The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 02, 1882, Image 5

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    A MEXICAN FARM,
sm——
Life at a Haclenda in Mexico.
A woek’s visit at the hacienda of Te.
penacageo proved ome of the most
agreeable experiences of my whole tour,
Tio houce was approached from the
main road by a long Jane through flelds |
of the purple flowering alfalfa, a larger
and hardier clover; past a dark-walled
corral, or cattle-yard; a very long,
steep roofed barracks for laborers
quarters; and by a pond embowered in |
willows. From a distance, with its nu.
merous outbuildings, it had the appear
ance of a ducal residence, It is Lo
when reached, the space immediately
in front having a farm-yard appearance,
and containing in the center a very
large s1one threshing floor of the kind
in which it is customary to thresh out
grain, just as in the patios, by troops of
running horses. It 1s of rubble stone,
plastered and neatly whitewashed; a
single liberal story in height, the part de-
dows, covered with gratings and a belfry
on top. To this are added, on
probably six bundred feet in length,
Some fonts project from the wall be.
side a door opening to the family
chapel. Over the main entrance-door
is an inscription : “ Ew aguests destiero
v soledad digfrute del tesoro de la pas”
{In this retirement and solitude I enjoy
the treasure of peace) Eich principal
granary or barn (oalled ‘roje) is in-
scribed also with its title, They are
built to keep the contents cool and of
an even temperature, with walls of
great thickness, Buttressed without,
and with columns or piers of a yard
square running down the center of the
long, dim interiors, they are more like
basilicas of the early Christians thao
one's preconceived ide: of a barn.
The buildings in the central clump, | 3%
not counting those detached, cover
alone between four and five acres of
ground. The estate of which they sre
the focal poin is eighteen miles in one
dimension by six in the other, and con.
tains not less than forty thousand acres,
There are seventeen hundred head of
ueat cattle, and other things in propor
tion. On the payroll, in the week in
which 1 was privileged to witness th
operations, were laborers to the tent
of eighteen hundred and fifty, men and
boys. I confess to the fondness for
country life, and with such a novel
domain to explcre, cne must be diffien!
indeed not to be pleased. One day we
mounted on horseback to go to visit the
corrals, where portions of the animals
are kept at night according to their
changes of pasture; another, to the Ojo
de Agua, a lovely spring, made mention
of by Humboldt; again, to examine the
different erops; again, to various white
hamlets that, like the city of Tulan.
cingo, farther in the distance, dot the
plain. At Acatlan is a most charming
bronze bells yet hanging in the steeple.
One day the househo'd ensconced itself
boughs, and we drove to Zupitlan, a
the estate itself, and held a picnie.
A high grassy hill, the Cerro, behind
the house, affords wide views,
gently sloping mountains one all the
boundaries. The leading crops are
maize barley and maguey. The
tlachignero goes around every day, with
his donkey carrying wine skins, col
lecting the sweet sap from the maguey
to make the pulque.
vats of skin in his department to fer
ment, treats itin his practiced way for
a fortnight or more, and then it is ready
for sale. We see sometimes forty plow
men come in and unyoke their teams of
an evening. Toe agricultural imple-
ments of the larger sort in use are
American, but plows, spades, picks and
the like are manufactured at
Apulco, near by, more cheaply.
There are interesting home-
made weoden forks and shovels vet re-
maining. Among
table Egyptian plow of wood, with
but an iron peint, is much more in use
then the modern sort. And for its pur
pose of turning shallow furrows and
plowing between the rows of maize it
appears, to tell the truth, not ill adapt-
ed. The ground is treated by irriga-
tion, no less than eleven large dams,
one of them creating a lake two miles
long, being jolted for this purpose.
The portions of land used for cultiva-
tion are faken irregularly in various
parts of the estate, according to their
8s Las Animas, San Antonio the Larger,
San Antoniv the Less
But it is a grazing country, and the
chief industries are the raising of ani-
mals and the making of butter and
cheese. The greater part of the cattle
sre hornless, which is effected by a
simple process of searing the tender
born when sprouting, after which it
does not increase. The idea is worth
attention by American farmers and
those who bave to do with the trans-
portation of cattle. The calf here re-
mains with its mother under all circam-
stances. It isa quaint sight at milking-
time to see it lassoced fast to its mother,
whose hindlegs are also lassoed, waiting
by no means patiently the conclusion of
the ceremony. Each of the departments
is under the command of its own chief,
“Don Angel,”
native of old Spain, with a talent
for minutie, fills ont weekly,
a blank form, a statement going
mto the closest detail. For keeping
the tally of revenues which amount to
$20,000 a year his own salary is £400
“and found.”
besides, various lands and casitas of his
own—a person of substance, in fact.
He is a steady-going man of middleage,
with a prominent scar on his forehead.
1 imagined some interesting story.
vicions horse. A sensible man lets
fighting alone; there are enough at that
already. The Americans haveexcellent
ideas. They all work; all wish to im-
prove and make money. Without
money & person might as well take him-
self off to the cemetery at once,
The butter and cheese making is
under control of “ Don Daniel.” He is
a large, handsome young man, with
rosy cheeks, coal-black hair and beard,
and excellent teeth—a picture of
assembles uronnd him congenial spirits,
choruses as, :
“Amarillo si, amarillo no,
Amarilla y verde me lo pinto,”
the sedate and the fatigued have gone
to bed. Another inmate of the house-
hold i3 a youth cf eighteen, a very volu-
ble young person, Salvador, who prof-
fers himself often as a guide. He is a
cadet learning the business of conduct-
ing a hacienda; or, as some think, a
young ecapegrace of good connections
put bere to be kept out of mischief.
Outside the household are the mayor-
domo and the sobresaliente, chief aids
of Don Rafael; the pastero, who looks
after the pastures; the eaporal, who has
principal charge of the stock. These
are officials of a humble order, dark,
blanketed men, bandit looking
enough on horseback, but in reality as
gentle as need be wished for. The
peons or day laborers live in about as
poor a condition as the Irish peasants
—except for having the advantage in
climate—receive from gix to thirty-
geven cents a day for their labor, and
seem without either chance or ambition
to better themselves. There is a
prison room at the mansion, where one
18 occasionally locked up for a couple
of days. Not tbat it is permitted oy
law, but “they are not civilizated,”
the proprietor explains, in English
which still leaves something to be de-
sired. “Nobody meskes any disturb.
ance abont it, and otherwise they would
not work.”
The family spends a small portion of
the year here, in an informal style of
virg. Servants and all call the young
Lik Ohoiita, a diminutive of her
name, Soledad. There is no expecta-
tion of receiving or paying visits in the
neighborhood, Social life, owing to
bors, does not exist,
| erness of small children in the adjoin.
{ ing hacienda shortly before,
| swarm in and out over
The place is kept us a big, gener
ous farmhouse, and not as a villa,
It has been designed for greater
state in its time. The old furniture, of
the style of the First Empire, wonld com-
| mand a premium from brio-a-brac deal
ers. The rooms are large and finely
proportioned, There are an octagon
chamber, with beds in columned niches
and another having the bed raised npon
a platform of highly palatial
The first proprietor is said to have been
a man, finally rained by his extrava
ganoe, who had half Tul lancingo at his
table; and if he were inspired by a sud
{den notion to go to the capital, one
| hundred and thirty miles, say, distant,
‘he rode his horses till they dropped
dead under him.— IW. H. Bishop, i»
| Harper's Magaine
—————
The Man Who Was Warned.
{ During the uncertain days following
| the elose of the war there were certain
{ looalities where aman who had a grudge
against a neighbor got nd of him by
writing him an anonymous letter warn
ing him to leave the State mmside of ten
days prepare fill a grave over
which no ono would feel partioularly
| interested in Keeping the grass green,
One day Colonel Blank, who had re
nioved to Arkansas from Southern Mich
igan and was attending striotly to busi
ness, received snch a missive. It was
| therule to tur u pal ¢ as death, rush home
and pack up, sell out nothing and
skedaddle on the wings of chain light
ning, bot the colo el didn't follow it
It him that he knew hand
Fritiug and be went home, buckled on
# knite and a revoiver, and took a ride
of three miles into the country, He
dismounted at the cabin of a long
haired, long-legged old swamp owl,
§ named Patterson . who was in the back
yard mending a harness. The colonel
approached him to within three feet,
and after they bad seated and discussed
the weather, the Miochigander re
i marked :
“ Patterson,
Arkansas.”
“Shoo! Anthing wrong
“1've been warned away.”
“ You don't say !”
“Yes, I've been
leave the State.”
“And you calkerlate you will ge
“Yes I'll have to be waylai
haug up.”
i Yes, I reckon that's so a
the old man.
“ But 1 want to
me to remember
tinned the colonel,
after your scalp.”
My what #*
“ Sit still, old m
through! That's - ap with
i hands! If go back to Michigan and
| tell "em: I was warned out of Arhanes: as,
‘and that I got up and dusted without
firing a shot, they'll 8 fA COWAN \
If I carry your scalp back I've got
{ something to show for the two years
I've put in here and the 26,000 I've
laid out. Old man you know the
Lord's prayer ve ow'd beter repeat it
quick, for I'm in'a dreadful hurry to
get back.”
“Say, kumel, don’t youn
kentry down here ?” asked Patt
“ Yen,"
“1s the climate all
“Fist rata.”
* Chance to make money
“Good chance.”
“Then, knrnel, dc n't go back! 1
don't keer two cents about my scalp;
somebow I've got atta ed to you and
i it will rip up all n wler feelings to
see you go! old scalp-lock
{ stay right whar' aud you stay
| right whar' you be, and if any of the
boys look ecross-eyed at you fur the
next ten years I'm a kyotte if 1 don't
drive 'em into Mexico or make
lose themselves in the ground.”
The colonel is down there yet, and
i old Patterson ne ver meets him with-
out anxionsly inquiring if he's go t over
being homesick yet. — Detroit }
Press,
or to
for
strack the
O
I am going to leave
given five days to
+}
C huckled
take something with
Arkansas by,
“and 1 came
eon.
ont
ap, or I'll bore
3 &
1%
you
Your
m
ail
call
: 3
the
€rson.
hika
Lilt
she 18,
‘en
ee —————
Sad Career of a Baron's Danghter,
The recent death of Mme. Laura
| Sweitzer, at Port Jervis, N, Y., Jocalls
one of the and emark-
able careers ever recorded Th 18 story
i of ber life, as told by Mme. Sweitzer,
reads like a romance and seems almost
{too strange to be time, ILanrs Von
| Puffnitz Steinbury, danghter of Baron
Frederivk Otto Von Puffnitz Stein-
burg, was born at Wismar, in Mecklen
burg, Germany, on the 10th of Osto-
ber, 1819. Her father was of an ancient
and highly-honored fumily, and Laura
wat a younger daughte was
given all the advant RZES ¢ 3p an expensive
education music and the German
language.
At sixteen years of age she mat
very peor youug nobleman with a very
long and honorable name, the Count
Frederick Kolstedt Schleswick Bweit-
jzer. The youug man was handsome
and pretty well edneated, but his pov-
erty was 8 bar to their union. Laura
i felt that she loved him so deeply that
she could marry no one hat him.
t old father would not listen to her en-
treaties, and finally he sent her to
saddest
31
Nia
in
id
a
| Elbe river, where he placod her in a
{ convent until she became cnred of her
passion. She contrived to let her lover
| know where she was, and thither he
{ followed her. Having
the
compensation.
{ Laura were thus
imeet daily, and affairs were
going on swimmingly when" the old
{ Baron Steinburg, having found that
{ Bweilzer had left Wismar, suspected
the true state of affairs, and came
{ posthaste to Altona. He arrived in
| time to catch his daughter i. an arbor
| in the convent garden conversing with
the forbidden iy The old baron
and the young man exchanged hard
{ wor ls, and a duel, in which the baron
{was geverely wounded, resulted.
under gardener in
modest
convent
He
enabled
at a
from Altona, were married, and
{ to America, where they landed at Castle
| Garden, New York, almost penniless,
| Sweitzer obtained employment and
| they lived comfortably several years
| Finally his health failed, and the o: ouple
i eame to Port Jervis, N.X.,
{up their abode in a little shant ty in
fa suburb. Madam Sweitzer
| winter. Bbe frequently walked fifty
| miles a day, and on
| took part in a pedestrian contest in
hours, and earned considerable money.
told the above story of her life,
was known in Pike county as ‘‘Meeshy
Maumie” or *‘the Countess” Her
death was horrible, She wus trying to
steal a ride on the night freight train
to Middletown, thirty-four miles south
of Port Jervis, when she fell under the
engine and was so crushed that her
body was scarcely recognizable. Her
husband died a few years ago.
re ——
A Relie of Guitean,
A relic at ones of Guitean and of the
great Chicago fire has been found in an
old safe, which was being rummaged
over by Snydacker & Co. Upon a
faded sheet of note paper was written
the following:
May 12, 1870.— Received
dacker & Co :
One judgment note ve, Ernest Boes, $35,
One note ve, Li 8, Warner, $265,
One judgment note vs, Jacob Forsyth, $300,
One rote ve, McGouegal, Straus & Co.,
$316.7
Ons jndgme nt note vs
(Signed)
of Messrs, Bny-
, Louise Freese, $2060,
CHARLEY 8 J. GUITEAU,
No. 2 Methodist Church Block,
Mr. Snydacker says that Guitean bad |
over a cent of money to the house.
Mountains,
A correspondent of the
Mail writes: 1 re-entered Kan-chou
Ia, having been away twelve days in
the Nan Shan mountains, and having
learned that the people called by the
Chinese yellow or Whuang Fan-tse,
Ly themselves ealled Qigours
{Mongols), and the black or Her Fan.
tue are called by the Qigours Tangut
tas, or Tangouths, The Qigours do
not bury their dead, but smear the
corpse all over with butter, put it out
on the hillside away from the living,
wild beasts of prey may take the whole
carcass; if alter a few days the whole
body is not gone, the Qigounrs consider
it an evil omen, and add more butter
and pray more earnestly that the dead
nay be devoured without delay. As to
marriage the girls are usually given to
young men of their own choosing, but
the bridegrcom must pay handsomely
for his wife. A marriage arrangement
was made the other day thus: ‘A chief's
daughter, about eighteen years old,
was promised to a young man, who
promised to give the chief, his future
father-in-law, ten brood mares, fifty
cows, 100 she ep and ten places of wool
en cloth; twice that amount was asked
by the chief, but the matter was walked
down, over buttered tea and tsamba, to
the above tune. A Llama priest ms arried
a wife a vear ago in his brother's name;
the young woman gave birth to a sonand
her parents claimed tt
as ho bad not been bargained
ontract; the pi st was then persuad
he boy, much against his
has died without
child, and the
lawsuit for the recov
which the parents of
give up on any
he Bi-fan priests
dressed in a single gar.
reaching from
and generally
of coarse leather
ble breaste d,
the waist by a
which are
¢ said son as theirs
for in the
oul
ot
{ ha
to give vp th
will;
giving
priest in
ery of the
the wom
his wife
said boy,
an refuse to RO
count, Poor bov!
and women are
ment, of ¢
the shoulder to the kn
eked out with # air
boots; the garm is dou
and i od ound
strong leather gird] o, from
suspended several things, such as a
kn chopstic ks, bits of copper,
brass and agate, and above the girdle a
wooden bowl carried for milk, tea
and tsamba. y Fant live prinei
i butter, tea aud black
tsamba, but they eat
eagorly, excepting
ceedingly fond of
call arrack, like
arians, They
OW and the
gother, and
they also
s Thibetans,
{ sorts of painte Wd
nearly naked. Bowls
nLn
nsual
ny
ug
MISH sorge
00,
18 faste
if
ey
0
€¢X
thev
asd
ther with
. #}
Inoensg [re le
—
The Congressional Lobby Worker,
Mr. J R. Randall writes from Wash-
ington to his paper, the Augusta {Ga.)
Chr think the great corpora-
deceived by the lobby
One of the most prominent of
brongh a sub-
qmr ed to
od if he
celve 000 from a ratlroad o«
and respon: ig the aflirmative.
did they pay you that
chairman *t Becanse
was worth responded the
“Did they hin you could infh
tes : gent answered that they
hat did you do I" said the
reported that Senator
ight, and they were sat-
“Did you
* said the ¢ *ha r-
rie d, “and
morning.
rigid, 1
and they paid
i ne 0,” |
gf whiel
y railroad com-
ymittee. At
this exploit is still
YiOg
QO
Lid
tions are ollen
men,
the gentry was balore
committe and
He was as
1 aor
ad oo
cath,
sum’
they thought
agent,
uepee
Bla an k Was
isfled,” re agent,
appro ach th
Ioan.
asked if
Pe anuswere a t
80 stated to th
over the
leave it to the
was the me
pany or the su
rate, the hero of
hand and still p
ind the eapitol
S2pans of poli
©
v
i
'
11e8s
wre §
Sl ny
on
7"
1
i
I avoeatic
of th it
who has
always
s th
:
18
arot : ne 3 Most
held
with
at the
much
congressmen, rule
used to spread epiourean
his Hlguor-mixer Valen
i tive floids, but
essmen who
never
I rather
employing
gr "WW weary of
vith the sinews of war
"mate rial of gastronomic
a8 gone; but his place is
filled by men "iho have ne of his
scholarship, but more nowledge of
still-hunting. ‘hether ¥ use cash
or condi y ; but their
ex by stmpluions
appointn ’ wear some of them
talk one would be persuaded that they
owned congressmen in fee simple and
sold them as corner lots to their em-
ployers. My own opinion is that this is
mere brag and botace,” and that they
would interview a royal Bengal tiger
sooner than confront the majority of
either house with a venal proposition.
Still, they li 1 thrive and want for
none of those things thas poorer people
for and sometimes imperil their
long {«
reputations and souls to procure.
ticians,
Ces and
tells me
have
as
honor Rud disting
lobby men do not
power over
Wa rd
son,
~ 11!
alter all
a
SOUL
COLT
£3 \
t that the corp
AEX Vest ib
.
oli.”
ne
nents BHO §
ded
5
ister i
3
?
i
1068 15 84
nents, and to
ive an
ee ———
Sealskin Sacques,
A sealskin sscque costs fifty per cent.
more than it did five years ago. Seal-
skins have not been worn more than fif.
teen or eighteen years, Fashion and the
discovery of new methods of preparing
and dyeing, or first the latter and second
the forme r, brought them into use.
The seal fur, as seen hare, is the
inner enat. When on the back of the
real this fine fur is hid by coarse hairs,
which are removed by a process of paring
down the other side of the skin. The
color of the fur as known to wearers is
artificial. If the government had not
taken measnuresto protect the seal new
wearers of seal sac Tues would be few in
n short time. The Shetland seals were
once numerous, but have been exter-
The Newfoundland seal is in
the market, but is inferior to the sesl
of Alaska. The islands of the Behring
sea are the only ones in the world
cial importance,
From 1751 to 1870 the scientifie
history of the seal. The Smithsonian
skin and skelaton of the seal, although
thousands of men and millions of dol-
ars bave been employed in capturing,
dressing and selling far sealekins for
the last hundred years. The
breeding grounds bordering on the
ulated.
1821 1,2
Between the
232 874 weals
years 1797 and
kins were taken on
between 1821 and
1842 458,502 skins, aad from 1842 to
1861 872,000 skine. In the year 1868
the number of skins taken was 242,000,
In 1870 only 9,965 were capt tured.
Daring the last ten years the satch has
been a little less than 100,000 per year.
The whole number taken between 1796
and 1880 was 8,661,001 skins. The
seal catching is done in June and July.
After that timo the fur begins to ** shed”
and is worthless, The natives are paid
i —— —— -
United States Senator Voorhees has
a remedy for rheumatism which, as he
hasn't patented it, may as well be wide:
ly advertised. He ga
water twice or three times per day.
Consequently I am able to do what I
|
|
|
|
ter of four miles, every day,
me.
A lesson
in language : “Bo your
| NEWS OF THE WEEK. |
Eastern and Middle States.
Tur stroots of Doston are to be illuminated
with the electric light
Ko Kux Hoa, Chinese professor at Harvard
college, and the PARAN
America, died the other evening at his
dence in Cambridge, Mass.
He was & man of high rank in his native coun.
try and leaves a widow and six ehildren
boast aduoated
resi
Pur Allan line ship Glenmorag arrived the
her day at Now York from Caloutta, having
on board thirteen shipwrecked persons,
were rescued at sea in an open boat after
left the
and Gulf Porta Bteamship com
Porto Now
York, which was in a sinking
whom
they
the
had steamship Dahama,
Quebeo
Riso for
pany, from
condition
by all
ain, l
others were reported
but two of those on board of her, The cap
Fiald Astwood, of Bermudas, and nineteen
lost, The
board
second cook
and another man remained on the ves
gol,
the
A
shanoes
ach tempestuous
with it than to risk thelr in
boats In BON,
md cabin passenger, whose room
to have been washod overboard, The seven
teen others were in the captain's boat,
as she
was swamped almost as soon
vessol's sid Two of those in her, one of
org was Charles Bmith, were
ol and were hauled on board
wer's jury inquiring into the deaths
i 1st
iotims of the late fire iu Park row, New
has rendered a verdict censuring
r. owner of the building, sud his agents
gleot,
HRISTIAN returned to
3g, N. X
his wife that he had k
his home near
the other evening and in-
illed Jonas Tomp
ther-in-law,
He said that the
. Suddenly he
o kill her, bul
ut of the house
with the head
y morning to boy cows,
body would be fo
iis wile
woesded in putting him o
ody found
The
found
Was
next afternoon the
Was in Lake Osca
of the murder, he having
3
in
Jealousy of Tompkins
his father-in
been the cause of the m
Jowell's |
ta th &ar, juries more or
other persons and
total demolishment o s boiler-hou
al den Lali Bt
Pa., tot vad th
litary academy. Th
A FIRE at iv desty
vania M
Bastar i
Lilie or, a
aonde
of whom
3 v
iis, ail om aped
| loss is estimated at $200,000
1 coal train was Passing over
iles north of Belveds
lenly gave
Lalf the train into
fy teat below. Two labs
ro killed and & brakeman
Way, pre
the
rere on the
aboul one
was fatally
leather
Washington
it & Arnold's sole
i bl
1] Was i
A Won sk, on street
ately sounded, bot when
reached 3 spot the
department
The
building
1 headway that the local
to stay their progress
rapidity,
and soon got beyond the
great the
woo!
Eogines were sum
Dover,
thi
and
burypaort
twenty to riy mil
despite hearole
re continued to spread
med as though the who
At
arrived from Lawrence,
nA, NM
that hour eng
and others
blaze,
rt and Lowell arrived
froma the n
and the freezing ¢
WIFI "i
with west,
emen to make & stan
fa total
nly three
ke and
thrown out
perso
f Houses were (
and two ot BIRO 108
The
res! $Y. le (iw sd
probaltdy fool
persons
loss on property
over $3 000 000
were valued st $350,000,
total
The
ildings burned ex
ster, Pa.,
Tae Merchants’
nded,
bank of ‘Wate rlow:
x It was affected by the
nyon & Co., of Chi .
. W. Macrantaxe & Co, of N
«t lard refining he
failed for $350,000,
in a Philadel;
has Susp
uses in the coun-
, have
A ryme which started
warchouse caused a loss of §150,000,
charred remains were found in the ruins,
South and West.
failure of several firms in Now Orleans,
Ar Grand Haven, Mich. the steamer Wis.
consin, having on board 1,000 tons of freight,
struck a pier as she attempted to enter the
harbor and sank.
mitted saicide at Henderson's Mills, Kentucky,
The act is attributed to grief over the
of a favorite brother who ran away from home
absence
and was not permitted to return,
Ax extraordinary marriage is reported from
county, Md., where H. E. White, a
boy of seventeen, was united to Ells Shores, «
pretty brunette of fourteen, Two years ago the
girl was married to her stepfather, aged sixty.
five, who was arrested for the act and {mpris
oned, the girl's friends obtaining a divoroe,
A coxprrrree appointed to solicit subserip-
tions for the relief of the survivors of the vie
tims of the recent explosion at the Midlothian
(Va,) mine have issued a circular setting forth
that thirty-two men were killed, leaving twen
ty-six widows and 100 orphaus, all of whom are
now dependent on charity. .
Rev. Dn, Winniax May Wiomrsax, bishop
of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, died
at his residence in Charleston, 8, C., the other
morning at the age of seventy-four,
lonrssox, Kansas, has been dovastated by
fire, the place losing twelve business houses,
two hotels, postofiice, Masonic hall, Odd Fel.
lows’ hall and two dwellings. Only one store
in the town was left standing.
ALpErMAN Frepeniok A. Orang, president
of the board of aldermen of Adrian, Mich., has
been arrested, charged with aiding the fagitive
young mayor of that town in the attempt to
float $150,000 worth of illegally issued walter
bonds. The bonds were sent to New York for
sale, but their spurious character was dis.
covered before any had been put upon the
market. Mayor Thomas J. Navin, the head of
the to defrand Adrian, is ony
twenty-soven years old.
Tux boiler in the Georgia Car works at Oar.
tersville, Ga., exploded, killing instantly four
negroes and injuring a number of others, two
of whom have since died.
A raxpsuioe at Coffee's Cave, on the Russian
carried tho house of Charles L.
The ocoupsnts of the
Nomersel
Lo he racy
white man employed as cook. All were killed.
Maxy small farmers in the southern
and southwestern counties of Illinois are ap-
proaching starvation on account of the almost
complete failure of last year's crops, Bome
have been obliged to sell their stock to provide
themselves with means of subsistence.
J. H. Raopgs, secretary of the Garfield Monu-
ment committe, at Cleveland, and a near friend
ceived a lettor from Mrs, Scoville, praying for
was authorized in Mrs, Garfleld’s behalf to
say that toward the slayer of her husband she
For the
sister and all members of his family sho feels
Further than this, she
asks to be left alone with her sorrow, and to
Mrs. Garfleld will not an-
swer the letter,
Mies Trosrson was hanged at Belleville,
Texan, for murder
Pur overflowing of the Mississippi river hu
twoan Memphis, Tenn, and Vicksburg, Misa,
For
until
throa
fncessantly, at last there was nothing bat
a watery waste for fifteen miles inland from
the lovees
I by hu
bank, Numeroas breaks in
urred, oattie and hogs were drowned
Buonaxax & Co,
of
NEwooss, large distillers
Louisville, Ky.»
Govenxon Cameron, of Virginia, vetoed the
bill against dueling passed by the ge
nase bly
Al
Ougruas
tate, estimates that at least
Owing to crop failares many persons in
man Dunn, of that 8
300,000 persons will require inimediate assist
¢ to provent great destitution and aot
starvation
From Washington.
John New, of
secretary of
President nominated
to
Mux
be assistant the
Tue Fits John Porter case was under con
ant cabinet moeting, and it
believed that will be taken
having it re-opened
Joux P, Gourn, of New York,
mare
action toward
has brought to
Mi A memorial than 8,000 feet
long and signed by merchants, manufaot
irers,
others re
It
wills and the two
and
the
8, farmers, faxpayora
siding in nearly every Slate in Union,
asks that the tax on bank dep
cent stamp on checks and
ished,
NOMINATIH
made by the
U'aschiuk, of raska, at Vera Cruz;
, of Distriet of Columbia,
orge Gifford. of Maine, at 1a R
Revenue (
letter Ww
drafts may be abol
Ns | msnls were
iran
Thomas
Nantes
helle,
ww Unit Niat
f tates
United States o
resident
Nel
as follows
at
INTERNAL SSIONER Raud has
the
that, as
3
and gla
them
o8 which they are used
their use may be ren
Ro
uthern Da
fav HY Pop
admission o
been ried t
Presi
r the
ENT his first state d
House,
ARTHUR gav
other night at the White
plomatic corp
¢ and daughters, were present in
flowers and other de
¢ dresses of the |
rilliant in th
& exirema
pamy mass
pastors
Was
Darsey
tiiree wilnossis, most
far We
sf, and its de
LNUA PAY was 11
The oxses
May.
wil
Soreiga News.
Ove 80 is
infernal n
two
3 { i»
Wi ag
AY
ht §
A roraceway was shot
parties,
Tuy nisters have
of &l
AYEry,
from
Aarmers
prevails among the people
prevent
}
weather
frot
them from transportation of pr
a of sleighs as
, England, 120 mine
ym bed in the pit
1
re
Thirty were
The foul
were o¥
by an expl
soon after the explosion
flooated
0
E3 RE
four men in another o
8 AWAY.
in Rus
re beaten nearly to death,
and seventy persons were
colliery explosion ia Durham,
is.
Brrwges sixty
by
England.
txnnent Spexcen, the
the
noted English philo
United States,
3 5
Lelweon
Carrick
writer, is coming to the
Suors have been exchanged th
military and the peop e al
froland,
Exaraxp, Germany, France, Italy and other
yowers have refused to conclude an
tional treaty fixing a gold and eflver coinage
standard,
Guear indignation and excitement
aroused in Germany by a speech of
Skobelefl, the prominent Rassian offic
the
General
ser, bitter
ly attacking former country and declaring
a struggle between it and Russia was in.
but that the latter
that
evitable,
trinmph.
count ry would
FORTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS,
Hennte.
Ibe report of the cattle commission on th
long plague of cattle was submitted by the
president pro tem, Mr. Jackson introduced
a bill appropriating $150,000 as compensation
to the agents of the Methodist | pine pal
Church South, for property destroyed at Nash
ville during the war r, Call then addressed
the Senate in support of his proposed amend
ment to the pension arrears i1esolution, de
i
|
In on the apportionment bill Mr,
debate
the House He favored a
Mr. Joyes argued in favor
fixing the number at B65
af 1 proesentatives,
of his amendment
Mr. Howitt ssid he wo
siiallest number
My
uit a bill
msed upon the old method
ment, Mp Clements, Mr, Page, Mr. Spooner
snd Mr, Tillman oppoked the Wl, The latter
was in favor of a House 600 members. *
Gibraltar imp regnable to bribery or intimida
Ho also favored a Renate of 300 mem
bers, Mr, Cox, of New York, submitted
modifioation of his amendment so as to fix
total number of Representatives at 819
Fhe commitios to audit the expenses grow.
ing out of the death and burial of the late Pres.
idont James A, Garfield, reported
Cox, of Now York, a bil
of $5000 a your fo
Gartleld The bill was passed |
An amendment to the apportionment bill
Mr. Anderson, fixing the number of Ropre.
sontatives at HI0 (the present number is 208)
passed] by a vole of 103 yeas to
nays The Bi that gain are Arkan-
sas, 1; California, 2: Georgia, 1; Illinois,
1 lows, Kansas, 4; Kentucky, 1;
bigan, 2;
Missouri, 1;
North Carolina,
ina, 91
1 Wis.
and Ver
and
oviding fon
jot Bhorwin Mr, Carpenter sup
120 representatives,
of ap partion
of
Eranting & pension
Mrs Laeretia
Was
Aloe
hire
nt lose one each
wortioniment
oprescntative
bill, which fixes the
a 8&1 93
hatrman of the commit
reported agricultural ap
Wai i Commities of the whole
he speaker laid before the House & resolu
{ the legislative assembly of Utah, de
thie sft Id, unreasoping pres
wiought u 3p
ture,
0
that wi
pion has been
sinformed
ich wish
pe of Utah t}
ashied
partial in
reigions nf
to rivel
B ie chains
not 10 res
deation
le gen
Utah, Re
jadiciary, ,
which Sppropri-
53, was passed by a vole of 165
nediate deficiency
Na
Hewitt,
his name
OIRO
Hsing (OR « ju stion of privilege
hind been without his knowl.
t by Mr Shiph herd
He was authorized to say
of Mi Belmont, ...
iniroduced a blll suthorizing the
of war to transfer to te
ase 100 condemned brongs
{ ction of ane wi rian statue
Jumos A Garfield, The bill to
ney of ti
in
Any
on behalf
Mr. O'Neil
® retary
Park Ant
August
ination
life-savit
of lite
Palioeo
BAVI
1h
indemnity
My
Willlaws gave a
In August, 1864,
nited Bistes
0 the last dollar.
verpment had «n
twith Great B itain,
fence the bat
in Japan
Hon Was
men
received
espoal
sevenieen
id the bill passed ami
50
HURLED TO DEATH.
ter (Pa. Firewarks Pactary.
ie of Choste r, Pa,
he pyrotec b-
which killed
nied
hg by + explosion i in
f I: C. Jackson,
riously wou
The scene of
strict of the
dwellers live,
hood,
lated di
shanty
city,
The
rod ie an his
mn erected in 1721 by |
iH sixteen vears ago it
‘orier as & residence,
aranoce now, but
{ the Porter family
surrounded by a hand.
trees, which shaded
The
8 barren
Ging Wis Constr
on a § lass overlooking the Dela
It was about forty feet long and
ide, with a peaked roof aud attic,
of ity y the factory was oo-
¥ CUP
200 OM i
Was
tall
in
waste of
it not used 1
and this was used as a
nly four persons had
Ary up to the mom.
hese were tho s ip erin.
Hora; a son of Pro-
Iwo young women
railroad torpedoes,
eceived a sudden stimuins from
uyten-Dayvil disaster, had become so great
or thres Wore YOU women wore en-
i, and a room was fitted them in
the main Lullding, A fire
~
Eng up for
ted in the
ion, and Sipe wintendent Van
7:20 o'clock he went to look at
the fire
the stove,
own he heard
he had just loft, wi
rool aud set the atl
od he 1} might by Apu
whiel to
#1 sich |
he room
of the
it
It
16g on 4re,
glove ire
¢
h “and this in tum explod-
ire was given, and
ios Movamensing Hose,
the fire department of the
$ though their members
were Ured by the
of the Mili
It was stated
Heved by the
LArY sCadeIny
the #
rem
ions night,
and be-
here was little or
wider in the building, and only a small
ntity of comparatively harmless pyrotech-
Consequently, the men worked with.
and some of them mounted
f of the frame extension to get
good position m which to direct
their hose streams, while a great
tators pressed close about the firemen.
an Horn warned them Away, but they would
not go. He and a num} others entered
the burning bailding and 1
viog the machinery,
made haste to leave the
this work was going on there
another explosion, and this, though slight and
him] wiant, caused the crowd to with
aurther r fi nu "the baiiding, thus no doubt pre-
on the prov
by tendent
fear
OAT,
the roo
{1
iIX
i
f
or of
while the
occurred a fow minutes later.
I'he work of fighting the flames had been
going on for about half an hour, and the build.
of firemen
wove subslance
an entire wing of the stone build-
fragments of stone,
Men
150 yards away, who thought they were watch.
struck and killed, Others were dashed against
ence, Others
were torn limb from limb, and one
indian wars prior to 1845,
After being further amended Mr. Edmund’s
sition,
my and disqualifies for sevice
polygamists and persons believing
to ba right. The issue of polygamous mar.
riages prior to January 1, 15833, are legitima-
tized, No polygamist is entitled to vote or
hold office,
offices of Utah
the conduct
by a board
than three
party, to be appointed by the President.
voard shall not exclu fe any person otherwise
eligible to vote from the polls on account
ang opinion such person nay
the subject of polygamy, Each house
the assembly, after its organization,
have power to decide upon the
tions and qualifications of is
are declared vacant, and
of five persons, not more
of
elu.
hie National hall and an sesistant
who was standing on the
Janitor of
fireman,
thrown to th
he lodged among the
shrieking and howling, roasting to death, for
half an hour, He was rescued by a brave oar.
penter named John WV,
teered to bring him down.
shed,
Bar bom
@ top of the main building, where
He was alive when
and Jobn Vandegrify, firemen, were
Barbour was struck
avy stone and hurled 150 feet away,
fell dead and
Vandegrift was blown off the
only shightly hurt,
on the
of the main building,
I'wo other
roof
firemen were
standing of the frame building
These,
however, were almost the only men who we re |
inate antly killed among those close to We build-
ing; the other victims were struck by flying |
Among these were John |
dices, a boy, who was found lying on the side-
walk with his head crushed by a stone,
tenses excitement. It shook buildings and
ke windows all over the city, and called al
Porter mansion, where they moaned and |
with anguish as they recognized |
friends and loved ones among the suflorers,
tivo assembly whose members hall
elected according to the provisions of this act,
the assembly may make such laws, conform-
able to the organic act of the Territory, as it
shall deem Proper concerning
offices declared vacant by this act,
Mr. Coke reported favorably from the com.
vuprove the harbor of Galveston,
it was passed Mr. Blair introduced a bill to
establish a polytechnic
Btatos or a school for
and the arts
appropriating $1,500,000 for river
ments and government buildings in Louisiana.
A resolution was offered by Mr. Call, which,
at his instance, was tabled to be printed, recit-
ing that the interests of peace between nations,
instruction
of the people of the United States,
proper that the government
States in some proper form adopt
ures to settle the controversy
Chili and Peru, and prevent the
ble dismemberment of Porn;
render
between
and composed of representatives from the peo-
los and governments of the different North,
uth and Central Americas, for the purpose
of agreeing upon some just m*thod of settle-
ment of all questions now existing or that shall
hereafter arise between the governments, would
be a wise and beneficial measure,
they supposed to be among the victims,
Women threw up their arms and shriekec
or fainted away, Some kneeled on
muddy ground and prayed, while
showed the intensity of
only by convulsive
body to fro and
oth
their |
rocking
fixed,
grief
of the
a
and n
firemen dropped their hose and devoted them-
rescuing the wounded.
tention to danger than be fore, though two or |
three other slight explosions warned them that
there was still a possibility of it. The bodies
of the dead were gathered together before being
taken off the ground, and at one time a ghastly
The fragments of bodies which were
to be
identified, after which thoy were taken to their
homes, The wounded were carried into the
nearest honees, whi re they were attended by
physicians, all the doctors in Chester and its
having volunteered their services
After seeing that all the dead and wounded who
could be reached were cared for, the firemen
Ted their attention again to the flames, and
succeeded in putting out the fire about 10
o clock, though by that time there was little
left to burn,
aae——————
People who cannot spend the seasons of winds
and cold rains in sunny Florida should keep Dr.
Bull's Cough Syrup in the house. It is the
reliove sufferers aé onoe.
A Boy’s Lueck,
cent issue referred among others to the fol
lowing cases of special interest, They are |
[ their own SomiBuTiazY. Mr. Samuel C |
| Nyoe reaides nt 808 Marshall street, and
{ holds the responsible position of journal
| clerk in the Pennsylvania Legislature, at
While Mr. Nyce and family
his boy aged |
in leg. He n
| Harrisburg.
| were in the country Mest;
| three years, fell and broke h
| covered, but a ver
| met in and he Id scarcely use the leg.
The injured limb was rubbed several times |
with Bt. Jacobs Oil, and the stiffness was |
{ #0 much reduced that the boy was able to |
use his leg freely. Dr. Knipe sald it was |
i
i
stiffness Mr. Nyce himsel! used the Great |
| German Remedy for toothache with good
effect,
| rheumatic nature, and always with good |
| effect.
| keeps it on hand.
From Berlin it is announced that an
| important and somewhat sncecssful ex
| periment bas been tried for the importa.
| tion of meat from the Russian steppes,
where enormous herds of cattle abound,
the meat of many being allowed to
perish after the hides have been se-
enred,
Its Equal is Unknown,
|
cites the case of Mr. P,
| of the Belmont Hotel, thot city, who sul.
without finding relief from any of the nu
merous remedies employed until he applied |
| Bt Jacobs Oil: “I never found any medi- |
| cine that produced such remarkable and |
instantaneous effect as it did,” says Mr
| Bhort — Lyons (ia ) Mirror,
| trees,
—— —— Sn
nie
z De Likewise.
V. Pierce, Bufialo, N. Y. 3
, I was completely (Hscom
dd with diffonlt
gon taking your *
wing the local
treatment recom.
Hg 10 seu
g me for them and inclosing a stam
Jor reply. 1 have received over four
letters, Inreply, I have described
wil
them *to do likewise’ From sa great
ive
; that they
and were much better already.”
Mus EF, Monoax, New
Me,
Sexaron Voonuwess declares that he
lemon ju
Gay,
“Pellets,” or sugar-costed
* Little Liver Pills”
Pioroe’s
the origins
Dr.
| granules
:
| headache, cleanse the stomach and bowels,
and parify the blood. To got genuine, see Dr.
stamp. 25 cents per vial, by draggists,
one of the two names on every student's bond
shall be that of 8 Massachusetts citizen,
* Beauty ( andeorned twlth |
implies) |
Adorned the ad .
kk
fatally, but the principals
were
| young lieutenants of marines,
edioal Discovery.” By druggists.
A Mure Care for Flis
roo iptof one dollar, Address J. Alonzo Greene,
In dian Doctor, 816 Pine Bt, St Louis, Mo.
* Bachupaiba.”
plete cure fur
rial or difficult urination,
iraggists, id by express, $1.35, 6 for $5.
E 8 Weus Jersey City, ]
The Science of Life, or Self reservation, &
aged or old. 125 invaluable prescriptions.
Pid You Ever Try Int
Voogmxe pat up in powder form comes with.
in the reach of all. Dy making the medicine
yourself you can, from a 50c, package contain.
r the Barks, Roots and Herbs, make two bot-
sof the lig
rladly ava'l themselve:
i
i
of this opportunity,
cine, Fall directions in every
package.
RE m( 1 ED FROM DEATH.
ts
Edilw Asch wild
BLEEDING OF vax Lowes fol.
a
by & seve ugh, 1
fined to my bed,
The docile
ar, Al
Te of
we Lise & report went sround
lead, I gaveup hope, but a friend 10id me of
WILLIAM HALLS RALBAM FORK THE LUNGS,
FOl & tlie
and to-day i feel
belle than for three years past
Boe
Coy i that CONS
an ative yoay i bas 4
ines | have taken since wy sickness.
A LLEN'S Brain Foodecures Nervous Debility &
Weak id of Generative Organs, $1-all d “=
Send for Circular, Allen's Pharmacy 513 Firstav. N.Y
ther
THE MARKETS
XW YORK.
| Beef Cattle Med Nat live wt,
Calves—TDoor to Prime Veals..,
Rhye Pp
=
“uo
a hey
! Hogs
| Flour
caty 3
Ex. State, good to fancy § 70
Western, good to choice 5 80
No. 2 Bed, new 1385
No. 1 White, new 154
Rye-—Btate By
Barley 90
Corn
875
2 186%
134
ahi
90
684
Te
53
4
a0
80
aS
@18 00
@il 10
NG 30
| Wheat
i
'
ledWe ale ora ined
i m Yellow
White Stat eure
Mixed Wostern
Hay Prime 1 imothy
Straw-.N
i Hope not
Pork
i Land
Oats
a...
Moss, new, for export...
City Steam... 19
Refine 1139
Crude 2%
10
wo
| Petroleum
| Butter—$
Western 1m, Sesser
Factors crshn
Choose
| Eom
Sl
Potatoos
State a and
-Eariy Rose, State, “bi bi $2 pi
BUFFALO,
Ww
Rtoers Extra. .. 600
Laribs Western. covveeanae, 550
| Bheep Western . , 495
Hous, Cron wl tod hokk oe e Yorkers . 685
Flour-C’y Ground, No. BSpen ng 675
Wheat No. 1. Han id Dale ith,
Com--Na, §
Oata—No. 2 Mix, West
Barley —Two-rowed State.
BOSTON,
Extra plate and family. 14 00
Live a
City
Extra Prime per bbl
Spring Wheat Patents, , 7
Mixed and Yellow
xtra White,...
ras REt LER nnes
oo
i
>
Cada
Oo hE = Gop
Hea
| Boef
Hoos
Hogs
Pork
Flour
Corn
Oats
{ Rye
| Wool
@13
T @
@
LI1B00 1b
60 Ge 91
Fas EREAREE
Ww in d ( ‘om b& De Haine
Unwashed *
WATERTOWN (MASS,) CATTLE MARKET,
Extra quality, . 850
Ek Live weight ...
ae
Gad
Beef
i Bho
Lam
| Hogs,
Northern, sasuns
PHILADEL PHIA,
| Flour—Penn. Ex. F amily, good
Wheat--No, 2 Red, ,
| Rye--Rtate ..
Corn State Yall "w.
i Oats
Butter— Creamery Extra Pa. ..
| Cheese Now York Full Oream,
| Petroleum —OCrude, ..oovveenins
Re fined... “a
»
oy ov
a
ove oy
| to irregularity in the habit tae a The
| functions of the bowels can... bs suspended
without an Mopsning J « dlatarbance of the
liver and stomach, an sympathetio svi.
denoces of bodily fn. being. A cours of Hos
totter's Blomach Ditters will give sn impetus
to the operation of these organs, which 1
manifested not only in the beneficial #ffecta
it produces upon them, but also in more
if snd active billous secretion, and the io
wearance of wind on the stomach, and
3 ioky The waste matter thrown off
during 1 ooess of digestion is then efloctu-
| ally ex pile sod the system more thoroughly
pied by 0 channel devotad to that purpose
ABOUT 80,000 acres of land between Jafla
and Jerusalem have been secured on which to
Tren, Contage v May 2, 1881,
H. H. Wanwes & Co.: Sirs—1 have used your
Bafe Kidney and Liver Cure,and 1 ake plodstire
in recommending it as the conqheror of ail dis-
eases of the kidoeys, liver and {nary GrEans,
Ina BTOCKMAN,
Ma. Sammons Mossersway and wife, formerly
of Page county, Va, now of Ohio, Tate) a
brated the seventy-second an niverssry of their
marriage,
On Thirty Days’ Trial,
The Voltaic Belt Co, Mars By operon to ble
eresture Anes about
, but is provided a a8 was
old satior, who dropped
the Grest German
erabbedness when 3
100 plain
Sun ing facts
that even the waves of time cannot wish sway
of scaly epithets Affect. 4 £1. 3cais 01 OL
85 rend the lives homes
sufferers than ever the electric cl ca
which wa
more
ity, Lost
snd kindred troubles, susranieeing
complete restoration of vigor and
El as above without delsy.
¥. 8. No risk 1s incurred, a 50 days’ trial is
gllowed,
ma
dd to such we would Pept in
to be misunderstood —in words
For prerepsia, INpiaesTion, depression of spir-
ite and general debility, in their varions forms;
also as & proventive against fover and ague and
other intermittent fevers, the *“Ferro-Puosphor-
sted Elixir of Calisaya,” made by Caswell,
| Hazard & Co., New York, and sold by all Drag-
use to admire the way,
etvod than t sailor wes en
» wrote thus Lis case:
“CROOKED HAERTEL."
Murder will out, so will the fact that Can-
Lang, a deodorised extract of petroleum, the
is the best | gol” I med
a well that 1 think I could
my young days Joss HaEnvEL, . Fremont, 18,
NY NO
PEERLESS
“WILSONIA
WILLIAM WILSON,
Medical Electrician,
4635 Fulton St., Brookign,
Lin gL EER Fonia¥ RAL Sib
’ RE eH
Sim Laid tes re he
as of © fils t a
dar ND BH WEAR © ed
is
dressings.
Vegetine.
DISEASE OF THE KIDNEYS,
The symptoms of an te atiack of ©
of the kidteys are as : ever, pain
small of the back, and 8 downward;
Send becomes
very often with pain and culty;
sone degree of colie
des Pp red color of the ha uelaa,
ty
the face, cough
dryness of t urinat
night), general drops
¥f strength, |
ans i shortness of breath,
Iu diseases of the Kidnevethe V
mediate relief, It has never falled | 10
HIS |
“Wi
cases it may take several
of long standing. It acts directly upon the
tions, cleansing and strengthening, removing
A grest many can testif
to cases of long standing having been pe octly subed
many
known remedies which are add 10 ety Te
this disease,
—
KIDNEY COMPLAINTS.
Crsciyxaw, O., March 19, 1871.
Brevess
oar Bir--l have used your Faguing for some
nd can truthfully say it has bee
Lo we; and 10 those suffer
ineys l¢ peartull 4 commen
¥
Ly
alii Lo
AND READY RECIPES.
Worth 825. Cost 20a
By the author of
“Prams Hous Ti Tasm™ rr * Meta
Car. Fighth and Central Avenues.
— 0., April 18, 1877.
Mg HR Srevexs
1 have sutiered several yours with the Eider Com |
plaint, and was induced to try VRGEYTINE, have
your preparation, and 1 am
mvinood It is 8 valust ble remedy. It done me
good (han any other medicine, 1 can hesrtily
end il to all suffering from Com
IRinte, You 10s resperituily, 4. 8, Mc
rst Ho co jor Newhall, Gale & Co. Fiour
chants, No est Front 8, Cincinnati, O,
thn d tho usands to health who
i and painful sufferers,
Vegetine
PREPARED BY
128 pac Advice shout
Coton Alments; 8 va able Hook 4
Beleronoe for every family. (my 23 ola
The Handbook Sumtaii chap rs vis Biy=
ghee for all sass, Uotinos #9ae OB
Comanon Tk Hagen Quative Mewar,
Ennis Worth Knowing, lists on Hething,
ob Munidsg the Nick, ob Kervencies. (or
grin with soane of the Privale Fonunie
= | Form, snd other phyaiciabs of b
py! iOpELe, ad 1 OF purpaiing oo food for lay
Ey wo AGENTS NY
Murray Hiil Book Publishing Ue.,
12 Las vm Sever, Naw Yeux Ory
MiLLx
Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists.
FOR LADIES ONLY,
a & * Ladies’ Medical Association.” lie medics for
diseases of women are prepared by the most con.
pe tent and relishie physiclans, who have made such
disesses a #pocial hehe study. Patients can be suo
cessfully treated by mall, Avvice Fuze. Letters
tiy oonfdential, Be nd description of Bm Toe
ROL In Dee i of remedies, send for «
jo : fo ae POET.
Reliable, Darabie andl Bropemiesl, will furnish a
hore pocey walk 14 bee Fuel and woter than any other
Ba puill, not titted with a Auto stale Cut-off,
Pend & for Thustinted © atajogue 3 A EE
Payer k boss, Box oor Cormnz, X.Y,
ondon Physic
Lead London 1
a A wir an
ilen IN Rw Ye
Epileptic F its.
Prom Am, Journal «oF Medicine,
| Dr. Ah, Meserole (late of London Lehomakes a
| elaity of Epilepsy, has without doubt frosted re
| pured more cases than any other! sr His
EnCCesR bias simply been aston d
of cases of avery veges standing se
o
ation or 4 =AuA 3 VAN oY (REX,
02 Frain i
Every week Solid Silver Hunting-case Watches are |
Uhampion. The
unsues of those who get watches are published each |
week, It isthe Best Boys Paperin the World, Send |
$ Hi 2 bl
Fox Fo Br ISHING co.
by him. He has pablbhed a ward ont
um St.. New k City. we Lav
f ssinile cured
£ Lo
hesegds with a larpe bottle of Bi are, iree
a
office address, We rise ¥ One winks $ug & cum te
The Yepetal Satter, | Mddzess Dr, Ab. M y No. 96 Jobn SL. XK. ¥.
fo any su Serer whi mar send their extres snd
si: cul harms THE OFFICIAL HISTORY OF THE
| GUITEAU TRIAL
This isthe only complele and fully Shustrated “Lite
snd Trial of G allt
| of the experts and oR poted it ners all the
sats § in his graat
Ls.
3 by £,
relieve at anon, cure within four dass. Box $1, ‘atled
Genuine has rod peal and Aignaty CX of I. A. Fags &!
Ask your drag- |
gist for the Genuine, Write for Dok and references. |
| wesc bes made by the
forts to escape the
ure of eatohpenny be
i Faung for this work.
{ree xtra terms to
i have a positive Temady for the above disease; by
0 tH, ress
Namoxas Ponisaine Con Phllsdelrhia, Pa.
ans splendid new and
NSY.
2-C ot Same BA
WE Yi K Jel'r Rise for Li
From Date Thy We 358 out ADE for WIDE
| these Bost Magazines in the World for Children.
| Brilliant Prospectus, Mem. of Prizes, and Illus-
J
a | (0 )W) with Worms that Deusen's
| Worm Confections will not remove. They have
made of Roots and Plants. Sure and safe for the
| most delicate child. Sold at all stores. 4 » 8 box.
Wir HIN | A + ent Stamp for thet
ONE 4
FOL REA
To D. LOTHROP & CO., Boston, for samples of
trated Catalogue frees,
saved the lives of thousands of children. They are
RS, XA. ~F TA JRY, CRY, Pawn
Nalichars a hington, D.
Par Selonii cord Han
PATENTS:
Book" and
$510820 es ER
or 4s Be
i rarped on
Apavomnge & grt
5 Mpcily Adios PROVE. XY
pense, : ¥. Prichard, Westingsn 3. 0
a BARGORE: will address at onoe Fv :
culars, DR. WM. SCEB, Controville, i un!
- RIGHTY. The - i
TRUTH pb. MARTINIS Ee Goat S|
Sppnioh Ber apd W — i
pags |, seller of a J i
proven af your furure husband or wits, tA
predicted, wb aan lb ee 8 " { B raons’ Parsative Pia
Sate 98 mb ay nh i i i and will completely chang he ! Hoot
Address Prof. L. Martioes, 10 None Bossom, am. . ®__ | entire system » three Fy ANY 3 Bo
wa wi i will take one pill each pight from 1 to 12 works aay
I wk hi Sabon | restored to sound health if sar a thi wer Les posud
anv address | Sol A OH ARO or sept by mail Tors letter sta SPE.
on receipt of tw wo Three-e rh Address N on, Sass.
C HARLES E. HIRES, ¢ Delavan Ave, Phila, nger,
Trantion @ Portable Yor
ENGINES RRS
Cy Oy For prices. Snaieiis O-
write Tug AULTMAN & TAYLO
ELECTRIC BELTS
A perfect gure, for a 3 Broad Sel New or
ey
$100 =F rea pa Blood ar
Kidney Daven wor eured vy Pw. Prroen, 808 Wal
mut, Phila, 1000 referenoss sont free. Cure gosran ined
A YEAR AND EXPE XHES Tv
GENTS. Ontfit free, Address
P. hh Vickery, Aughatn, Me. |
CHP AMON TH-RGENTS ea TEavobest | |
‘ow? Addr, Juy Heantons Detan Mich,
if you want to learn Telegraphy in
a few months, and be certain of a
Bros, Janesville, Wis,
INTS WANTED for the Post and Fastest.
ling Pictorial Books and Bibles, Prices reduced
National Publishing Co, Philadelphia, Pa,
Catalogue free. Address, Busnonrd
awerican Wateh Oo Pittsburgh se
Fevolvars Osmisiogue free. Address,
Great Wert Gun Works, Plttaburgh, Pa,
ARD COLLECTORS, » handsome set of Cards for
three-cent stamp, A. GQ Burrs. Rochester, N.Y
$72 AWEEK $12 a day at home east ly made, Costly
a week in your own tow n. Terms and $5 outfit
free. Add’s H. Harierr& Co, Portland, Maine, S1 £ Outfit tres, Add ds TUE & Con. ily made. Cottly
SON Gs, One Cent Each
J Kiss Me, Kiss Your Darling.
23 A Flower from Mother's ve.
ne The Old Log Cabia on the HILL,
180 Comin Thro' the K -
381 Must Wa, Then, Moot ni § trragers
158 The Kiss Behind the Door.
1% 'U Remember You, love, in My
{Prarers,
148 You May Look, but Muasn't Touch,
10 There Awa) fe & Boat in the Pare
iA
JOHNSON'S ANODYNE LINIM ENT will
Fi prevent this terrible disease, 20.4 will posi
vetentitied, Pensirnsgiven
FToSr Fpiaee, yarigose
bousands of pens ery
LF #o ine Giled to INCREASE snd DOL?
ENTS provared for inventers. Reld
Ra warrsnts htand sold. Be
sind ig or Cie your riebts at omoe.
pg Row
PaTusy AWys, gprs fpr
\ TANTED-A Relinble Salesman, with estab
lished trade among fintelpes relgil grocers, to
soll Teay, ither on eomaission or dividion of jeailis,
Dost of ywoforenoes rust aroomniany apnhioat fons {a pie
| ceive attention, TEAN, 102 Waler Street, New York,
ACE
Ho on Cabin 10 mn aa ad phy
we 2 Too Sailors hr Sey dary
armer's Danshter ; ions
H Ohl Dem Golden sig
246 Poor, but a Gentleman Stull,
Nobod 2. Dasting ba} Mine.
trie Bhoes AWS.
21 Darling Nellie Gray,
£55 Lite Jug.
Bolt,
EEE prt
7 Good .B
260 Radie i
#7 Tha Puig
re Was ay when the Light
u fweet BY an and 4 8 [Want Out,
= When you rev 1 were Young
8 When 1 Saw Sweet of Nollie liome,
pr Take this Lotter to My Hot Mather.
0 A Mode! Love Lew
$3 Wife's Ee
weband's Commandments,
" ih 0id Log Cabin i tly he Lane,
88 Marching Through
€ Widow in the Collage by the Bea.
© The Minstrel Bo
TC Take Rack the Heart.
1% The Faded Coat of Bina, [Night
TT My Old Kentucky Home, Good
#4 I'll bo all Smiles to Night Love,
#6 Liston to the Mocking iird,
#3 Her Bright Smile Haunts Me 8ti1}
b+. Sunday Night When the Parlor’s
The uy s Warning, {Full
yo Tis Bae Little Faded Mower,
104 The giz i Left Behind Me.
308 Little Buttercu
3107 Carry Me Back B 01a Virginay.
iis te id Man's § ry ois
316 1 Am Waltin sie . i
3119 Take Me Bac ‘to Home & Mother | 222 Sherman's March to the Sea. Linger, Not Daring
120 Come, Sit by My Side, Darling, 224 Coma. Birdle, Coma. 328 Dane ancing 12 the 8 % a
Wo will send 3 mall, post-paid, any ten of these songs tor cents ;
Fifty for 25 cents Or'wo will send all the above ons han red tee po Ud for 40 Senta’ iS cents;
not send lass than ten songs. Order songs by NUMBERS only, Se a ho r thres cont member, we w
gue Free, Mention thispaper. WORLD MAMUE'D ina Nassau ! Cr ry ER OI
¥ e e .
~ More than One Million Copies Sold!
CVERYBODY WANTS IT. EVERYBODY N
258th Edi Revised and TDs "
tion (New).
A Great Medical Treat-
or for Yo
189 Pre) — Moth - ‘Now, I'm Weeping
156 Massa’s in de Cold, Cold Ground,
ja Say a Kind Word When You Can.
85 I Cannot Si ie § the Qld Songs.
on Norah O'N
167 Waldng, M : Darling, for Thea,
153 Jonnie the Fiower of Kildare,
170 I'm Lonsly Since M eather Died
113 Tenting on the OL Ground,
17% Don's You Go, T. IY Bo " Loo.
150 Willle, We have Missed
152 Over the Hills to the Poor Mouse.
185 Don’t be Angry with Me, Darling.
181 Flirtation of {he Fan.
154 Why did She Leava Him ¥ {other,
188 Thou Hast Learnsd to Love Ane
233 Th are's None Like a Mother
4 You Were Falso, but 1'i} For zive,
208 Whisser Softy, Mother's Dying
211 Will You Love Me, Wem I'm OM.
£20 Annie Lauria,
eg porate.
250 The Sweet Sunny South.
24s foma Some Father.
ie aggie Mag.
Molly Baw
Little Oue'y Walting for Me.
my Oid Love Agalm
¥ Boy To-Night.
or Self-Preservation.
ise on Manhood; the Cause and Cure of Ex«
hausted Vitality, Nervous and Physical Debll.
ity; aise on the Untold Miseries arising from the
Excesses of Mature Years. 300 pages, Royal
Sve. vo yi yecy Seat atee] eubivinm: 125 invaluable
COW THYSELF, mips ssi EE Mie even tun
ouly $1.23,
ILLUSTRATED SAMPLE, 6 CENTS. SEND NOW.
Tha Science of Life, or Belf-Preserval ost extraordinary work sished
There is) hothing whatevor chat the mrried or reingls of either scx can either an Fhysiolory sver poh know but
what isfully explain . 8
The best medical work ever published. Ble to ail whe ish for.
gold and jeweled medal award
stowed, —- Nassachuse! ma
won
Pine Journals-——literars, could be
toed 1 be & better medion] w land. The buok is
wouey will refunded in every nti elsewhere for double the price, or
Thousands of Coples are sent oh mail Malls secutaly sealed postpaid, parts
world, every month, upon : aa i tt
i| Address PEABODY MEDICAL | INSTITUTE or W. H. PARKER, M.D., |
ER BTR i te lla
be taken from