X X X x Sinn yiSuturd, 2 nn | Wodnes - on on Eolipros for the Year 1852, There will be tog aclipsos this year, both of f the. sun he A total Sciipse of the sun, May 17. Iv ei the United Ba I. An Price oy eclipse of the sup, November 10 Taxiuble In Anterios, t of Yo YVizibl the Utted a ates, nus, Decombar 4 5X Morning Stars, Tv ening Savi Yanns until Pebroary 20, Venus after ¥ AT after December ¢ ne ti i Mars after December 100 Mars until Haden altey May 0, anil dupiier wy 4 ~ Ne Lie Saturn r May until Satum Awsust 1% Planets Brightest. The Four ! Seasons, Winter begins Deca: mber 21. 1851, and lasts 30 days Shaurs and #8 Sprig begins Nat h w TR hours and &deutes. . Summer begiy June, 1883, and Jasts 85 das, 3 bows and 2 oh : Antumn Testu September 23, 188% Asis & days, 16 hours and 8 mingles, Sor. Charch Days and Cycles of Time, Septuagesima Sanday. Nexagesima Sunday. Quinguagesi ma Ny EER Sata Ash-Wadnesday SR MA Shares nd A RSNA AAA Mid-len Pain Bun wood Fri rida Easter § First Sand Chewing Gum, Forty thousand dollars worth of chew- ing gum isfgathered in the State of Maine every year. collect spruce gum. Every buys from seven to nine tons. gum is found chiefly in the region about Umbagog lake and about the Rangely lakes nothing else in the winter season ex cept collect gum. With snowshoes, ax and a sheboygan, on which is packed the gum, they spend days and nights in the wood. The clear, pure | lumps of gum are sold in their native state, the best bringing $1 per pound. | Gum not refined by a pect aliar process. Sieve- like boxes sre covered with spruce boughs, on which is placed the gum. Steam is introduced underneath. The gom is melted, strained by the boughs, and then passes into warm | is sg nto Is be 8/6 7 8 a & 2/13 14 1% 44 ot 3 " hs 1§T a 10 tay 20/23 22 23 ale 1s 4b) | wuts oy) T9950 34 1 50 ! Jd1s 1813 | 3 4 5 ol 7 8 0 19.90 81 2 yd 25 [10,13 12/13 44. 15 16 ane [ry 18l19 00/01 ie 03 ss funni ing a8 esta 04 189 iT 2% 4 80% PO 1 IR ovo TUTE YY 1g Rim ISG rif aio mn 2324 e223 %ei0s & 8 & WRN wid : 1% 3 4 28 is 6 yy 8 gwar} 1415 HR XY gas 0A *109 119 20 21 22/23/38 9820 ne wa 0) AB 086 {3a 5628s ine ine et FORE ER XR a4 XE NK Wry MUR B24 yas evar ia ny baring easy ln Lindo Paada Addl TRIAL OF GUITEAU. Wan u— The first Witness called for the defense on the ningteenth day was Congressman Charles B. Farwell, of Chicago. who testified that he had had one or iterviews with Guitean, ane; but on oross-ex- amination he said Guiteau could distinguish Between right and wrong, After a short ¢ yam ination of L Gorham , edit ir of the two | George Washington Kepublicar, during which Gritean constantly an nd violently inte rapt ed and asked questions, at one thine savin coun: 1 Mr, Sooville, wi ett is » burst, ™ fhe defonme closed ¢ saving, however, that he expect insta from President Arthur and Dr, Bpit yy what he wanted to show t Mr. avila explained that yy he Ry itgent 6 low uitgny wrote pablie bosines, and he im led this letter as proof of It was arranged Su l0iiA to the IP Tose of 1 & otler on 1 i with some spin upon PIOPOSo Jd that wie oner himself We here ath atid 0, with ¥ er a Way hat Paul | hour ] day mark ihe © proposed to eall we ation xt seodings on the twerti nself dissatisfied with the acta relating to the politi gisl demand for defense, eived rom mitted in writing ¢ he conrt sald that the banotit delanssd ftean disclaimed a wish § oor, express) Bi a hig i claiming the cr ident, The Pro W. tian } FTiiien OV Umi ctod at wo soner 100K occasion tO & President's message, : General Arthur has rap ped I aa ad that ka it a Li a wi ion we § ive ever at ue ring to i" urt on the ie 3 twent y Of into sticks, and wraps it in when it is ready for market. There i is not a village, town or ci ity ir Maine where it is not in demand. dealer last year sold $1,400 worth. In Biddeford, Lewiston, Lawrence and | quantit ies, ber camps the gum is used as a means of extending hospitality. time the host fills his own black clay pipe and hands it to his guest. clear lumps of spruce gum are placed | before the visitor, and he is asked to take a chew, Maine produces $40,000 its way to this market, {fom which it is | distribinted to the varions outlying fac- tory villages, where, as stated before, it is in goc od demand. Spruce gum is adul- | terated, and those who adulterate take | the troy Sen to fashion the pieces of gum to appear like those taken ina pure state from the trees. The ingredient of adulteration is supposed to ve the gum | of the pine tree. A Tarkish Tea-Party. A correspondent gives the following | picture of a Turkish tea-part;: Through | the open windows that look out on the garden come a scent of roses and the hum of bees, mingled with the langhter of children, who are playing on a well- trimmed lawn, under the eyes of the dark-eyed Circassian nurses, —dresses much like an English lady nowadays, reads French novels and | plays the piano, though she dons t' native dress upon state occasions, such ! as the chalvas, when she entertains | other ladies. Chalya means a cake, but | has come to designate warty at which | that dainty is eaten, just as we say tea | for tes-party in Enzland. When a Turkish lady gives a chalva her hus- | band is excluded while the strange! women are. in the house. . These | guests begin to arrive toward 6, megroes carrying lanterns and bringing | thei: -ghildren with them. Closely | muflled, they divest themselves of their | room, and pnt on. delicate slippers | which they had brought with them in bags. The reception-rooms are bril- liantly lighted up with pink candles and | is no kissing or bandshaking between | he hostess and her guests, but each lady | fully to her heart, her lips and her brow, Ra performed, is very pretty. The greet- being ended, the company seat : fhemsgives on chairs, if there be any Frank ladies present; if not, the take themselves to the divans an hes and the cake-eating begins much more rapidly it is economy not and hanl wood for fuel stormy weather and at hand, but to cnt it ve and fireplace at the ppy wood is not 3 sure of vexation the burning of dry all of it avail. ts two-thirds g the con- escapes latent sap and for fuel it becomes to take for fire- only as will do best be while ing el Tong the foremost rank y is regarded as repre- standard among fuel, and calling that will compare With it for a8 Yollows: Shell Mes. t we assassin ana ni Fat. and addre "iit ny “th ict juestion and ansy vast. He mp t this ki the pri trict valus x of the two me have been sane, shy fathe ar. Mr. angrily objec W. Gu “1 thi nk shant a, ban fn hi hile h Fn a "be tter £0 i known any just crawled ng to get a li roc Eni sel in thi | Several o tending t ; displeased LE 1 witnesses of mony of thar's re ply by Mr. Scov said he MY snd perhaps twer 4 ¥ LOO conversation } him except tu return the ordinary salufations, and once or in answer to his request to be e ved a8 a speaker by the i Republican 8 tee, of which ho was chairman. Guitean had never rendered any political services that the President knew of to js the Republican party in the last campaign, ‘here was nothing in the prisoner's relation to himself or to General Grant or Senator Conk- | ling or any other leader of the Republican party, socially or px olitically, to give him any ground for supposing he wonld receive polit- i jeal preferment, and he had never given Gui. tean any resson to think he could have any po- litical or personal influence with him. The President added that in October last he re- { ceived a letter from Guiteau, containing some | clzim to having rendered important services to | the Republican sarty, and an appeal for the | postix ponement of his trial. He did not preserve the letter. The Rev. Dr. McArthur, of New | York city, of whose church Guitesu and his wife were members several years ago, de- seribed his soquaintance with the assaesin and the circumstances under which Guitean was ex- | pelled from the church, The prisoner alter- nately contradicted this witness outright and | addressed him with an air of familiarity. On the twenty.scoond day the proceedings | began with the eopbinudtion of the exsmina- i tion of the Rev. Dr, Ma~Arthur, of New York, | who testificd that he had seen po indications of unsoundness ify Ggitesn. The prisoner, as } usual, constantly interrupted snd used | abusive lasiuage, at one moment showing | anger at £ witness, al another making an on- slaught or tacking 1 | your rece worse lu i for remoy local reporter, and then again at- riet-Aitorney Corkhill, saying : “If waa dug up, colonel, it would stink i mine, I understand you are booked al. You had better go slow. The President is only waiting to get this thing off his mind before you g got yon ticket-of-leavo, 1 want the absolute truth about this.” Stephen English, of New York, editor and proprietor of the Insurance Tones, next detaile all the cir. cutpstances connected with the prisoner, procuring bail for kim while he was in Ludicw Street jail on a charge of itbel, He was interrupted at every step of his narrative by the prisoner ejacnuating: "That is not true ;” * Confine yourself to the facts, English; ” He got me arrested by actual perjury; ¥ “That is abeo- jutely false, I can convict you that you are lying. There is not an insurance president in New York who does not know that you are a first-class fraud ; ” *“ That is the biggest lie you have spoken. Ww hy, 1 would not spit on you in the street, you old scoundrel;” *The jnsur. ance presidents of New York would not believe yon under oath, you old fraud.” In reply to the question whether he had any doubt as to the sanity of the prisoner, the witness said: “Never, On the contrary, he appeared to be a man of remarkable keenness of intellect, be. cause he completely outwitted me, Hewasa shrewd, active, intelligent lawyer.” Beveral New York lawyers were then examined, and testified either as to the prisoner's sanity or rascality, Guitean con tinnally interrnpting in his usual abusive style. Judge Hawes, of the New York marine court, in whose office the prisoner occupied a desk in 1874, testified that they had never seen any indication of unsoundness of mind in Guiteau, Senator Benjamin Harriton, of In- diana, testified that the prisoner asked him in Washington last eprin i o help him got office, but the witness told bim he was already overloaded with Sppijeations from his own State. Ho had never questioned Gui- tean’s samity. Guitean patronizingly said of Sensior Hanison: *“Yonare a good fellow, Senator. I remember yon very well. Our con- versutions were genarally social,” The next witness was Isaac F. Lloyd, of New York, sec retary of the Mutual Life Insurance company. He presented applications for insurance - four from John W, Guitean, two from the pris- oner, aud one from the prisoner’s father. The point made was that those applications con- tained negative answers to the question whether there was inganity in the family. Upon objee- tion by prisoner's counsel the court excluded the applications of the risoner’s father and brother. But the great sensation of the day was created when D. McLean Shaw, a ow York lawyer in whose office Guitcan had a desk ten years ago, testified that the prisoner told him in 1872 that he (Guitean) was bound to be notorious before he died ; that if he could not get notoriety for good, he would get it for evil; that he would shoot some of our big men, and would imitate Wilkes Booth, As the story was told, and the hs: felt how comploialy it fitted the pop- r ongeption | of the assassin A pd sensation wag te ati *s Book, "Truth.” Mr. Scoville ald have to read the whole book, | i g 10 de 80 when the im: “Do not read! to destroy Mormonism, | re iS a very fi th { suffocation en { frenzy seem to § was beside himsell with exeitemant “You lie,” ho shouted, shaking his hand at the wil ness, “You're a mean, low, dirty Har, [never had any such conversation, you low, dirty, low.dived whelp, My wife and vou know something of each other. | She told me you came up to visit hey he said, with a grin of pure mal Pilshow you up Ihe assan waits went Oh 10 ‘pou oul A torrent of abuso on the witness, which a almost without a break through both the t and oross-examination, My, Boovill in best to break the effect of the ey ¥ showing tha . Khaw ha pression of th Guitean, bu y that he had not really supposed the man w do what he said Dr. Spd teks was called as the first witness by wm fw rd day His di spasea hav ios | niry and enpants o f the be at at bY 4 wi in ows iro in whic h many of the maddenasd themselves headlong 3 NEWS OF THE WEEK. Tastern and Middle States. A rerouraan disease in the nature of curva born of the spine, which for want of & technical “The Dends, | peared among the laborers in the Hud It ie supposed to bo causal W has ap i river tunnel, hy i working in compressed air, | Tue attorpey general of Pennsvivania has | {ustituted additional proceedings to break up Jurrenson Davis arvived in New York to} other day on an ocean steamer from Fung i He was on his way with hia family to look after | his plantation in Tennessee, A company is forming In Philadelphia | make glucose from cassava, & tober which grows luxuriantly ia the southern part of the i United Blates, A sew counterfeit national bank note has | | just been put in eiroulation, It rood | | tation of the fivedollar note by | Bovieston National bank, of Boston i 3 nily suspended Pact! National 4 host { gimme t FOAB I's A i an I Ta ¥ adid yew You I t iw his wi 3 i only | VERS i i ¥ 1 hia P-in-iaw vind his : bv desper Ww hig { an attempt 10 £ LANGAN oon at the Bing Bu =~: 3 » t § with Gon i \ us and stal atl M vig a Io tox for havi : his Ww A Wi ms was the third i wi had murdere W the well-known Phila A that iy a wv da y, aed sixty-four yoa Mr | f the House of B ta reds § Senate and 1 the 13 pla, and & i inent ti in death 1 § ¢ and proprietor of g Wil BAYS fod i ¥ ¥. t Hghted the Ki lamp on & tabi “ he went to wile an servants, In his absence t sion occurred and the dining wn flames, Mr. McCune made lis his w and the servs and » % t stairs § im for their lives, In a it the fames had envel 3 4 $i iI means « WA 3 BOVE except wpugh the smal & ther end, and f i Bi South and West. Tux bill introduced into the Benate by Mr, Edmunds to provide for defraying the extraor dinary expenses inonrred in consequence of the assault upon the late President Garfield, su. thorizes the secretary of the treasury to pay the necessary and reasonable expenses fneurred in behalf of the late President, provided the ag $100, Go Foreign News. Conronat punishment of negroos In Cuba is to be abolished by the Bpanish government: BRINGING HIM TO TERMS, A Scout Tellin About Brighnm® Young's Ave | reat by General Harney, “You must have seen considerable of General Custer during your life on remarked the reporter irquiringly, ss the scout lighted his longer exists In the colonies, but has given place to a system of apprenticeship, ii 18 bell i 8 si “lie i feigs U1 lery ory sped 1 the thind gallery, IY nt attempt on the fe of Gen i eral Fife r of the RB al {net, & sense Of Inoroas I danger is { fuse Seven earthquake shocks are reported from New Zealand It was brought out in the trial of negl sian police ofticials in BL Petersburg mirth assassin ed Emil Catharine ff and the others on the day « ied on with & bomb under his 8 fellow work if hi ¥ ale the tors should fail. ‘on attacking the clergy three Spanish edi tors have been ex municated OXLy oie American is reported to have lost his at the Vien ator fire Tux agitation against the payment of rest tinues in Ireland. Forty farms seized ander sn for rent were offers 1 for sale at Cork hased for the la: fen canta Lhe ¢ ied the rent, A A A A FORTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS, Menate, MM petits enants sel ra and bills fo await Cameron, of i ¥ tabled Mr SROrEan, ia conan: . \ 3 af a; te wi : the £1 rem { 8 PERS pays, 30 ¥ ¥ hs ex 3 that Pr ! Davis Ww th the Mosars, Bh i i, Dawes, lap 4 1 8a . ¥'a % § i 3Y MOTIR Weres ape ted ¥ 164 i 13 i i » ¢ iis a he { 8 memorial apon the donih of dent Garfield... Among the bills one making the trade dollar a iil for defraving eXhecs + RENAL ‘sited Siates, ioroRse Of ajundioation of Ponsion S13 Ana 8 m " tor auire to the cond ¥ we i edoostion in the Unite be 5 thereon, and also a8 10 wh in "the t fon of the committee, (x —— can law. fully ane | properly enact in aid of such educa i hs from the : Pp \ ! ok cor . i if the New Yu i | right of Messrs, Mil ham $0 occupy seals in the Nenste, 1 that they 1 tabled and the ¥ discharged from their further consideration, He Stuted briefly mmitiee did not think an one por A spax of the dros lage over the Missour river ad St ( 5 M A, RAVE way, precipita. | i a train of thirty-two oars into the engineer was killed a other wal Bea is were in p 6G. Epa o murder of Miss Sallie Wat red, ypu was executed at War. for th , Ark, to the pit low, where stantly killed by the fall 0 8 sister-in-law and danghter of a wealthy | cation. Others gave the r; and on the same day, at Little struggle and calmly an : 5 ] J colored, was has for the the furnace, whi The alarm throughout the eit the neighborhood with a crowd tend he the mu A added to the foart Within ten minute am foaseasi ion of the auditor rigade was on the ground, endeave ning to resoue The walls near the chol a knocked away. and of ple were thus free, I ti i= ing builk i , howeve 80 flores that the firc men we scheme of deliverance, ve up this held large blankets outstretohied, and into these the im- prisoned men jumped from the ows of the first floor above the pit. In tl fifty sons were rescued ‘without roCely Then the heat became so inte impossible to stand near the burning theater _ the brave fire men wore obliged to give uy the work of rese All who remained within the walls of ry heater at this 6 were 1a doomed, and the shrieks of the vi as they slowly roasted fo death were agonizing to the great multitude who watched the progress of the fire. By 11 o'clock, in a little more than four hours, the flames had done their work, and pothing remained of the R thes te ir b ut the | four walls and the statutes of the three muses and the gilded a he d wi ith his trumpet, which ornamented its ful front. It was many hours more pe re it was possible to explore the ruins in S0ATCh of the bodies. Additional details from Vienna say that 58( bodies had been recovered and that the num ber of missing is 917. On the arrival of the fire brigade after the fire broke out it was | found impossible to penctrate be youd Ah » first | tier of the the aler, the rush of & smoke and sir extinguishing the torches, The firemen retired mentary impression, focating 1a anne and under « no boeanss their shouts were not answered, that there were no more pe opla in the theater. Those who eo soaped on tho § firat alarm, however, soon nnd Yeosived them, Au other effort was then made to penetrate the between a mass BOme 80 Was the and was interlocked blazing. In the second of corpses closely Darrow passage third galleries discovered, that it erod was got out alive, but all the rest were dead. These were persons who had lost their way in consequence of the turning off of the some irresponsible person with a view to pre- vent an explosion, Bome men were found with their hands grasping each other's throats, Bab. sequent investigations showed that in some canes pufudns finding escape hopeless had oom- mitted suicide, It isstated by survivors that women were seen to throw their children from the galleries into the pit. At the time of the outbreak of the flames, the gallery especi dally allotted to ladies was full, Subscriptions wer immediately opened for the relief of the fami. lies of the dead, the emperor heading the list with 25,000 florins, sss King Kalakaua's first visit on bis re. turn to Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, was paid to his sister, who had reigned in his absence. He found her sitting in a’ straw hut, surrounded by natives, Thus informally she listened {0 his talo of a jonrney round the world, and told him in return what his ministers had been doing in his absence, No less than 141,000 children recently presented themselves for the examina- | tion for Scriptural prizes in the London Board Schools. Four thousand copies of the Scriptures were given as prizes, ' The service cof presentation was at the | Bishop of Manchester, 1 Bannds Ts, also +01 i COLLISION between two freigl it trains at Ki i Gevesar Hexny B. Baxyixe, Congress for Ohio, died Cineinnatl, entered t OX a fow residence Ho out & general, in 1873 was elects as a Liberal Republican, d¢ B. Hayes, and was re-ele aged War a private, came wl to Oo re ing Rot tod in 15874. Jonx Eras, his wife and child were drowned while attempting to cross a creek in California. Cuosa Tsa Yo, the United States, near VEAL L, he feat her ford accompanied by his wife, secretary and suite, numbering fifteen persons, arrived the other day in San Francisco, From Washington. Dunia the flscal year 1881 the number emigrants arrived in the United Slates was | 680,431, of | preceding year was that of the { June 80, 1873, when the | arrived was 450 803, year ended pumber of emigrants Of the emigrants arrived | during tho last fiscal year, 210,485 were from i Germany, 153,718 from the United Kingdom of { Great Britain and Ireland, 49,760 from Sweden, | 2,700 from Norway, 15,387 from Italy, 11,800 { from China and 11,203 from Switzerland, Tue state department received nows of the | death, at Santiago, of General Judson patrick, of New Jersey, United States minister *o Chill. General Kilpatrick was forty-five years old, and during the war was a well-known | cavalry leader in the Union army. A Wasnrxaron dispatch says that the lady of the White House will bo Mrs, John Davia, a daughter of ex-Benator Frelinghuysen, and the wifo of President Arthur's private secretary, | Bho is regarded as a very accomplished woman i and well qualified for her new social duties, Tur Seoate committee on privilege: and elections has reported that there is no evidence to sustain the charge of irregularity and fraud preferred against the return of Bonators Lay ham and Miller, of New York, Hox, Frevpnick T, FRELINGHUYSEN, nomina- ted by the President to be secretary of state aa gnccessor to Mr, Blaine, was born in Millstown, Somerset county, N. J., on August 4, 1817, He is a nephew and was the adopted son of Theo- fore Frelinghuysen, ex-president of Rutgers college. Ho was graduated from Rutgers college in 1886, and thres years later was ad- mitted to the bar. In 1861 he was appointed attorney general of New Jorsey, receiving a res appointment in 1866, On the deat h of United Bates Senator Wright, in November, 1866, Mr. Frelinghuysen was appoined to fill the vacancy, tnd the appointment was extended by the leg- islature to cover the entire term, which ended in 1869, In 1871 he was elected to the United Btates Senate for a full term, to suceced A. G. Cattell. He left the Senate in 1877. Bince that time he has devoted himself to his private af- fairs. Mr, Frelinghuysen’s nomination was | promptly and unanimously confirmed by the | Senate, enn. resalled in the death of ane reman and brakeman, i ERxoR Sr. Joux, of Kansas, has fssued a | sation offering reward ranging from | } to $500 for the arrest, eosnviction i punishment of persons violating the law pro } uibiting the manufacture and sale of intoxi- | | cating | AROS. YE roasins adie or by the memorial wen taken up and Moss Garland and Bock denounced and Mr, Morrill defended the On motion of Mr, Morrill the ills ol were then referred 0 the commit the subj House, | delegates, except the one After consider. ii 1 chiefly by the the following: ri ¥ni il de legate in entitled to be this H HH ih as del is ON 6 pris A » cing made to this tion, m arising, the swear i th from Utah was postponed 0 the ne , and the members proceeded t ats, ‘The fo lowing commits, { Jaks appropriate ion upon the death of President Garfiend Was apc dnted : Messrs Mek in! y. Ps a, Belford, Waite, Fi ney, Dunn, Martin, David { #On, of bt rida, Ris pl ns, Canton, Orth, Kas i | i i |] f ¥ Carlisle, Gibson, Dig! , Bor, vy, MoLans, Barris, Danneel, Hooker, Ford Hail, Hill, of New Jor ¥, ew York, Vance, Gi b O'Neill Chase, Alken, Pettibone, Mills, Joyes, Tucker, | Wilson, Wi iliama, of Wisconsi n, and An lereon. CE ———— The Attorney-General’s Office, The annnal report of the attorney-genoral recommends an increase in the number of jus supreme court, There were pend r July 1, 1851, 6 211 eriminal prosscations, viz., 3,104 for violations of the internal revenu laws, S08 for violati ms of cus‘oms laws 276 fur violations of postoffice laws, 355 for Prose. entions under the election laws, 158 for violati of the civil rights acts, 63 under naturalization laws, 33 under intercourse laws, 88 under pen. ston laws, 77 for embezzlement and 1,740 mis. cellaneous prosecutions, The i { i United States in civil suits during the last year and the amonnt sctually collected lass year on these judgments was $185,962.84, while $70,040.12 was obtained dur- ing the yoar on jadgments rendered in former years for the United Statos: $130 968.06 was otherwise realizod in civil suits. The aggre gate amount of fines, forfeitures and pe imposed during the year in criminal pros tions was $314,785.87, and the amo gut of th me fines, forfeitures and "ponaltie a collected during yoar was $62,650.38 while $11,858.85 was realized on fines, forfeitures and pe naltics im posed in former years, For expenses incurred in 1878 and prio: years there wore paid during the last flsoal yoar $11,805.28 out of the appropriation made in the several judicial districts, For expenses incurred in 1878 proper there wore paid during the fiscal year $29,429, 40 ; for expenses incurred | in 1879, $305 508.99 3 for expenses in 1880, $640.72 1, 10, Of the expenses incurred during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1881, $2,718, 186.47 were paid to United States marshals, attorneys, clerks, jurors, witnesses, ete. Tao appropriation for foes of marshals for 1881 was $660,000, $610,731.21, boing the amount advanced to them, or pald on adjusted accounts, prior to July 1, 1881, for their fees and exponsos, SE ———————— ‘Mewuring Dreams, The longest dream, says the Medical Monthly, lasts less than ten minutes, A man fell asleep as the clock tolled twelve. He wakened ere the twelfth stroke died away, having in the interval dreamed that he committed a crime was detected after five years, tried and condemned. Shook of finding the halter avonnd his neck awoke him to consciousness, when he discovered that all the events had happened in an in- finitesimal fragment of time. Moham- med, wishing to illustrate the wonders of sleep, told how a certain man, being a sheik, found himself, for his pride, a poor fisherman; that he lived for sixty /eRLS, bringing up a family and working rd; and upon waking up from his long dream, so short a time had he been asleep that the narrow necked god bottle, filled with water—which he k he overinrned as he fell gsloep «=h t had time in which to empty 1 3 the Jur before the beginuing of an operatie i performanco at the Ring theater in Viens | ana of the ling places of amusement in thu i Austrian « spital--8 fire broke oul through the fall of a lamp on the stage Immediately | aftorwar f there was an ex ion of gas and { then the audience, comprising about 200 persons, was plunged in darkoess, A terrible BOY if pando onsmed The rapidity of tha { 4 vented the sudience lnary means of exit, snd m tl thind story to the stimated loss of life is 300 the bodies taken oul were fearfully red, i i Ha ¥, & % wis banged at ant I Cansda, ford murder of & fellow | AN ¥ v ina J i colliery resulted fn tl i SIV-8IX persons 1.4% win state that 400 bodies had been re { y the ruins of the Ring theater, Vi A hat the loss of lif violy i | i ““ You, I was with his command oo- time he eameo to the plains until the time of his death. I worked for him but very little asa soout or guide, but hunted for him at various times. I was at the Rose. bud agency at the time he was mas. | sacred.’ : “ He was a good Indian fighter, he not ¥”’ “That depends upon what yon mean Wis by a ‘good Indian fighter.’ He was a very brave man, but a rashly brave man, [do not think the Indian was ever born whom Custer was afraid of, He appeared to take perfect de. light in exposing himself to danger, and oftentimes when there was no nse Lis doing He nasal to balt his command at sight of Indians, and himself ride forward to reconnoiter, uld Or scliEe in BO He wo ride up so nesr them that they would open fire on him and then he would turn in his saddle, swing his hat for the trooy 5 to without waiting for th with him, put spurs to his horse and dash down upon the Indians with the bullets fairly raining around him, “Now, my idea of a brave man and good Indi ris one who first as. certains the strength of the cnemy, and then, if he thinks he ¢ win, makes the attack with coolness and jndgment, [hen let him show his bravery by fight. ing lika the devil in my opinion it is for and, up come on, mo some an Deh an poor generalship a commanding officer to needlessly put himself in a position to be shot at the very outset of nt, and thus take a chance an eng 0m of leaviy g his command without its leader, If to bo afraid of nothing, is to be brave, Custer was the bravest of the brave, Harney was the best mili tary leader for the plains I ever met. He was cool snd deliberate in Lis bravem 88, but was a lion ina fight.” a" “When were vou with him ? “1 was with him at the time of the i untain Mead w massacre, and I went Salt 1. ke City with him when he went down he or Young. Ni to interview Brigham was an incident con. ww there } nected with that trip that I do not think was then reported, or has ever been written ny It shows the kind of a man Harmey “Tall mu . “ When be heard about the massacre be sent out scouts to find ont who the murderers were, and when they re. ported to him that they were Mormons, off he went with Lis entire command | for Balt Lake City, swearing every rod little while, and then declared that he bad started for Salt Lake City, and he would go there if ho was court-martialed and shot for it nd he went, (00 ; and if the war de ari ent ever heard of it no aolion was take We camped a shori distance culside the city, and slaved a few days to give the animals a rest, and they needed if sadly, for we bad | 4 ast. The morning that Ww Arted | ack to Yuma a young girl, or eighteen years old, came | ont Cammy and appl lied to Brady, the 1 master, 10 Leip her CEOAPE. Het parents were En gli sh, who had coined the Mormons not long before, and ope of the elders wanted to marry her. Her parents were lrying to force her to ous marriage, and she oonl void it by running AWAY uncle and aunt in San Francisco, and to them she wanted to go ‘ Brady wasn't the man to say ‘no’ under such circumstances, and he stowed her away in the flour wagon by piling the barrels around her in such a | way thst she conldn't be seen from wore sulllcient | or did in fact 1d] was of the Way Lat he would havg the murderers if be had to hang covery Marmon in Utah. He intended to give Brigham Youn 8 twenty-four hours to! surrender up the mun lerers, and unless this was done, Latter r-Day Saints would ity searoe arot ind there, Before reached Salt Lake City a messenger k os with orders from the war for Harney to return to eivil anthorities wonld acre business, Then rd the « id man be wmigl we 5 4 Ave Lt RWOAY never met a man who could A Wear ¥ ntly than Harney, “ He thought the matter over for a either end. Wo hadn't gone far befor a dozen Mormons overteok us, the girl's father being along with them, and they went through that train until they | found the girl. Alter they got her out she tarned to Brady ad bade him good-bye, at the same time thanking him for trying to help her. That, of course, gave him dead away, and the Mormons arrested him for kidpaping the girl, and away they all went toward city. Harney saw that there was something wrong with the train, and back came a messenger to see what was the matter. As soon as Saney was in. of what bad oconrred, he or dered the train fo hall ‘aud stay there putil he got back, and, swearing worse than before, away he and all the troops went for the Mormons, They bad a long start on him, however, and reached the city first, Do you oF pose Harney the city? Not a bit of it. he went at gallop, and when he fromm his horse and cried “ Halt!” it was right in front of Brig- | cffice. There was a guard on with a musket and fixed as he bronght his weapon a duty there kavoned, but 4 turned the guard half round, and the instant bo was disarmed. Harney office with a hall dozen sand two minutes strode into the center of a troop of cavalry, “It was fun to the Mormons see but before tl ey had time to we wore out of the About city. v and it wasn't long before a lot of Mormons came riding vp as fast as their horses could earry them. When they got up within sound of his volce Harney ordered them to halt or he would fire on them, and thoy halted, Then he ordered Brigham to tell them to go back to the city aud bring Brady and the girl back with them, and said to Brigham: ‘If they are not | here inside of two hours, I'll fill your carcass full of government lead.’ “¢ Yon don't dare to,’ says Brigham, “ + Why, you, says Harney, ‘1'll shoot you myself!’ “Long before the {wo hours were np Brady and the girl were there, and | when we got to Yuma Harney sent a guard with her to San Bernardino, on | { her way to San Francisco. That's the f man Harney was."— Detroit ROIS Of Interest to Fowls, An Italian law court has just had to decide a case of great interest to fowls, The Duca di Lavello and his brother, San Marco, had pat. ented an instrument called “the me- | for feeding and fat- The | oruelty to animals prosecuted the two noblemen before the tribunal of Naples, and they were sentenced to a fine, the judge remarking that he thought it was | certainly cruel to make fowls eat when | they were not hungry, snd to fatten | them grossly for the mere delectation of | epicures’ palates. Bat the duke and the marquese appealed against the decision, | and the judges of the higher court, while regretting that hey had to give | up a whole day to what they described as a trivial question, felt bcund to re- verse the decision of tho lower court. They decided, in fact, that to fatten fowls with a mechanical stuffer, is not eruel. a —— Some one has discovered that ** Lovd Nelson omitted to wash his hands for the space of eight years.” He must have had some very important buviness “on hand” all those years, and didn't waut to wash it off. — Norristown Herald. ite Smo The gent ontton RE in the { world is E. Richardson, of Missis. | nippl. Ho has 52,000 meres of land, {and raised last season 12,000 bales of cotton, He expresses the oil from his cotton seed, obiaining thirty-five gal. ons from a ton worth 812.25, while the “ America,” says an Englishman, “is a place where a man's statement is not worth two cents unless backed up with "a it us that time, — Detroit Free Press, Sr ———— The Ottawa (Kan) Republican thus quotes: Mr, Harvey B, F, Keller, recorder of deeds, says: 1 have bees long convinced of the merits of 8t, Jacobs Ol], and use it in my family for rheumatism successfully “What is the best attitude for self defense 7 said a pupil, putting on the gloves, to a well-known pugilist. “Keep a civil tongue in your head,” was the significant reply, An ex-consul of Great Britain, says the Brooklyn Eagle, related that Mr, Charles Townsend, Bedalio, Mo, was cured of rheumatism of the worst kind by Bt J noobs Oil. — 1ndisnapolis (Ind ) Sentinel Plush costumes are among the most elogant of the importations, and the novelty is to trim these with leather- work in borders and in arabesque de- signs, y Femuln Complaing ." Dr. BV, Pen 6, Buffalo, N, Y.: Dear Sir. I write to tell you what your * Favorite Pre. seription™ has done for me. 1 had been & great sufferer from female complaints, especially “ drageing-down," for over six years, during ma hoof the time unable to work, 1 paid oat hundreds of dollars without any benefit Lill | took three bottles of the * Favorite Press rip tion,” and I never had anything do me so much good in my life, 1 advise every sick lady take it, Mus, Ewviy Ruoaps, : Me Br ides, Mie bh. Tur youngest of the revivalists sre Ben and Lotta Joyoe, who exhort and sing with great skill, aud are moeting with wonderful sucoess in Bouthern Mississippl, They are t wins, sped fourteen, The Dead Cannot be Hailsed, nor if your lungs are bLadly wasted away can you be cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's tu Golden Medical Discovery.” It is, however, unequaled as ¢ tonic, slterative and nutritive, and readily cures the most obstinale cases of bronchitis, coughs, colds and incipient eon. sumption, far surpassing in efficacy cod liver oll, Bend two stamps for Dr. Pierce's pamphlet on consumption and kindred affeo. jons, Address World's Dispensary Medical Associstion, Buffalo, N ¥. Ix the new vity of Palins TUN ne ar ( Chicago. 8 bandsome-looking roofer, who for more than three months did work on the highest buildings with a» much skill ss the best workmen was discovered to be & young woman in disguise. Young and ‘middle. aged men suffering from nervous debility, premature old age, loss of memory and kindred sympto ras, should send thrdo stamps for Part VI{ { of pamy hiets issued by World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. ¥ Berore the civil war the exports of pecay nuts from Indianola, Texas, wore reported st $100, 000; now is is estimated that the amount anny- ally gathered exceeds $2,000,000 in value Ss On Thirty Days’ Trial, The Yaltale Belt Oo h Marshall, Mich, will send their Lloctro-Yoltaie Belts and other Eleo- ri Appliances on trial for thirty days 0 any erson afflicted with Nervous Debility, Lost tality, and kindred troubles, gusrantecing complete restoration of vigor and mashood, Adi rom as above withont delay P. 8 No risk is incurred, as 80 dave’ trial is slow Busse Drzans. Excitement of the brain snd pervous system is the direct ease of sleep. jessness, as also of harassing dreams. Von vine has & peculiarly soothing effect in all such oases, taken just before going to bed, THE MARKETS NEW YORE. Beef Cattle Mad, Nat live wi, #1 1084 Calves Good Prime Veals , b @ v4 ne i hema enesien. 30000 850 hssbusntadne be@ N va saud van . 6 @ 64 are or oi! BY. covnarnn ie & {4 ,, good to fancy 865 @ 80 WY on n, geod to cholce 6 05 &@ Wheat No. 2 Bed 1405 @ 148 0 1404@ 141 @ gt 8 6 @ TH fh 56 40 @ 8 8 2 9 Hh @ = - 8B a BD 8 L185 ll 0 Belin A160 @1l elrolenm--Urade, |. oie. . Gia x Hofined A i tier z Gt 42 @ 2 4 86 ee 2 Shes «0 12 & ¥ tb 11%; Eas @ 3 Potat @ 287 Stogan-- Good Shippers........ 380 @ 565 {a 100 @ 850 XY Si wi i x fa) bo 600 i 675 @ 798 1 i @8158 8 @ 68 % © H0 Ba uw ao Ww Beef 50 In i 64 7 Hi City sa 9 i Ext weper bbl... 1650 @17 00 Flour J Patents, , S80 & 900 Corn 72 5 Onts 551i 57 Rye . 1065 ‘© i110 Wo by 3 a » eg S 0] WATERTOWN (MASS) CATTLE MARKET. Doel. Extra quality. .... creas 878 @ 750 Jambm ,... .ooconnnsnnnnn ‘ise o » Home, Northern, dressed, ..... he Es PITILADRLPIIA, Fioar--Poan, Ex. Family, good 650 @ 60 Wi at - Na, SBed. i. .onceis 140 @ 141 Ry fate, , ’ 8 @ BB wi Niate « HH B Onts~Bised ....oonsenans 4 @ Batt Creamery xtra Pa. $2 @ «© boos New York Fall Ore 1a 13% Vol troleum-—Crade, . ...u0.. van 6 @ 7 Refine we 7 Yesin AM CURED. NEURALCIA. Pr. Wasnmearox, Wis, November 15, 1878, H.R. SrEvExs, Fag. Boson: Dear Sir Having been 8 great sufferer fro New. palgia in my bead, 1 was (nduced to try VedxTing {from seeing it advertised in a Gernmn paper), and after using not quite one bottle am cured. 1 have no h ouitat] oft in raving it is the best wedicine I ever weed, and take pleasure in recommending it to othe: 1, [oure, CHAS, GRAY. 1 know Mr. Graf and ¢ can inde sree th eabove, [have sold VEarTixk for some time, and it has given good satisfaction, M. ANDIER, Druggist. Money with Doctors DYSPEPSIA. Carrascosa, Tenn, April 8, 1878, H. R, Srevexs, Bosrox Dear Sir-Having received your Vearmivg, and being troubled with Dyspepsia, and having lost agreat deal of money with doctors, they doing me no good, i thought it would be well for me to try your VERGE. yx, and found it te be better than all the medicine the doctors gave we, 1shall Always koep it in the house, and would recommend it to all troubled with the above disease, 1 am your well wishor, NO, W, OALVIN. X L.ost | Have Not Had a Chill Since Using .+Vegetine. FEVER AND ACUE. July 24, 1878, BrevENs: mR SireFor several years 1 have been suffering from Fever and Agus, Have need Quinine and other poisonous medicine to hveak ww, the chills, until my general health became £25 wv. Finally, through the advice of a friend who had used your Veourixe, / irded it, and it worked on my system dhe a charm, have not had a chill gince [ commenced using the Veoxrise, and my health and strength are mpidly fmproving. 1 regret that 1 had not heard VeEGETINg long ap ‘? 1 beliov alt wonld have saved uch suffering and exponse, Very regpectiu a . MRS, ANN GREEN. SriavereLy, IL, Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists. 30188 21 08 5) DESY ITS} Sod wine \p 10 NS: Po Box 6, Washi aaBingtonD; PATI i i That is, Ay Ee ets and viel. ble sign of » lack of RI in the perform. ance of the bile-secreling function, and thai the bill fluid bas strayed from its Jropes channels, impeding digestion, Sntrderiig She bowels and producing sggra disorder, No time shonld under such cirewmstances, in resorting to anti-bijlons remedy, Hostetter's Blomach Bit ters, the good effocts of which is in nothing more consplenously shown than in its reformatory action upon the great bile.socreting Renewed activity, when the liver is sla . regular sction of the bowels, the d rance slok- ~enduchon Jaaribuin, flat mt aud in in the region of the organ princi arbed, may be anticipated with ant eonfience by suy bilions subject who begins with a course of this peerless regulator, and debilitated or nervous sufferers o petits the greatest bene fit from its tonio influence, while ils Mioacy in rheumatism and kidoey weakness is equally weil authenticated, Bron of 11 TARY Brac ¥, of the New York Children's Aid society, roports that young childzen of six, five and sven four years aro still employed in elty factories, Heer Afteets the Kidneys and it may seriously interfere with the Jesitn unless promptly sountersciod, and for this pur poss Warner's Bafe Kidney and Liver Cure has Bo equal, Tue number of ministers in the United Bistes anid to be shout i“, 006, For pysrersia, — : of apirits and general debility in their various forma, also 85 & preventive against fever and ague and other intermittent fev the Fauwo Paosruonaren Eris or Cavisays Bang, made by Caswell, Hazard & Company, New York, and solid by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for patients recovering from Pte or other woknon it has no roqusl, For a Christmas present bay one of the Mass, Orga n Co's Harpetten, snd your children will be delighted snd give you musie in your own Lone these long winter evenings, “ Hough on Hats, Ask droggists for it, it ny ont mia, mics, roRshion, Lid: bi En, 15a. The Beience of Life, or Belf-Preservation, s medical work for every man-—-young, middle. aged or old, 135 invaluable preseriptions. on ma ——— Ax Exonmovs Trarei Pittsburg boasts that 848.748 botiles of Canmore Lave been sold within the past six months, This shows that the great srmy of bald-heads will soon be reduced to 8 corporsl’s guard, Th Sengmving regrobents the Tha lang tn » healthy state) A STANDARD REMEDY IN MANY HOMES. : Conahs, Colds, € al Seal sot. TRS i utterly beyond ail compet! UNPTIVR CASES Fe ole og NS pe roel os & specife * Ninety. Bre ™ Con ently enpe here the dives § ar t iad with ino olats 3 & ary the Young or oid, AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL! IT CONTAINS RO OPIUM IN ANY FORM) J. N. HARRIS & CO., Proprietors, CIN INNATL o. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ICTORIAL OAL N and authentie accounts of ery fames, and in nding of the Greek and Homan 8, the crusades, the feu the discovery snd setlie cote. It contains 694 Esupires, th sysiom, the IN aeist of the Be deni ped Addvess No © Os or hiladelp huis, Pa A chatige the blood in hf et Porson Ww ach wih 1 froga § to 13wosks ma beadth, if such & thing be i Wy aa . sr 8 etter stamps, Fe. lie} wrgntiv Sf ie! i ors ¢ r sont be I. = JOHANSON & formerly Hangar a wer A NEW NOVET, By the Author of “ONE SUMMER." AUNT SERENA. By Braxens Wiis Howann, 1 vol, i6me. S038 “ A vouch stvongsr novel than One Summer,’ The canvas is broader, there are more characters, the theme i» more complies, and there is the same breezy, healihy tone andy niet ky umor which marked Miss Howard's earlier wo Traveller, JAMES BR. 0%G00D & Oty Boston, TRUTH: ray - me. J s MART INA on i. F # Ted will fr US eerie wih wg J wa, wud Sok of Bids, send» BURR i wife, pievelming ally be : poe of mowing, med LE tw al san ind GARFIELD Obaeon _ Han Rie wd in § S Carver (2d od to Whi fe House, full sceount of 4 drawl Bi Soot #ivie - u Ty oH : tadge, Ki fib. Publ: hers Provid: FAN IHEAPEST TJOOKS If THE Muonulat yk [ORLY sory of Shand op. Limrature 7 ge pet ve Pee tio vols. 18s vol. handemuely wre pr oth: ond re boand, for only §9 ote, Pre NMANBATTAN DOOR OO. 1s W. 1th 80. XY, 1.0 Dax 888 HOW TO DECORATE YOUR HOMES for Christmas, with {lastrations, in MORENT"S SNTH LY for Jdanua oe Address 1 41h St, Rew York. OPIUM Morphine reo Tt in 10 till Cared, Dx. . ps 4 EEREN Lebanon, Ohio, »- JA OAT ON WA wot wt oo —— YOUNG NEN learn Folocraphy 1 ft s aod be certain of 2 situation, address Valentine Bros, Supowiiis, Wis, JENTS WANTED for the Hest and Fastest. 5 Pictorial Books and Bibles Prices red ood Nations! Publishing Oo., Philadelphia, Pa a week in your own tosn. Terms and $ onthi free. Add's B, Havuwrr & Co, Tortiand, Maine, Revolvers Cusiagos free. Sddress, Catalogue Tree, GUNS Great West. Gun Works, Tote, ™ A BY AK AND EXPE 8 T™™ $7 1 11% ENTE Outfit free yr Re 4 P. 4. Vickery, Augusta, Me, ¥ LA Selling Boilers, ete, Sole Pump Combined. printin and al following iow prices has boen 8 years; he alws ays su swells sand 3 on » Rigs, making himself at ho : Hance and leaving me Jn Last winter be rae and sla then decided that the next | nge Lis diet. Was e at him with, bat finally him three squags meals maming,. Boon 8 furs! with, snd is ave by 10 IOTTOW OF DEX ss he es Leravoch. Boss, Juss ive him At he won't slop long, I ~ PEERLE! “WILSONI WILLIAM Mi WILSON, Medical E ar May be consulted m 10 AM. to : CAR a IAR SALI Fork, WINTER IS U AREA zo WEBSTER'S RABBI in Sheep, Russie ond Turkey s Get the § Stendend, | +4 T™H Sandenrd 33 oon Lots Svsting ». wif Aer isa 3 ent, Te ‘eacher, ¥ ford , Irth 00 Shares of 816 —h at p £0 ove: For sok 10 re a me u« 7 ihe fe a Pare ees, o¥Fig Ena. Thi po npal 4° Butatum 3 deiphin its aes ok x. Room Hal Detailed papoctn Wilh LE ae atid free tous 1-horse power - - » ns R¢ home bowep - a a horse power - - = = OSS POWEr » + - pis Shores power - Orse power - Bend for descriptive circular, Address =o A HE x 1 oo. "SPIANOFORTES riapaifonh « Bo tday presets: squate Fate Padofor tes four very tag lsome round oo BETS, Tae] Sane cues Whiter Bn Beatty's pa chia ep CET, Shel. SILL 73 to e287 0; culos prio. Ix; sstisl action Surah anton ey refused, alte yearsuse; U ax innefo aren HA wrod Jogue prices Sey S06 Lo S860 han of the ui ¥ thonsanis testil a tania Beat’ - rs eT church, chapel. patior, rd. Ee peti peer tr Ep ¥ edition} 1 esll ANTEL FRAT, Wise dumars. $510$20 ILE Pe SERERIR "ESTABLISHED 1544, TODD, Oakum, and Bagping Machinery Mayber's New Patent Aetoe Steam pa Ae ion To J. C. TODD, Paterson, N. J. > 2 stelane and receiving bo benef day and night gasping for Beth mysel! by compoknding roots | EP cnt in patient cae after using cue hole send me your address for a trial pack can sendith mail on rece of the tor, Wooster, Ohlos or £LBER] iE, 36 Tans, HS 1. 1 STRATED on TALOGL trating more than 100 SiFje of O about organs generally, which w aid. Address MASON N & HAMLIN bi) treet, XE W YORK; or 140 Wabash Ave., ho #0. his, w EVERYBODY WANTS IT. 258th Edition (New). Bound in beautiful - Price only $1. KNOW Tt THYSELF, TRAY Eps is hatever that t the ir dhe short, the book is ok is inv The best ly Sabie Ee Sver pu DIRQ, sue gold a and 4 Jloweled m warded t ghar. ih Susans iis ournals--literary, re. i £0 be bob better Jed] al work, in every will refonded r every i rebild The Rin ot ye anthor of ta 8: CATARK Li 1A Ad al, wl 8 Br eyond amciion "1a de i Sugai Yk by all i} Braseta, pried b. ork Clty, ans which have Joah MPHOVEMIN instrument = ARGED OAPACTRY: nd circi) lars AE rehasing? 0 be aud 54 Tremont Street, BOSTON: 6 Rr Sold his NEEDS and Enlarged. ch mai
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers