rich chenille eordings, which give a gay and pleas- eeremonions occasions. Sash draperies arranged in huge bows with long wide ends appear on the backs of many French dresses, and the Fei flonnees, doubled and forming a like flounce round the skirt, which 8 introduced last spring, are still A Letter from Mrs. Garfleld, Mrs. Garfield has written this grace- ful and womanly note to Mr. Hall, a Chicagoan, who sent to President Gar- field last spring a volumes of photo- graphs sng autographs relating to the aE Sma: Previous to my illness I remember that Gerieral Garfield and I experienced great pleasure in looking over the rennin book which you prepared, containing photographs of many of the prominent characters con- nected with the presidential campaign of 1880 In my illness, which imme- Gistely followed, aud in the horror of be misfortune which I have been called Bots sustain, a proper acknowledg- ment of your kindness was overlooked. 8 now to acknowledge its receipt, to express to you ik cordial thanks Steat pleas pleasure which the exami- n uf your book gave both General Garfield and mysclf. | shall always re- your present a: a souvenir of a which we enjoyed together truly A GARFIELD, Mr. Wilmarth, of New York city, when the Newfoundland dog that had saved his life died of old age, had it buried encased in a costly cefiin, bear. ing a silver plate, in his famuly lot Greenwood. So great a scandal raisad that the trustees forbade the there there- 1 id was aller. At the funeral of Robert J. Smith, of Pittsburg, Pa, bis divorced wife plead ed, with bitter tears, to be pe srmitted to corpse, but was repulsed by the family and elergy- man. Sherif J. R. Wilhelm, of Scott county, Va., was, during the war, twice shot through the body. Each time he S § the placed in their tent. Whenever ird sheriff is buried it will be in his th The Relatives of John Hammill, of Sparta, N. J., not thinking that he had been buried up to his merits, disin- terred the body, placed it in a new cas- ket and reburied leaving the at colin beside the grave.— New York Wi it TI In traversing the Llanas of the prov. ince of Caracas, in order to embark at San Fernando de Apure, on his voyage up the Orinoco, Bonth America, M. Bon- pland stopped at Calabozo, his object | being to investigate the history of the Gymnotus, great numbers of which are { found in the neighborhood. After re- conducted him to the Cano de Dera, a but sur- nificent flowering odo’ .sreuns mimosas | were pre-eminznt. He and his friends were much surprised when informed that it would be necessary to take thirty | half-wild horses from the neighboring notus. The idea of this fishing, called, in the language of the country, embar- bascar con caballos (intoxieating by { means of horses), is very odd. The word barbasco indicates the roots of the | Lacquinia, or any other poisonous | plant, by contact of which a body of | or, at least, of intoxicating or stupefy- { ing the fishes. These come to the sur- face when they have been poisoned in this manner. The horses chasing them | here and there in a marsh has, it seems, {the same effect upon the alarmed fishes. While their hosts wero ex- plaining to M. Donpland and party this strange mode of fishing the troop of horses and mules bad arrived, and the Indians had made a sort of battoe, pressing the horses on all sides, and | forcing them into the marsh. The In. dians, armed with long canes and bar- | poons, placed themselves round the | basin; some of them, mounting the | trees, whose branches hung over the water, and by their cries, and still more { by their canes, preventing the horses | from landing sgain. The eels, stunned by the noise, defended themselves by repeated discharges of their batteries, For « long time it seemed as if they would be victoricus over the horses. | Bome of the mules especially, being { almost stifled by the frequency and | force of the shock, disappeared under | the water, and some of the horses, in spite of the watchfulness of the In. dians, regained the bank, where, over- | come by the shocks they had undergone, themselves at their The picture presented, M. Bonpland says, was now indescrib- able. Greups of Indians surrounded the basin ; the horses, with bristling manes, terror and grief in their eyes, trying to escape from the storm which had surprised them ; the eels, yellow and livid, looking like great aquatic serpents swimming on the surface of the water, and chasing their enemies, picturesque. In less than five minutes two horses were drowned. An eel, more than five feet long, glided under one horse, discharged its apparatus through its whole extent, attacking at once the heart, the viscera, and the plexus of the nerves of the animal, probably benumbing and finally drowning it. When the struggle had endured a quarter of an hour, the horses and | mules appeared less frightened, the | manes became more erect, the eyes ex- | pressed less terror, the eels shunned in place of attacking them, at the same time approaching the bank, when they were easily taken by means of the long cord, and were drawn ashore without being able to communicate any shock. Having landed the eels, they were trans. ported to little pools ‘dug in the soil | and filled with fresh water ; but such | is the terror they inspi e that none of | the people of the country would release them from the harpoon, a task which | the travelers had to perform themselves, | and receive the first shock, which was | not slight, the most energetic surpassing | in force that communicated by a Ley- | den jar completely charged. The gym- | notus surpasses in size and strength all | the other electric fishes. The following suggestion i is made by | Dr. Foote’s Health Monthly: Try a satu- | rated solution of bicarbonate of soda | (oaking sods) iv diarrheal troubles; give freely. Guitean's Trial, The second day of Guitean's trial was oeen pled in obtaining jurows Rove wore pasion as to their Gua only four of them cop both sides and tained on the on the w= Samuel F, machinist, and wastorer, Wl BE 0 Ix jn Wily ied Wo ft day GRY Warn A plasterer te ve th } turn to the gh the erowd, ither sido, and h p ansod, Hi was probs fire! time sn tosiatio Brow wnethin Bin win as hu van, 1 ts sheltering in the erowd. A as he drove aw ex-assistant Assintant prosecution of Conn On the thind day th selection Of Wo Yolaaingg pasary to make wy he in the sit nati in as it existed, Becretary Maine answered 9 t of the resi g and Platt ms ‘ork le 4 L tioned sug speech f questions on the subjec J the fou les with 1 a ring it had upon the «8 pont the pri wille, ing auply with "his {Gh and if he did not do so there row, Ho was removed by the ity. He Sesired to continue the conversation, Mr, Be ovil le paid no atten- tion to his client. In reply to further ques- tions the secretary statod that after the assns- sination of the President ho paid little or no attention to the conflict in the New York lature, and, in fact, thou; He said he invented the self in 1875. Bocretary question z t was follow y Mr, ) Yenezuelian minister; A White, who was in charge of the lad 1 - room at the depot when President Garfield was shot; Robert A. Parke, ticket agente epot son W. Wheeler, a young A ladies’ waiting room st the time of the ing: George W. Adami, publisher of the Waslh- ington Siar, who witnessed the murder, Jacob T. Bmith, janitor of the depot, All these witnesses testified as to the shox ting and gave snch facts as were made public at the time o the assamsination. At the opening of the court on the fifth day, and before the prisoner waa brought in, Mr, Beoville addressed the judge, asking him to en- force quiet on the part of Gaiteau, Ho was continuing with a request that an erder be issued prohibiting any official at the jail or elsewhere from giving to the press anything which Guitean might write, when the prisoner entered and eanght the purport of the remarks, Guitean, with flashing eyes, and with extreme i anger displayed in every feature, arose and de- | nounced his coupselgs a double-dealer., Mr. Scoville tried to quid, the prisoner, but his anger seemed to increas, ‘hen Judge Cox commanded the prisoner to be silent, and pro- ceeded to sav something, Guitean continued his angry declamation, interrupting the judge, and asserting that he did not care for the rul- mgs, and that if he was excluded trom the court during the trial, he wonld have a new trial by the court in "bane, When he was view Lo prov At th postulated with Mr. 8 desired him to ¢ wishes in the case, would be a bailiffs with dif tht noth * hime further *. M., and the tern wart en’ wal t the d gheot- { gnarled at them in a flurry of passion, called them scoundrels, and bade them wind their own business. He made re- marks at times during the remainder of the session, but with the exception narrated he seem aceably and indeed humorously in- clined, He passed much of his time reading i Oceasionally he looked up at witnesses and smiled good humoredly aa Sirounnstances surroum fing the assa sin. win into the teal wi ght ve that to-day I have had the fret Square dines July 2.” he sald, as a withess ox} re the opinion that he waa fitaliior on the sho than now, He enjoved his own sallles hed heartily at thom dd on th Afh day wi { FAIR mas o meal | sod | wing | "and who aug he witnesses foniid and n misander ‘tmy 0 your honor { this wvitation,” tis Jur ard #3 bly aad of nnit him 0 close lowing day, and his request was granted, mld Pe I The Cymbalom, Supper being over we went out upon | glistening on the vine leaves, and cast ing sharp, black shadows on the white Most of the guests dis- I remained gypsies, attracted by the One of the men empty barrel, in of a table, and on it something like a shallow box, almost a | yard in width, but rather less in length nearer, I discov- what 1 had taken | were long flat | arranged in different | In each hand he held little | sticks, made something like the ham mers in the interior of a piano, and | until, that strings coming ered and quivered and danced | tain falling into the basin below, One | when the air played was alow and mol- | ancholy, This instrument is the cym- | balom; and in every Hungarian melody | there are notes which are only produci- ble in perfection on just this instru ment, although first-rate performers can execnte a feeble imitation of its | Argosy, M. d’Arsonville, in the Revue Scien: of electricity. He says that supersede all the motive powers used by man and surpacs them in every way, and he promises to prove in an early he ercployed, it is electricity alone which can store and transport it to any distance in a practical and economical manner, “ NEWS OF THE WEEK. | i witern and Middle States. Wer es, haa a weolloon ht in as Jay GU wld, the ! hit | Coroner, J. Howann ed Now Yorker, wirate scheme to hlao been oaug kmail known stock operator, by pending letters threatening death in caso the sender was | ” noe probal 16 rise od that all the ion BE, fifty st haxes in stocks f Was joal v malled for stat and on Bun tots wor fifty detectives and letter carviers | hed all the lamppo in that district letter was f to My i and o arrested Welles, who had Gould, of the tragedia r from Troy, N, Y,, iby the five men were drowned | r, WAS BWR awall of lors, and teh save that the ¢ esion Mas s §nil af Athena Ja at Athen Woman, wid and hanged dispatch rison Wagner, Was Bays that fon waa ing that strongly desonneing the had obfained his judg. rey re ourt de somewhat alarm. from Du- There are ailing to a over a territory reaching ok, Dakota. Stearns county, Minnesota, 1 je, Lowa, af Joast 100 cases In to Bism From Washington. Crop reports to tho agricultural departmner from the ten principal colton growing 8 n indicate! vie last wear, AVErARD in 1881, as shown by tho 1 half bushels a thirted in 1880, indi considera! yield Rive a ioss than sre of wheat rainst is yon and one fann Of what Te anl one-tenth iting a deer about twenty per cent, from last year, the yield was nearly 500,000,000 bushels, turns show an average yield of twenty and « half bushels per acre of corn, indicating a fall iug off of about twenty-five per cent, from the orop of 11880, caused chiefly by the drought by excessiv) rain since the €rop was har | The quality of the corn is somewhat below the Average. Dr. J. L. Canery, president of the Nations board of health, in his annual report, says thal yellow fever appeared in only one locality (Key Weet) in the United States during last summer, | Frrra Avprror Arexaxper, of the tie department, reports that the consular service is not only self-sustaining, but contributes ina | measure to the support of the diplomatio ser vice, the excoss of receipts over expenses las year being $25,248.65, Upox the adjournment of the court on the sixth day of Guitean’s trial the jail van started as usual for the jail, having one policeman, Officer Edelin, as a guard, who sat on the seat’ with the driver. Before reaching the eapitol the guard noticed a young man on horseback riding leisurely behind the van. Near the cor. ner of East Capitol and First streets the horso- man rode directly up to the rear of the vin and peered through the small grating, Guiteau was alone in the van, sitting on the right-hand | After evidently satisfying himself of the exact location of the prisoner the horseman wheeled suddenly to the left of the van and fired directly through it, He then | spurred his horse and rode rapidly wway, Officer Edelin fired one shot at the fast-disap pearing horseman, and the driver of the van | whipped his horses into a gallop and kept mn | gight of him for several blocks. The would-be | asury | avenger was, however, mounted upon a blooded horse and readily escaped out into the country The van was then driven on to the jail, and groat ox Ho exolaimed: * I have been shot. frock at Tall him to ar uddrel and have him dealt with as it was found Gultean’s left The ball ¢ ide of the van and fell upon tify Major onon rout the ws On examination gragad sgratoh he desory the ball had just infli gE A kK tho opp floor, Fhe man who was » shot hil living on the outskirts of Washington that Here sira thie mind on reaching the Urea d to have fired where if was It GRe Jonas, a dissipated farmer WAS Br the evening in an intoxlosted con He Edelin sald positively ed In i and joeked up lentod having shot ul CHR lite was the third ¢ his arrest missioner of patents, Jury brought In aptain Howgate of government an attempt to the Washington y Aawall the action Foreign Nows, i Mooces, At TT tthe t dwellings, from Pansma state tha own of taining about 200 yod by a storm and every launch The riven ashore iilam’s availed the ot deputies when The Postmaster-General’s Report, The report of Postmaster.-Goneral James for nd 30 states the 251,736.44, showing » h was covered by 00 made by Con. une eX “ i, ion of §4,000.( wher of letters mailed was 1,047,107, . isthiy and money order systems increasing in popularity, and the ich exceed their expenses, Mr James recon nie nde that the fee for the issue of money orders for sums not exceeding £5 be re- ten cents to five cents, and that the num limit of the amount of an order be ised to $1040, He alg recommends a new ] be engiyved upon bank ne stated as wall as writ i » payable to bearer signate ce any time within oo months after FY ie, James oonours with the recommendations of his predecessors in favor of the ishment of postal savings banks Mr. James holds that the ¢ ought to de rapidly, Ie pense in this particular amount to wt of star servi Yes “A minute investigation into alleged at BCS in the star roule service was instits ited by rection of the ate President, and is stil prose outed. The post foe de parimen operated, andiwill continue to co-operats the department of justice in this investig No one who has not been directly cone the matter can fully appreciate the mag indertaking, the mass of record evidence oxamine od the difficulties of a personal investi. gation in sparsely-settiod lerritories, and the resnlts attained by the patient and intelligent labors of the inspectors of this department, There can be no doubt, from the facts already ascorteined, that the existing statutes leave the way opened to great abuses, and that there is abn dant ground for asking a judicial fuvesii. gation of the transactions of the last few VOars, Mr. James thinks that not only ean the post. office department be made self-sustaining, but letter postage from three to two cents will be possi. ble, This con be accomplished he declares by proper economios and by ceasing to load down the mails with bulky and Ruprafitable third and fourth class matter, Unless this matter, principally merchandise, is excluded, the pay of the principal trunk lines will have to be largely increased, Mr. James thinks, however, that the ma- jority of railroads are overpaid, and the pay He FAYE : “1 had hoped fo be able to submit the out- line of legislation which I believe would accom. plish a great saving in the cost of the railway mail service, improve its efficiency, and be sat- infactory to the country, the department and the railroad companies, The od events of the ” this duty impossible, Mr. in towns of 10,000 and less are too large, recommends increased pay for auxiliary lotter- carriers and for the postmasters in large cities, In conclusion Mr, pendent of personal or partisan influence, The number of postmasters, contractors, clerks in postoffices, railway postoflice clerks, June 30, 1681, was 61,444, TIP The coming holidays will be more ro generally observed than any for many years, and we would remind our readers that a bottle of Dr. | Bull's Osugh Syrup will prove a most aeocopt | able holiday present, Losses in the Postal Service, Colonel Barker, chief of United | States postoMee inspectors, gives in his annual report to the postmaster-general | In Walker county, Ma is » natural bridge said to rival that uf Virginia. It is in the sandstone called juilistone grify | which underlies the coal formation, vision for the flueal year which ended | June 30, 1881. From this report it ap. | pears that 461 persons were arrested during the year for depredations npon | the United Btates mails, Four hnn- dred and twenty four of these per | sons were proseecnted in the United | Btates courts, and 37 in the courts of | the several Btates where the arrests | were made, In the United States | courts 1858 persons were convicted, 26 wore soquitted, 8 escaped, 5 forfeited bail, procesdings against 24 were dis. missed, 1 was killed while resisting ar. rest, and 177 await trial. The number tigation during the year was 31,640, aa follows: Registered letters reported loss, 3,300; registered packets reported lost, | 387; ord.oary letters reported lost, 14,. ora. ay packets reported lost, 6,608; robberies of postoflices, 323; post. offices burned, 92; mail stages by highwaymen, 88; depredations by postmasters, 135; mails burned in rail. WAY accidents, 11; in floods, snow storms, ete., 65; B40; total 81,640, r ds 52; mn ince). lapeous, 3. The total The dis- % of mot collected and re- osived in cases of lost aud rifled regis eye 8B cases to $13,667.90; and of the ifle ul or lamp rod with, & anted for, l¢ aving a 061 under investigation, or finally closed as bopeless, ineluding losses by fire, high. way robberies and or linary thefts, A Hs exchange mentions that a Ol cured Mr J. H Mattern, a of that ety of & severe sprain, Detroit (Mich ) n Indias 1M irviet nis led in the Western 1h me Jo war urnal, I AS A plcasantry attributed to M, Thiers: “When I was Very yo ung I was so little little— that I needed a pole to down the "la BO knock strawberries.” Fg Jaro, AA 30 From the Wilmington ( Del.) Republican Mr.J. MM. 5 ner Third snd Madison sireels, Lin LE SLE ol the scratchs befora do not talk You act. ———— talk, YOu The great secret of the {f Veoprixe, It strikes a by p orifying the blood, re inevs 10 healthy aotion Ep 0. i yeTERY BoLyED € Uae 1 { disease i Iver aid K the Dery A.2 ni ATTY'S FIANOFORTRA wos ifion) eg siler abe $i date DANIEL 1 Ese UED ¥ “Hx ATT Y. ‘W asinovon. New Jousny ¥ ROM ny ATA. Mass save In ki 1 feel betiew Dy. Wa i lune $ 23 Ceuts will Bay » Tre sptine upon the toms bis se, 4 tale very owner of hors i or starane takes Fag t POW NEW YORE NEWSPAFEU UNION, Hew York 136% ry hires, wid 3 fin MAKKEDS, oF en a Eo I 0 A 2 a hoa bh eo » OF = 80 4 ab Boban 40 En wn Oats tr ~¥ bY Wt - - oS BE i PRILADELYRIA. ov —— w Sa en (This engraving represents the Lungs IN MANY HOMES. For Congha, Calds, Cioup, Bronchitis and all other affections of the Throat and LUN a stands unrivaled and utterly bevond all aptiifon IN CONSUMPTIVE CASES It approaches af near a apac ific that per cent, are permanently cured where the diree. tons are strictly complied with, cal or other ingredients to harm the young or old. AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL! IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM! J. N. HARRIS & CO., Proprietors, CINCINNATI, O. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. eet and its height is about seven stvesity | feet. A smaller bridge conneots it wi the bluff beyond. The lines of strati- fleation of the sandstone give the struc. tare the appearance of having been ar- tifieially built np with massive blocks. It ie in the midst of a region of wild and romantic beauty, high escarpments | of the same sandstone being seen stand- ing out in the face of the hills around. I Lank — TAU laste: eyes plainly mark the debilitated, that the blood lacks richaess and the aT han vigor, that digestion snd sesimilstion, twin functions, without the vigutos ds discharge of which there can be no # thing ss stamins, | wre disordmed and weak, To | frm snd lean, Hostetter's Stomach specially commends itaslf, were such | necessary, might be Jultiplied infinitom, | to show that waning vitality is but | to exhausting Siniies, aod and hah in to terposs 8 bulwark the latter, | must be inoreased, hist nu triton and the selection ol articles of diet, but by ¢ ennily surmounted obstacle to foot digestion, Vor faulty i the most popular and amply tested of remo. dice, strond thening the stomach, the blond] sad banishing ew Syupep i symptom, Moreover, iI is 4 8 for chilis and fever, rhenmatism, ras and Lillos isheas, Tue dirense of men is neglecting to weed their own fields, and busving themselves wied- ng the fields of other people, Du RV, Prence, Batalo, ~ Y.: or Fy 1 h sve advised many ladies to try ¢ Prescription,” and never see i fail to # then you auattine. Yours truly, Mrs. AM, Raw, 141 Bates street, Indi Gavery is to pr — as perfames lo | vegetable fragrance; the one overpowers weak a rite, the other rocrestos and revives them. rr Young, middle-aged or old men, suffering from pervous debility and kindred weak. nesses, should send two stamps for large treat giving successful treatment, ORLD'S Dispexsany Mupioar Assocuavion, Buffsle, NX rl, Bo remarkab iy perverse ie the nature of man that he despises whoever courts him snd ad- mires whoever will not bend before him. If You are bilions take Dr, Pierce's * Ploas ’ tive Pellets,” the original * Little Ha” Of all droggists, Wenn every one employed in points concord. ant to thelr natures, pro‘essions, arts and ommonwealths would rise vp of temeclves. Colonel Joln €. Whit ants, Ga, says he Sy. his I Wie to War i's Bafe K Liver Pu id Alls Srpnex resolutions, ‘ike the Sars en rise of the mercury in the barometer, indieste little else thay the changoableness of the wonther, Pou DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, depression o spirits and general debility in their yariom | forms, also as a preventive against fever and sgue and other intermittent fevers, the Penne Puosrsonaten Erno or Cavisaya I mad by Caswell, Hazard & Co, New York, wold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and fou | patients recovering from fever or other sicknes i LAL es nnd Monquitoos. we. bax “Roagh on Rats” keeps a house free a flies, bed-ta Ags, roaches, rads, mics, sto 3 Oe cuts win np - forse and Lis Diseases. able 0 Every owner Laken. Bent mt but one way to cure baldness, and ing Cansoraxy, a deodorized ex em, the natural hair grower mproved, it is the only dressing wr the hair that cultared people will use, ~ Vegeting Cured Her. Brirxvee, Dn HR Srevess—-Dear Bir 1 most slate iat ¥ roti vo #5 10 be called “ valuable pd invigarsbor of the whole sve ¥ ered fora length of the with & pe jog. Bhe book several hotties ol were surprising; it cured her, wer remedies failed to give satisian 7.1.18 K FNIY WERTHEMIIER, Luecary, 13% Mogmouth 88, © above to be tre Draggist and Ax Vearygxe-For emticating all impurities of (he bl Ae 0 © sytem it has no equ 11 has peves ‘ ure, giving tone snd strength ic Ulaied dimoane, Vegetine PURIFIES THE BLOOD. : Dosrox, Mass, Jan 14, 1877, BrEvEss ~~] have boon using Yopetine for some e greatest satisfaction, and can highly 111 8# a gros lesser and purifier of the L. HANAFORD, { Egleston Square M. E. Church HR Pastor o Nervousness and all derausements of the pervons vetem Are nEURL 1) connect od with a diseased oon. 5 of the blood, Debilits 15.8 froauent a T 16 firwt Thing to be done is to Spore + the hind, This bs Mcomplishod it is a nOrve edicine, and pos Be power over the nervous = an: veak. Vegetine is acknowl indged and ans and apol jonnser of the blood aud ole dis shiros speak in its praise ih have PREPARED BY H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. ns —— Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists, {a coanmencod 1a the Novem ber number of Artiur's Home Magazine, new subscribers for 1882 will receive the November and December Nos, of this year, Terxs . $28 year; 200 50, 3 copies §5. 4 copies$6; 8 and one ex 2, a For specimen number, contalving ters of “ Divorced,” RILUR&SON, P A uy Living Persan oan learn to play Plano or On anin 13 minutes, Musical talent or previous pag {ie ary. Guide by mall, Soc. (stamps tal ) Sem for cl irentas. LW. 1 MANE, , B58 Bway, N Xs rr KIDDER'S PASTILLES." == 2 ATA SRA ainats 8, Mass. S117 SILL amd for terms » - 1 Oe)! ® MONTH: AGENTS WANTED-901 hows Y oo tar fa duy B ronson, Detroit, Mich, YOUNG MEN | vn, Address Vai entine Bros, Janesville, Wis, JENTS Ww ANTED for the Best and Fastest. Pig torial Books and Hibles, Prices dare Nephy iil Cured, Lebanon. Me. Goods on oom sitnath ASS BU my keeping or Telegraphy, Terms and §8 outfit WA CTS Catalages free, i : wis American Wateh Oa Pittady vers. Catalogue free rent Wert Bun Works, Pi ru INE ‘ we : 7 2 AWEE K. $128 day at home oasily made, Costly Outfit free. Adds Tues & Oo., Augusta, Maine, Biitor Inter-Ocsan, hi 28.11 send You Shin hat the in orn BE iil perp Fry ther; Captain © 2 lore: house point, is y one of the oldest i in America alied es yoaly Verio hl ymin Ailes fre he bok ke the Lightat tha Goyern ment bul ix it the Gros gps A here) when was transferred. store this mating the Capinin vo em oe following statement : * This is to certify that I ig wiltien sfilivted with rheumatinm twenty {an Jour, both in my ide and limba, yom , after us Yo less than twobot- ties of Acons O11, Lam entirely free from Jud Sy stil Ranging a soanew hat when walk. yey 5 foroe of b CW, Bovison Eolerrtog tothe foregoing i, 1 might allude numerous similar cxses (hat have come to oF bot “a word Lo the whe is suficient” Dalen Goxert, Phanuseist, Evanston, Ii YY NU—47 MANUFACTORY Jad Whaiesale Depo, 465 FULTON ST, BROOKLYN. Send tor Firrniams, rive "e ing the "WILBONIA, e give from the List of thousands of * WILSONIA® a follows | 8 ag oy - Ny 5H . Tle s b. ¥ Fairweather ay, (merchant en FARM HOMES On land withis 7 hours of wud 10 hours of New Coed bree 4 “5 to S15 per Acre, ON TWELVE YEARS TIME. Good opesing fory with capital to Fae, take brick ay aD fruit and A Ao Iptovicating 1 ihe oolong J xeuty.Gve bu i For fall particulars ad HLEJ GRANGE, XEW YORK CITY. = stlen A, [Cc Coty n.d Should have such a Tan of the requirments of busigess os mas be obtained in ROCUOESTER BUSINESS UNIVERSITY, Hechester, X.Y. There in Po others omrpercinl S-hool inthe > Yih extent by § the potter cine ai zed by wo masta snd wh. of that Las 50 Iarge a DU. wallive and honorable PostEiana, yn i.. Ww iL i. AA Mm, 5,000 Agents Wanied for Life of It contains the fall history of his Ite and dastardly assassination. death, funeral ¢ Jour fife to make mos nitations. This ist Ie thie only Fasraied Bis at our Marirrod Ros NATION AL Pt Parsons’ Pargutive Lun Blood, and will com ae ietely entire sy stem in th will take one ill onch SE from} EEE ored 10 afund Sad 7a RIG SON Te Na &o. ngor, M PLAYS Wo PLAYS! bs, lor Amateur perance Part braing + loom % optan Plays, Guide . Tableau Lights, Maornesium hs, Parst Cork, Theatrical Face Prey Kaz Works, ka, Fa, | Hie Saris, is. Moystaches, ny i ¢ Rp URL VRENG oh Lay Ea 50,000: ! sm Cr IT % * immense. ashok; BEACKAIL & c0p ond aly ms LDIERS Live wonderful paper, the We hod at Washingtos, D.C, War, Camp Life, Soenes from the Battle-Seld, » thousand th ngs of interest to yA cre. Is the great soldiers’ paws, Ne & year re the Laws apd Instraciions rela? Bounties for soldiers and their hele ad heni Box rg Aire D.C Ret ‘should enroll is Acorn under PEN SIONS. PA at oy ee klix He Fir Sai asd Pres Press Cantead pha If you enjoy a langh hesriee Then read oor SCIENCE IN STORER Of Samu Tublsand ise ousie, The Bos Doota Trick A onkeys , Fie Banking Oo The author, EB, Foote, M Diastrated crntents free. But if you're fond of Jots o* fun, & fast lay the Pod, Spent wi hor Magic Laut terns are ouddone, = Br Po sag Yor at RR nN iii re 3 co. WAX SANHATIAN POUR OD le W. ian ie X SIX | FAT WASTE MONIT) Yormg ns or ren wast 8 Lorecient messisata, Sow CTS rims am toh tae ot fe EE sas NEVER imo ¥ UNLY MIX Sve LEZ, Bes 104%, Barron, Mos. i 5 ¥ T. pays for 1Daniaz Syangiod ike : 8 Eh ERA dross STINSON & 1, hav ESTATE © ATALOGUE, 36 p.. #0, 10 styles of Ure Bas. ¥ rally, NC TAD Tae Addross MASON ¢ t, NEW YORK; or 14 Nvabash. Ave, CHICA which have been fully « circulars cont sining such of purchasing, will bo sent free and Street, Bi w 134 Tremont OUSTON; them. stamps. Address Thon ‘or sale by chromo I weaderfully in a very CHE; aid = hile acting te » producing a JAGH ft Jie thrcs-ceh pastage
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers