a The Early Rala, Down trongh the misty air, Down from the gloom abova, Pulling, pattering eve ywhere, The rin comos quick with love, Sotily the miseel-thrush Bings in the golden storm; The robin under a laurel bush Waits for to-morrow morn, Drip, drip, drip from the caves, Pit, pit, pit on the pans, Swish, swish, swish on the drenched leaves List! "tis the song of the rain? Grasses are bonding low, Green is the corn and thick, You can almost see the nettles grow, They grow so strong and quick. Boft is tho wind from the west, Solver the rain’s low sigh; The sparrow washes his smoky breast, Ard watches the gloomy sky. Btirred are the boughs by the brooms, Searcely a leaf is still, Bomething is moving among the trees Like a restless spirit of ill, Blanding watching the rain, Do you no keem to hear The voice of God outapesken minutes before my train goes; if Ty Directly afterward ‘wo heard the could be of any service to you about sound of hastily approaching footsteps, other way, I should be most happy.” tell “1 think, Helen, it would be better Letty's courage had failed her, and not to go to a hotel,” said Letty; “we she leaned on me half fainting with should never wake up for the d o'clock | fright, when a voice calling, in Eng- train if we went to bed, and we can't | lsh, “Hallo! What is the matter? waste 80 much timo waiting for the What are you rascals doing? revived next train, her, “Yes,” I answered, “we could get Two men came running toward us, some refreshments here and spend the | one of whom, toour amazement and de- remainder of the night in the waiting: | light, we recognizad as Mr. Mordaunt, room--it is not quite five hours.” our traveling companion, Our fands would not admit of much We hung upon him, and hovered over extravagance on the trip, as the allow: | him with tears, hysterical laughter and ance papa had given us had dwindled | incoherent thanks, and during our con- during his prolonged absence, and I | fused explanations did not notice that was glad of Letty's economical sugges. | both robber and guard quietly disap- tion, Something in Mr. Mordaunt's | peared manner gave the idea that he did not Mr. Mordaunt accounted for his pres- approve quite of our plan, but he was ence as follows: As he left us in the too polite to say anything against it. | coffee-room he noticed a suspicions. He ordered a waiter to attend us, in. | looking pair of fellows about the plat quired if we would be allowed to pass form who seemed to be disonssing us; the night in the waiting-room, brought the waiters also were talking together us a favorable answer, and then, as the over the vagaries of the two Ameri- locomotive whistled sharply, he ro- kanerinnen who were going to spend luctantly took his leave, and dicappeared | the night at the station, and Mr. Mor in the darkuess, daunt concluded that we might be “I wish he had siaid with ns—it is subjected to annoyance, if nothing To man's unerateful car? Promising plenty and penoe, Gainers with treasure heaped, That sced time and harvest shall not conse Tull the Harvest of Earth is reaped. hy haat” £40 AI S————— The Silver Whistle. Argosy. We were ail traveling with papa in the Tyrol, when a telegram summoning him to Vienna to the bedside of a dying friend came to interrupt our plans. He installed Letty and me in a confortable room in the fine new hotel at Toblach, gave us his blessing, a double allow- ance of pocket money, and left us, with strict injunctions to stay quietly at home till his return, as he did not ap- prove of his daughters traveling about alone in a foreign country. Letty snd 1 amused ourselves very well for the first few days, driving over the picturesque roads and through parts of the beautiful Ampezzo valley, We gathered gentian and mountain straw- berries, and lost our way in the big! wilderness of parden at the back of the Rotel; filled our presse botanigue with handfuls of floral treasures, and then began to weary a little of our striotly raral pleasures. We were the «uly Americans in the hotel, and we found few congenial friends among the host of strangers arriving and departing every day. We had read all our books, written all our letters, and were feeling very moped—it was a rainy day, dull and unpromising—when Letty spelled out from the German newspaper the following announcement : “Her majesty the queen of Italy, on her way to Lins, intends to honor Sachsenburg with « brief sojourn, arriv- ing on the 13th. The people of Sacheen- burg are preparing for a grand fete to honor her majesty.” “‘Sachsenbarg. that is not very far from here, on the railroad,” said Letty, “Oh, Heler, let us go! Queen Mar. gherita is so very lovely, and we may never have the chance of saeing her again, and the fete, too, will be well worth seeing. The town will be one great bower of flowers, and all the Jonnute will appear in their best holi- ay costume. Do say you will go, Letty—it's so dull here.” “Bp: have you forgotten that papa asked us to stay quietly here, and not g§0 roaming about withont him?” I said, gravely. “Ob, you dear, conscientious old gocse? it is not traveling to go to Sachsenburg to see the queen.” ** Sachsenburg is a ten hours’ journey | from here, and we should have to be! away for three days at least to make the trip worth while.” i ‘So much the better; I am fright- fally tired of this place, and papas re- tum is delayad for another week.” But I need not repeat our disenssion further. Lotty carried the day in this instance as in most others, and I-—her staid, elder sister, her senior by ten years, and her nominal mentor and gusrdian—meekly gave in to her wishes. | Equipped with light hand-luggage, | umbrellas and shawls, we set off in the | omnibus the next day, with many in- junctions from our Wirth to inquire carefully the hours of arrival and de- parture of the trains, as the time-tables | were often inaccurate in this part of the world. Our only fellow-traveler in the rail- | Way carriage was a gentleman apparent- | ly about thirty, with pleasant brown | eyes, a straight, slender nose, and an | indescribable air of good-breeding | about him from the slender toe of his | boot to the closely trimmed hair beneath | his soft traveling cap. He looked often at Letty; not imper- | tinently, but as any well-bred man | looks at a pretty girl sitting opposite | him on a long journey. Letty, with her | violet eyes darkening at times almost to | black, her delieate color like an alabas- | ter lamp wth a rosy flame within, and | her charmingly graceful figure, made | excusable more obtrusive admiration | than this man’s, i Animation and pleasure at our trip | made her doubly attractive, and I conld | not blame the brown eyes opposite for | often wandering to her pretty face. i I did not like to seem stiff ; so pres- | ently I spoke to the stranger, who had been attentive about stowing away our | Inggege and screening us from the bril- | Kant sun, He answered pleasantly, in a low, | musical voice that I liked, and we were | soon all three chatting together over | our various experiences of the summer, | He proved to be an Englishman, and | the name engraved upon the card which | he presented me in the course of con- | versation was Romney Mordaunt, of | Mordaunt Hall, Surrey. His destina- | tion was further than ours; and at Reich- thal, where we were to change car- riages for Sachsenburg, we must sepa- | rate, ! Letty seemed to share heartily my | approval of our traveling-companion, and I almost wished she would not emile upon him so confidingly, nor be- witch him with her bright, half-ssuey speeches, for he was a stranger, after | all, and wight prove unworthy of our trust. Gradually I began to think myself a very poor chaperon for my pretty little sister, and I tried to look fisrce and forbidding, but it was no use, and my furtive plucks and nudges at Letty were quite ineffectual. When I flat- tired myself I was looking awfully pink palm at Mr. Mordaunt's request to have her fortune read. The time sped very quickly, and shortly before our arrival at Reichthal, our companion began to tell us some amusing stories of his life in the Indian jungle. He showed ns a curious little whistle that had often served him to signal his lost companions, which had a curious shrill, bird-like tone, unlike anything of the kind we had heard before. As Letty was returning Mr, Mordaunt the whistle—a pretty little silver toy that she much admired—he said : Please keep it, Misa Weir, as a souvenir of one more idler whom fate has thrown in your way. Imagine that it is charmed, and if you are in dis- tress a note from the whistle would bring me to the rescne—if I am worthy that honor—as Oberon flew to the as. Latty could not refuse the little gift 89 gracefully tendered, and her evident lessure in it seemed to reward Mr. ordaunt three-fold. At about 11 o'clock at night I heard the guard call out * Reichthal I” with great regret, for here we must lose our amusing companion, and I could see y that the pleasantest part of the Journey was over for him. At Li:iechthal we made an unwelcome : had m i with the Sachsenburg train, and to reach ont destination we wouid have to iy till 5 o'clock in the morning of Mr. Mordaunt, “I have ten 80 lonely in this strange place,” said move. ; Lo He therefore decided to wait himself “ Nonsepse, ehild! It would have for the next train, and not liking to in. give us so much of his society; we the tim» smoking snd ohatting with of oar temporary prison, He bad strayed some distance down the road, when the souud of Letty's whistle reached his ears as a sound of ferently anderstood being spoken about | distress, me not a familiar face to be seen but “What I can’t understand is this ras- Liotty's frightened one, and midnight | cally guard having deserted his POA 80 fast past, shamefully,” said our rescuer, ringing We were the only women in the at a huge bell which hung near. place, and [ did not Jandy the look of | Presently lights were a SppeoAh- the men hovering about. Some were | ing, and a few sleepy-looking men gath- playing cards in & corner, and others ered wonderingly about us. One of sat silently over tall glasses of beer, them stumbled over something lying in giving us fartive glances which I tried | a dark corner, saimod. “Adal to ignore. “What is this!" he exelaimed. “Ado Hetty, you ought not to wear that Harle, the nightguard, in a drunken ring oa a journey, or, if you will wear sleep. He will lose bis post for this it, you ought to keep your glove on; neglect of duty.” it is very tempting to a thief,” I said, It was afterward discovered that Adolf nervously, as the light caught Letty's | Harle, the real guard, had been drugged diamond —papa’s present on her birth- | over his evening glass of beer by two day—while she pat back her veil, and roffians, one of whom had invested made my eyes sole with its sparkle. himself with the watchman's duties, At that moment I saw the ugly, dark lantern and cap, while the other face of a man close against the window ' made his daring attempt upon Letty He and me. turned away quickly as he saw me look- ‘“‘He only got some sham earrings ing at him, but I bad time to note his | and an ivory brush from the portman. heavy, rough beard, unkempt hair and | tean, and I saved my ring I" said Lotty, coarse big throat. trinmphantly The horrible thought seized me that | Fright and excitement had cooled our he had seen Letty's ring, and would ' desire to see hor msjesty, Queen Mar- try to rob us. I said nothing to my | gherita, and on the following day we sister of my fears, but felt intensely re- | returned to Toblach, Mr. Mordaunt ao lieved when the porter appeared with a | companying us. lantern to escort us to the waiting- When papa returned five days later, room. Romney Mordaunt met him with the He informed us that we would have request for the hand of his younger the room quite to ourselves, bat that danghter in marriage, a request which we must consent to be locked in. It my father conld not refuse when he was the striot rule that the door be looked into Letty's radiant eyes, locked after the departure of the last S——— night train, and according to the regu Prehistoric Mining in Michigan, lations passengers wero not allowed to The Lake Saperior mines have the spend the night on the premises; he advantage of producing metal free from had only Eads an exceplion in Our | 4, y 4lioy of antimony or nickel or ar- favor, turthermore, we must make up | ni, In many of the mines great our minds to dispense with a light, as | |, cco of native metal are found so every one went away but the guard, and large that they must be eat in place the place must be left in darkness, with chisels. This was appalling, to be locked up | 4) "the more important mines are for four hours in a pitoh-dark room; situated on the ancient workings of a but there was apparently no other alter prehistoric race. ey seem to have native, xs. 3 . been ignorant of the fact that copper At last, by a judicious fee, I prevailed | , 14} melted, for they left behind upon the man to allow us to bolt one them the fragments too small to use door on the inside, so that We would | o;q the masses too heavy to lift. Every not feel qulle in durance vile. day they subjected it to a temperature The clock struck, and the porter, hur- nearly high enough, without making a discovery which would have lifted them out of the SBione Age into the Bronze Age, and perhaps have enabled taem to survive the struggle in which they perished. They must have been very numerous, and have reached the point of development where they were capable of organizing indastry, In Isle Royale, near the Minong mine, their pits, excavated to a depth of from tan to twenty feet in the solid rock, cover an area of from three to four hundred feet wide and more thana mie and a half in length. The labor ex- pended here cannot have been much short of that iovolved in building a pyramid. Isle Royale is ten miles from the nearest land, and is incapable of producing food, so that all supplies except fish must have been brought from some distant point. Their exea- | vations conld of course never go below the point at which water would acoumu- late. Their hammers, frequently to the number of several thousand, are found in heaps where they were evidently placed at the end of the season. no graves or evidences of habitations are found, we ean | hardly doubt that the ancient miners lived south of the great lakes, and made yearly journeyings with fleets of canoes to the copper mines. The ag- gregate amount of the metal which they carried off must have been very great, and it has, I believe, been gen- erally thought that the copper imple- ments of the ancient Mexicans came from this sonre.e M. Charnay in a re- cent number of the North American seems to think that the Mexicans re- duced copper from its ores. A chemi. : : 1 analysis of their hatchets would stealthy steps approaching the inner Saal: : tora door of the waiting-room and the grat. | solve the question, for Lake Superior ing of a key quietly turned in the lock. | Suppe: i340 ies from alloys as to be I began trembling Violently, and the | “py superintendent of the old Cale Bez} asta, Jo wf Jorrat) $he Soo donia mine in Ontonagon county kindly Ihad Seen thon h Te OE a ow took me to the top of a cliff where three u Bh uh8 oo © | Cornish * tributers "—miners working cofee-100m, crept softly in with a dim not for wages but for a share of the Inuices ib his nd, in German. in a product—had cleared out one of the hoarse whisper. fixing me with his evil | Ancient pits in the outerop of the vein. “if BPG, 2g me 1 : | They had brought out a quantity of oy arte quiet mud sensible | | copper, and bad just uncovered a large will do yon no harm; but if yon make | : : : ai ns y mass which would weigh cartainly not the least disturbance, 1 know how to less than seven tons. Many battered ened Jou + 504 he showed a murder. | stone hammers lay around the mouth of “I have | : r : , phir come for the Samos the young ene | Bh i og Be erie Tittle Euglishmen, tp ea on Other jewels | perhaps as old as the mound-builders vou. Be quick and silent: give me | themselves, had come around the world these things, and make no resistance as | tom th Kak $0 piel the Work of the you value your lives.” | departed Asiatic race from the West at I suppose I grew very white and |® time to which no date can be : . My i. | B8signed. Sremblisg, tor L sty said ina firm voice had cat down a dead cedar to “Do as he says, Helen—our lives | @Ake props for their tunnel. As are worth more than a fow trom sary | they were putting the log in position, jewels.” HAPEIY | from its center dropped a small but per- she ay hed aa) Dorimustem | never been used. It was made from a put it on the floor just betore the door | stone found, I believe, only on the through which he had entered, set his | north shore of the lake. This trae lantern on the table, and began undoing the straps of the portmantean. How eagerly and vainly we listened for the bamp o the guard at that moment, but he appeared to have | : vanished from the ey of the earth, | or! hammers in the center of cedars. “The rascal evidently thinks the | It Would seem barely possible that this other door is locked on the outside, as | hammer hd been placed in a cleft of he is not watching us,” said Letty, | the treo, when it was a sapling, that the gliding like a phantom toward the doos | wood might grow around the groove and next the platform. | serve as a handle. At all events, this While the man busily overhauled our | °2 which I have, was certainly placed effects she slipped the bolt with as little | where it was—about thirty inches from noise as if it glided over velvet, and | th 8round—by human hands, un- then said to me: | doubtedly by the ancient miner him- “Iam going to make one bold effort | *¢1s When the tree was a twig.—Hur- to save my ring; I shall dash that man's | P*"* flagagine, ~~ lantern to the ground with this bundle | The Child’s Escape of shawls—in the darkness we shall| ,, ary apes hile have the advantage of him, as no oh- | " Harrisburg, Pa, recently, While stacle is between ns and the door, We | Forepaugh 8 show was starting on can rush ont and scream for ihe guard its street parade, one of the elephants and I am sure this wretch will no, dart wandéred from the herd and could not to follow 2s.” be Sontelled, id, in hus Sachement “Ob, but Letty, the danger!” I yas 16d towar the TOW y Which swaye« moaned; the man un not oe tand back in much excitement, A lady us, 50 we could say what we chose named Ww ise had a baby carriage in “Don’t think of the danger bat be. charge with a child in it, and in her ready to open the door as I tinnh the efforts to get out of : the crowd, found lantern.” herselt ad Surviage in front of fhe Sle : PT ; phant, ith great presence of mind ay oity, Wi swell iSunten ala) Sent Mrs. Wise snatched her child from the table, and we were all in darkness carriage, and in the next instant the The next instant my sister and Lvers front foot of the monster crushed down rushing like mad creatures down the | \° the carriage, completely demolish- platform, shrieking for the gnard whose i slouching figure we could see in the distance, Strangely enough he did not or would not hear us, and, horror of horrors, the burglar was hurrying after us, the light of his lantern gleaming upon his knife blade! Letty, in despair, pnt her silver whistle to her lips and blew till its pe- culiar note rang cut like a clarion in the still air. & Shake boldly—but I, too, felt de- away with his light before we could get ings. “It isa consolaticn to know that the guard is on duty outside,” I said, “Perhaps we are not alone in this dreadful place, after all,” said Letty, stumbling over a chair; *“ and someone At this cheerful sucgestion I be- thonght me of some wax matches in my satchel, and lighted one, shielding its flame as well as { conld from observa- We hastily explored our prison—a tall iron stove, a table, some cane chairs cushions, none of them inviting repose; Pitlowed upon our waterproofs and naturally wakeful. Here were we, two unprotected women, dropped down at an obscure little wayside station at dead of night, with not a sonl nearer than the mile-distant hotel to help us in case of need. There were suspicious characters lurking about, and our only protection a glass door and the guard, who might be a coward or a knave ; we could be robbad and murdered, and no one would know. The guard's slow, heavy step passing at long intervals, and the gleam of his lantern on his scarlet cap, gave me a | little sense of security, but I was very miserable nevertheless, and heartily wished we had not disobeyed papa. In the midst of my reflection, I heard | years old ; but as cedar is almost in- | destructible in this climate, it may | have been dead several hundred years. te ————————— While the schoo! laws of Utah ex- pressly forbid the use of public school funds for the support of sectarian or denominational schools the book of Mormon and the Morison catechism aro ased as text-books, und children bave been expelled for refusal to study thom, No teachers can obtain employment in those schools except members of the Mormon church paying tithes regn- larly, pe 1 ‘NEWS OF THE WEEK. Eastern and Middle States. Faaxx B, Ames, a soa oaptain, about fifty years old, and his wite wore found dead in their room In a New York Captain Ames had evidently shot his wife and then killed himself, trouble between the two, but the captain had been sick for some time, Manig Koxia, a German woman, years of age, living in Boston, murdered her boy Auguste, five years old, by cutting his with a case knife, Bhe then out forty-six throat Her son Alfred dozen places, and Emil, a boy of seventeen, peither of them fatally, not fatally, was wounded, putting her Jefl leg below the Knee, Liedly insane the Penn in Harrisburg sylvania Republican convention held wie following ticket! was James A, Beaver: William T. pomisated: For governor, for lientenant-governor, Davies; for secretary of internal affairs, John M. Greer; for judge of the supreme court, William Henry Rawle; for congressman at large, Thomas M, Marshall which condemns the use of patronage to pro mote personal political ends and compulsory aasoasments for politieal purposes, and declares alnst the removal of competent and faithful further recommends ay A officers. The platform the holding of Blate and the conduct of the party, and a poliey looking to the education of India: children and tw conferring self-supporting Indians. The resolutions de. President Arthur's administration as wise, con Governor Hoyt's ad { State affairs is also approved per cillatory and efficient winistration ¢ been & Co frauds have the firm of LIL. Green EXTExsivE colton petrated Columbus, Miss, , hy uy s Boston and vicinity, were presented to these oon , and the drafts in payment for the cotton drs i 10 Colun but the cotton falled Ww arrive i vere forwarded and Green & Cx lose about $2 d00, and Fall River concerns about $680, 0X uv M sapposred. Boston parties Moore declared sopal church y ions scattered very State and Territory, Canada, pd the West India islands, There are a recently estab. ing in North Carolina court has dissolved i Assesament losorance com a wore lately provee fed against by eral at the instance of the in. ioner of the State, The num mmissioner alleges f . a Od SEE 10 VIOA0 and against boen instituted, with finear damage has bean dobe 10 shipping wl other proporly Ly a heavy slorm sloag thera Now Jersoy coast New York addressad 1 A sass meshing in ty Mayor Graco, and resolulions coudetnt Dublin Hrishinen, passed revonl assassiaalious in thoy wore csused by Eoglish lenland, id man in New York Li UY a cal, nd two n os ware pal ons crimes, at the New sixteen-year-old nded his stepmother p Pliny, from Brazil for Long Branch aving station, The Pliny was i at $200,000, and had & { oof e, ssl valued cargo of $335,000, and 500 b be a total loss, 26,000 bags © worth about undies of hides. Bho will South and West. Ix Wilkes county, N. O,, three burglars were entrance dead fisarmed after they had effected an {ato a smoke-house, and one was shot I'he other two were crushed to death by falling logs while trying 10 escapa, Lares reports say that by the eyelons which passed over MoAllister, a mining settlement in indian Territory, seven persons were killed outright, four fatally, eleven dangerously and injured. Fifty-eight houses were do jabed, and thirty thirty-gins mor Others nore badly wrecked, NO wore badly damaged on the west coast o Michigan during a heavy storm. L ister news from McA llister, Indian Territory, increases the number of fatalities by 10 to tweaty-one aud the injured to One-half of the killed and wounded are women and childron, loss than eight vessels wont ashore or { Lake Sri the cyclo forty. Ax enormous pigeon roost in the vicinity of Bparta, Win, is attracting groat attention. The roost is in a dense pinery, is about hall a mile wide and toa miles long, and every tree coon. ' taing from Swenty to thirty nests, The pigeons number millions Parniox Devine was hanged at Clinton, 11), for tho murder of Aaron Goodfellow, a prom. nent citizen of Bloomington, in 1879. soil another young man wore supposed to have the crime, and the New York extradited, tried and found guilty upon cironmstantial evidence, committed former was tracked to Niala, He protested his iunocence to the last, Crovoxes bave wrought death and destroo ton in various parts of the South. Through- out the south side of Virginia many family rosidences, farms and fonces were demolished, largo troes uprooted and bridges washed away, In the vicinity of Shreveport, La, houses, for. oats and plantations were destroyed, one old lost their lives, and Mill Crook sottle went, in the ludian Territory, was partially de and two children Ex-Govenxon C, C, sin, is dead. Gexenar Joun G, Banxanp, for many years Mich. art Moore, chief clerk in the freight depart. ment of the Northern Pacific railway, and Mr, Bear lake, twelve miles from 8t. Panl, Minn, Sir Roger Tichborne, has been recognized by dents of California, by heavy rains, oats and corn in Indiana have been destroyed by heavy and incessant rains, and many farm- ers will be ruined, run the soldiers out of the fort the former was killed and the latter mortally wounded. Tor Tennesseo senate passed the bill to fund tho State dabt at sixty cents aod three, four, five and six per cent, interest, Du, H, H, Hesparp, laty surgeon-general of the Confederate army, died in San Francisco, aged fifty-five, A sartLino boat with twelve persons on board capsized in Lake Calumet, near Pullman, I11., and all were drowned, as follows: Napoleon Bucklin, an old sea captain, recently from Muine, aged 50 yoars, land his two sons, Ben and James Bucklin, aged 12 and 17; John L. Smith, foreman in the car department, aged 29; Charles F. Pierce, aged 46; H,T. Moore, 38 yours; W, J. Barns, 22 years; a young man uvamed Foster, a man named Davis, 45 years old, and three other men, From Washington Tur committes of ox. Union and ex-Confed. Army of the Potomac and the Army of North. ernment history of the battle of Gettys 7 for those en or near the * Peach * Wheatfleld," * Devil's Den” and * Round " at or near “Calp's Hill” and ** East Camden HilL" the hour and place for the meeting to be the Eagle hotel, Golttysburg, at 8 p wu PIOgTOBRO0., Koa———— Tux business part of Manta, Ecuador, has been burned ; aggregate losses, $120 000, Tue Pacific Mail steamer Salvador was No lives were lost and nearly all the CATEO Was saved, 130 horribly mutilated persous there, wounds A nuwanp of £500 has been offered by the Firry Austrians have been killed by insur. with amendments which the House has not yet In the the last five months, Lue sunual peusion appropriation bill as re ported ww the House, appropriates $100 000 GU tion of $30,000,000 will be necessary 10 ¢ pote the service for that period, The pew bill ap $4, OL, 000 ; widows, chilldren and dependent re propriates for army peusions lavalids latives, AU, 000,000 ; survivors and widows of the war of 1812 £3 640,000 For uavy pen sions lavalids, $900,000 ; widows, children OnE hundred of the children of the Crow In- bo sent to farmers in Ohio, **to be educated and reared up to useful ness," ir terior has decided to adopt the policy of dis is reported that the secretary of the in arming all the Indisus in the Western Slates James Q. Burry, the contestant for the seat of Hepresentative Charles W, Bhelley, of the Tae woman suffragists have se quite a red nmitiee on woman sd Biates to vole dged by the United The shall not be denied States or by any Nate on a Yeas, vole was as follows Blair and Jacks snd Pair, 4; Ferry Mas Sherman, scin to tnt GaRFizLy Benator wiedg & notice of the pension granted her husband's sake and saving further mindful of the generous kind ral Garfield gol on Foreign News Ma Greon Preveryay has been ag pointed successor to the murdered Loy endish ¢ tary for Ireland A MINISTERIAL ¢risis hss © land because ¢ Hos r of a treaty F ministry @ special art of the other than MAY give the mont of a railway passed the spol wher mitted, They saw the viotima, and heard Lord Frederick Cav ery out who then stabbed him And fell over against the bieveie of one of the fitters dy assailant, Fraderick who was 00 2 10 his assistance; but them derers, with bloody kn and both of ae fast as possible. The road waiting for the mur back was turned. They saw & man stad ives, made toward Lim, the bicveiists thereupon Rot Car sway on the by {oi pga pt 48 Qrivers ¥ saw ihe lerers. Car. endish in the back as ho lay on the ground, Earrr isin a state of revolution. The min. istry have amoned the chamber of notables over the bead of the khedive, Tax British minister was stoned {in the ca tal of Morocco, Six hundred arrests were wade by order of the sultan 7 Ballina, Ireland, a man who had rents farm from which another 1s man had been evicted, was shot and mortally wounded while entering his door. On the same Jay the Navan, county Meath, thot and killed who was attempting to stop a mail car Tux funeral of the m Cavendish at Chatawo ered Lord Frederick igiand, was attended the Duke of Edin. burgh, representing the Queen; Mr, Gladstone, 300 members of parliament and an assemblage of 30,000 persons. One of the most consp features of 5,000 tenants of the Duke of Devoushire, the funeral was an asser of Lord Cavendish. The order of the fune procession was as follows: Tho hearse, the Duke of Devonshire, walking alone: the Mar. gion, Lord Edward Cavendish, , Earl Granville, the speaker of and threo hundred wa'king four abreast, members of parliament, Tae greater portion of the business part fire, causing aggregate losses of about $60,000, A stony at St, Johns, N, F,, did heavy dam. age to shipping and other property. Several A sur endowing the lord lieutenant of Ire. ment, and to bave received police protection, owing to rumors which are current, and to threaten. ing letters which he has received to the effect that he is a marked man, A renninLe explosion of fire-damp in a mine in Westphalia is reported. Shortly after the recovered, Civie war is threatened in Egypt, and English Alexhndria, Trinrv-six houses have been destroyed by fire at the town of Oranienbaum, Russia, about nineteen miles from nt. Petersburg Tur hall of the Hygienic exhib.tion, near Moabit, in the district of Potsdam, Germany, has been destroyed by fire. ‘The exhibition was about to be opened, and many costly exhibits stroyed. The loss is estimated at several hun- dred thousand pounds. Emperor William was present during the conflagration, A Dusrix dispatch saya: ‘From informa- ba separated one would turn From information obtained it appears least twelve were engaged in the It is believed that in the cab stood near the scene of the murder at men ready to effect a rescue in case the actual The police have Two of them are described as being about thirty years of age, with sandy hair ; one about other about twenty, with a small black mus- tache, The driver is described as being be, tween thirty-five and forty, with a red bloated Tux captain, first officer and fifty-five of the grow of the Turkish ashore (ip the Bosphorus perished, Avout half of the village of Danville, Que. bate Forty lLiouses aud has Loon burned, | ! The Squirrel Problem, ¥* A squirrel is up a tree and a man on the ground with a gun is trying to shoot it; but the squirrel ta in | keeping on the opposite side of the | The man walks | cloar around the tree to the place of | starting, the squirrel going about in| the same direction and keeping the tree | all the time between itself snd the man. | Now the problem fs, * Has the man been | around the squirrel? He has been around the tree with the squirrel on it, | The Express invited answers to this | problem, and received twenty-seven, | of which fifteen say yes, the man does | sl $150,000 Fuom Bt, Johns N. F., comes news of many tho recon heavy storms | all ou board have boon lost. A large vissol, with a crew of nineteen men no, he does not, A few have sent us| their reasons, and two send figures de. | ing answers are printed: 1. Of course the man goes around the | He goes around the tree and | everything on it, : 2. Should the squirrel have the start | overdue, has boon given up as lost. Sues Use airival of the Froneh fishing foot atl Bt. Pierre twenly-one doaths Grom drownlog have o6- curred, 5 FORTY.SEVENTH CONGRESS, Senate. Bills were passed to give from one to six Casi-iron cannons to monumental or cemetery associstions in Topeka, Kansas; Lycoming ! county, Penn.; Hamilton, Mansfield, Gallipolis, Malan township and Belicire, Ohio; Waterloo, lows; Concord and Portsmouth, N, H., and 3. Not by a blame sight does the hunter walk around the squirrel, | 4. The man does not go around the | squirrel. Might as well claim that—by | having a horse attached st A and an. | time going around the ring go around — men) cause the outside of one desori other. In other words a man or horse i BLL as it came from the House was passed by A vole of thirty-five yeas 10 nineteen nays, six Democrats vot against the bill i A petition from the New England Genealogi- al society, asking that extinet cities and land | reservations attached to the ancient Pueblos in Mexico and Arizona be withheld frow ; sale snd thelr ruins preserved, was re ferred to commities on public lands. , Mr Butler reported & new bill, appropriating $20, . fora b ing for the use of the national association four f of women sng auiares in Lirover a OW destitute colored Distriet, ., Mr re favorably on the bill giving full pay to Lieutenant Schwatka while on leave i command of the Franklin search expedition Hills were reported favorably making APpro- s fo ublic bullaings as follows ; 20,000 ; Newosstle, Del, $15,. fla, Ia, $100,000; Detroit, , ¥75,000 ; Louisville, Pendleton presented a Bn the committee on civil service, ¢ passage of the bill to improve the civil service reported to the Senate in March, Hono The bill creating an executive department of agriculture was passed - vous 172 nave 7, The bill provides thar the department of agricul. b itive department under Ie { a secretary of ? an experienced and nd sstaviishes depart. ments of sgr pote, of anima) in. fustry, of | ! statistics The oun. erence report on the Indian appropriation bill Was Passed The bill to b the | @ the gid in the support of common § was received from the committee on n and isbor, It provides that for ths Gve years there sha!l be annually appro. ithe sum of $10,000,000 to aid in the ree common schools, whieh amount nown ss the common schoo! fund i which shall be apportioned to the several States sud Territories scoording 10 the number of thelr tlliterate population over ten years of age exceeding five per cent. of the sum apportioned may be used for the igoation of teachers in public schools, session of the House was opsped by Jacob Voorsanger, of Houston, 4 CAA er and harbor appropristion bill was i and orderad printed The bill to tions! Lanking sssocia is 10 extend TRE existences Was he Lh { several sme lnoed spd press to Lieutenant Danen. é, and conferring upon anl-oommander given ¢ referred ming nal or game wi, shall for ossession, and shall be deemed A resolution was sdog ctetary of war to inquire inlo lik 2 the dwe § President Lincoln The speaker announced the sppoimt tof Mesars, Camp, of New York; Davis, of snd Blackb of Kentucky, a» visi to West Point; and of Messrs, Thomas, , of Lovisiena, and Harris, of ors 10 Annapolis A mo- suspend the rales asd pass tion for damages lor | be sustained Tor when ved Hing hous ois, Darrel ¥, AB visi ntad article or device ar on the tris] that defendant pur. b article for 8 valuable consider. market, Mr. Rolduson, introdooed a resolution in the President U ether cerfain papers and g American citizens nicated to the Dritish in London, have been artmwent, and whether the sdditiousl corre. by its resolution of the persons Claiming wo {| remain in Drilish jon of crime or prospect {el Llib tate dey Lapect i 5. The man goes around the squir- Itis jost like a wheel within a wheel. 6. The man don't go around the squirrel. I have tried it and had r shot it, 7. If there was no tree there and the American Citizens lo » a8 10 accept release isonmonl by socepliug it on i otadit whether auy person % office under the United States hiss of. ad OU | cept reloass under such degrading aoe, std if 80, by what alleged aa thority, Cote msm —— A Circus Rider's Tragic Death, The tragic death of Emilie [oisset, | the famous circus rider, at the Cirque |d'Hiver, in Paris, plunged the gay capital into temporary grief. Her and it seems to have run in the family, for her father and uncles and aunts were all famous equestrians in their days. Prinoe de Renss created so mnueh ex. citement a short time ago, was also dle. The accident which cansed Emilie restive horse, went to the circus in the daytime for | one particular horse called “J'y pense {to gallop from the stable into the {ring when she was encored in her | on the ground and the man was going in a larger circle I should say the man went around the squirrel. Bat when The man does not go aroand the squirrel on the tree, 8. The man doesn’t go around the squirrel any more than the squirrel goes around the man, 8. OI course the man doesn't go around the squirrel. If I am standing on the nigh side of a horse and start to walk round him, and the horse keeps of him all the time, am I not? And 1 don't go around him if I am on the nigh side all the time, do I? The case is precisely similar to this of the squir- rel on a tree. — Buffalo Expres, Unele Samn’s Men, Uncle Sam's letter-carriers sre a hard. working set of men, and are lisble 10 con- tract rheumatism because of the constant exposure to which they are subjected. Call. ing at the postoffice the reporter had a leasent conversation with Mr. J, Mats, one of the most popular and clever letter-carriers in Indianapolis Mr Mattern said that, whilein the army during the civil war, he sprained one of his ankles which was always worse in the spring, dur. ing the period of the rapid changes in the weather. He did not find wuch relief from the several remedies he applied But two years ago be hit upon Bt, Jacobs Oil, and experienced wonderful relief from its use Several applications of the Grest German Remedy relieved him entirely. The re porter talked with others among the letter carriers and found that the Great German Remedy was popular inthe posioflice. They use it for sore feet, rheumatism, ete. and praise it highly. —~Indisnapolis (Ind.) News. IN 30510 Nebraska has 129 Presbyterian churches, with 4 638 members. Colo- rado has seventy-six Presbyterian churches, with 3.077 members. We see in the New York Spirit of the Times mention of the cure of Mr. George Drake, 46 Filth street, Indianapolis, Ind, of a severe caseof water rheumatism, by the use of Bt. Jacobs Oil. —~Cincinnati En. quirer, Two-thirds of the members of the American House of Representatives are lawyers, while in the English house of commons only one-sixth of the mem. bers belong to the legal profession, I SH A. Bed.Ridden and Cured W. E Hussars, of Emporia, Kansas, says that his wife has been sick pearly seven years, apd for the last four months bedridden. She liad bees treated by a number of physicians and uly grew worse, Her attention was ealied to Dr. Pierce's “Golden Medical Discovery” sod “Favorite Prescription,” which she com. menced using. In one week she could sit up, and in three weeks could walk about, By drug. gists, A xmirrox of pounds of buffalo meat were shipped from the plans last vear; and the pounds of buffalo bones and 6,000,000 hides to Eastern markets, General Deblilty nod Liver Complaint. RV, Presce, M. D., Bufislo, N, Y.: Dear Sir—My wife has been taking your “Golden Medion! Discovery” and “Pellots’ for her liver good medicines, and wonld recommend them to all sufferers from Liver Complaint, Sour Stomach and General Debiiity., Yours frater- ually, N. E. Hannon, Pastor M. E. Chareh, Elsah, Iii, Taxa will be an unusaally large yield of opium in India this season, ope district pro- ducing 75,000 chests which generally raises but 50,000, Young, middle-aged or old men suffering from Nervous Debility or kindred affections should address, with two stamps, for large trea tina, Wonrn's Dispexsany MEDICAL ASSOCLA- riox, Buffala, N, ¥ A oneaT many people who are always com. plaining that life is a burden wonld feel very unhappy at the prospect of being relieved of the oad, Facts from Experience. Maven Cuoxcs, Pa, September 12, 188], H. H. Wanxza & Co.: Sirs—1 have used your {placed at the ring as she returned. When Mlle. Loisset rode *J '7 pense” at | this obstacle, the horse, a vicious brate, | | balked, and exasperated by the vigor- | ous lashing which kis rider gave him, | | dashed at full gallop toward the stable. | | There the iron gates stopped him, and | Emilie Loisset, catching him short by | the head, tried to turn him around | The brute, however, reared, and after | balancing for a moment, fell heavily | {over on one side on top of his rider, | | The eratoh of the saddle inflicted severe | internal injuries on the unfortunate | | girl. Everything possible was done to | [save her life, but she died a fow days [ afterward, and all Paris was plunged in grief. IS Do Your Best, A gentleman once said to a physician, | “I should think, dootor, that st night you would feel so worried over the | work of the day that you would not be | able to sleep.” { “My head hardly touches the pillow | till I fall asleep,” replied the physician. | “I made up my mind,” he continued, | “at the commencement of my profes. | sional career, to do my best under all | circumstances, and, so doing, I am not | troubled by any misgivings.” | A good rule for us all to follow, Too | many are disposed to say, “No matter | how I do this work now; next time I'll | do better.” This practice is as bad as | the reasoning, ‘‘No matter how I learn this lesson in the primary class; | when I get into a higher department, | then I'll study.” As well might the | mother, in knitting socks, say: ‘‘ No | matter how the tip is done; if I do drop | a stitch now and then I'll do better | when I get further along.” What kind | of a stocking would that be? | As well might the builder say: “I don't care how I make the foundation of this house; anything will do here; wait till I get to the top, then I'll do good work.” Said Sir Joshua Reynolds once to Dr. Samuel Johnson: * Pray tell me, sir, by what means have youn attained such ex- traordinary accuracy and flow of lan- guage in the expression of your ideas?" “1 laid it down as a fixed rule,” re- plied the doctor, *“to do my best on every occasion, and in every company to impart what I know in the moss for- face, n cible language I can put it.” great bend fit therefrom, : H. F. Noxxesacuen. Tur oaterpillar of the silk worm, when fully developed, is 70,000 times heavier than when it Rooms 6 and 7, Milea Block, Fourth st., Drs Motes, Iowa, Aug. 5, 1860, = To the Holman Pad Co. § For the past six years I have suffered from | mil rial troubles and inactivity of the liver, | causing indigestion and headache most of the time, and at times eontinuing for fifteen or | twenty days without relief. 1 bave taken all the medicines known, I was recommended to use your Pads. I did so and found absolute relief, and am frank to say I regard it as a positive cure. I now wear one ali the time and would not do without it. I write this because | 1 feel this is due yon, there being no longer any question in my mind as to their merit, Yours truly, W. M. Joxes, Ou Thirty Days’ Trial, The Voltaio Belt Co, Marshall, Mich, will tric Appliances on trial for thirty days to any | yerson afflicted with Nervous Debility, Lost itality, and kindred troubles, guaranteeing complete restoration of vigor and manhood, Address as above without delay, P. 8. No risk 1s incurred, as 30 days’ trial is | allowed, i —————————————— { FOR DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, depression of spir- | ite and general debility, in their various forms; | also as 8 preventive against fever and ague and | other intermittont fevers, the “Ferro-Phosphor- | ated Elixir of Calisaya,” made by Caswell, | Hazard & Co., New York, and «old by all Drug. | gists, is the best tonic; anc for patients recover. | ing from fever orother sickness it has no equal. | Ax Exorsous Trarric. Pittsburg boasts that 819 746 bottles of Carboline have been sold within the last six months, This shows that | the great army of baidheads will soon be re. duced to a corporal’s guard, Frazer Axle Grease, One greasing lasts two weeks; all others two or three days, Do not be imposed on by the humbug stuffs offered. Ask your dealer for Frae gor's, with label on, It saves your horse labor. and vou too. It received first medal st the Cen, tennial and Paris Expositions, Sold ¢varywhere., HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE Is the BEST SALVE for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns and all kinds of Skin Eraptions, Freckles and Pimples, Get HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE, as al) others are counterfeits, Price 25 cents, DR. GREEN'S OXYGENATED BITTERS Is the best Remedy for Dyspepsia, Billousness, Ma. laria, Indigestion and Diseases of the Blood, Kid- neys, Liver, Skin, ete, matism, Kidney Troubles, ete. Can be used exter nally as a plaster, Use RED HORSE POWDER for Horses and Cattle. ALLEN'S Brain Food-cures Nervons Debility & Weakness of Genarative Organs, $i 1-all druggists, Bend for Circular, Allen's Pharmacy, 318 Firstav,, N.Y, The © In order to make heathy . mon enemy, Disease, it is necessary him with Bieta It very frequently ua necessities of the if in, Is ecn- t d and th pol i a tow doses of it do not cure 8 malady, How unreasonable snd vojust would such a jodgment be re . ing Hostotter's Blomach Bitters, one of the of the day, » nt inv t. and an invari ably a, remedy for constipation, ¢ pepsia, liver complaint, incipient and gout, insctivity sod w enn of deys and bladder, and for the iufirmities inci. rience its truth, those efilicted with obstinate orm of disease should give this benignant curative a patient trial, If they do, they may rely upon decisive curative results, A max who cannot govern bis own temper should never try to control his wife's, That “Husband of Mine Is three times the wan Le was before he began using Wells' Health Renewer. $1, Druggista wend for pamphlet to E. 8. Weis, Jersey City, N. J. a, The Bolence of Life, or Belf-Preservation, a medical work for every man--young, middie god or old. 125 invaluable prescriptions. THE MARKETS NEW YORE. Beef Cattle ~Prime, live weight 1138 £4 Bheep,.... b Lambs, Hogs Live, Dresscd, city Flour Ex. Stale, good to fancy § 65 Western, good to choice 690 Wheat No, 2 Fn srsnnnne 380 No, 1 White, .... ae -- w Sak Ungraded Western Mized Osis White Biate - eRcosEEEs Hay~FPrime Timothy........ CH0660666600606% { Lard—City Steam. ...,. tires we 0 SalBERE.L.888 8 1 i - i Petroleum-—Crude. ,,. see : fined , see | Batter—State Creamery, fine, , i POY... 0000000000 i Western Im. Creamery Factory , | Cheese—Biate Factory........ Bhi .....00000 seen i Western, {| Eggs—Btate and Penn... ,... Potatoes Early Rose State, bhi BUFFALO, fieers— Good to choice | Lambs Western { Bhosp— Western ...... Hogs, Good to Choice Yor | Flour—C'y Ground, No. 18 | Whest—No. 1. Hard Duluth, , ,, { Corn-—No. 2 Mixed { Oats—No, 2 Mix. West | Barley Two-rowed State... BOSTON, —~ Extra plate and family. 15 Hopga—14v0. .....iio00ceuesss | Hogs-—City Dressed | Pork— Extra Prime pet bbl, 1 | Flour—8pring Wheat Patents, , | Corn~Higt Mized : Ogle Extra White Rye—State canassanes Wool Washed Comb& Delaine Cowashed + - " WATERTOWN (MASS) CATTLE MARKEY, Beef Extra quality T62,@ 837 Sheep Live weight ,..... “wee 6 @ TH I pon . TY 8 x ot what COREEEEOL COREE BERLEE 3 * ox ; oo SUCEES BEC wel .a2ERE0EBRG8RS -y - 8 E38% al el sles Em aI ay - - ERSRZEBL.x8 BER2EZREOER { Beal! - ¥28BI8T.. SN 0666068669 wo o Hogs, Northern, d. w......... i PILADELFEIA, Fiour—~Penn, Ex. Fauily, good 625 @ 625 : Wheat—No. 2Red............ 144 ; Bve-State............ a Corn—-State Yellow........ Uals--Nixed |... Batter Creamery Extra Ps... Cheese—New York Full Cream. Peurolenm Crude Refined. . ...... 12%9 6 @ HS x THE COUNTRYMAN IN THR Weather Signal Office. Mr. Jeremiah Toadrine, of the rural district, brought a letter of introduo tion to the Lait i cer. and by the latier he besutiful scientific instro- ng and determining os and conditions cinting to the stand. eter he explained to Mr, T. the uses of the heat gauge, where upon Mr. T. anxiously (aquired if he “hadn't her un to spare-sicha { 8 10 sot (he weather in and harvest time” His inspeo- ion of the aerometer or wind mossurer evoked the expression: “Wouldnt sha be the racket 10 run the wind with™ The bsrometer was too many for Toadvine, and, Jook- ng queerly st the officiel, as if he were ulterly ponplussed and bank. rupt of words, ssid; “ Friend did you ever have the roumsts® tness of the question surprised . who replied, * No—-never™ ® What" Evidently recollectin himself, Mr. T. stopped 00 a Ly edge of the threadbare remark, and £8, 8 § & BOB 8 By said: “only wanted to know, for if this trap (pointing to the barometer) shows the good an’ bad westher afore it's time, §t would be a bully trap for people with reumatis; they could flank itevery time. Up my country use 87, Jacons when folks hes 1 the OfL, an’ isa powerful argyment agin reumatis—ils the upper dorg inthe fight every time™ With thanks for { the unexpected information, the offi ; cial politely turned Mr, Foadrire over to the usher to show him to the street car, while he, looking over his per. road: “Mm T. A. Gist, No, P30 Watnut street, Philadelphia, Pa., Twrites: 1 had fnflammatory rheama- tism very badly. Inone footandankie it seemed to have taken hold with the By By Be #9, 8, 0%, ing A obtained the 3 Broomst i} could not put my fool Gow ih fioor, By for an instant, 1 used it thatevening for the first time, and the next morning for the second time, and that afternoon put my foot down for severs! minutes. On the Sunday following I could stand up and wal a few sic On Tuesday could walk about Rh and went down stairs by holding on to the banisters. Now I can walk quite well and there is very little pain left. Just think! one | bottle and a half, and 1 am simost free from pain! Itis a wonderful medicine _XYNU—i8 To Ove nnd All, Are rou suffering from a Cough Cold, Asthina, Bronchitis, or any of the various pul monary troubles that so often end in Consumption? feo, use Witdor's Pure Cod Liver Ou] and Lime,” 3 safe and sure remody. This is po quack preparation but is prescribed Ly the medical faculty, Manu! only by A f WiLson, Chemist, Boston. By all druggists CENTS I for tho three first numbers of iS EN the now Tulip of Dexorest's MoxraLy, Bee! ongravings and Oil. The a. a Oe is Ee. dont J A G . pi Three cut dross palterns, Two bandred ‘dlstis- of clagant tions, Two handset ad oy literature, size BX §o OF 3) inting, on tinted T, free, for fifty cents fr ponte stamps. WW JHNNINGS DEMOREST, Publisbor, 17 East 1413 Street, New York. . M ANKATO, Blue Earta Co, Minn, fs the best i manwfecivring and sbirping point {railroads radiating in all directions) (n all Southern Minnesota and Dakota, and Northern lowa, which is the best section west of the Mississippi for dairying, stock ralsing apd general farming combined, © have 6.300 inhabitants, good water, stone, brick, timber and cement material in imexbaustible quantities. We want pork packers, cement works, cheese factory, tow, bagging. twine and paper mills, larger woolen, wagon and Farniture factories, besides many other enterprises that will ray. For further information address M. GC. WILLARD, Secretary Board of MAKE HENS LAY. An English Veterinary Surgeon and Chemist, now t ling in this country, says that most of the Horse 3 fe Powders sold here are worthless trash, He says that Rheridan's Condition Powders areabsolyte- iy pure and immensely valuable. Nothipg on earth will make hens lay like Sheridan's Condition Pow. ders. Dose, one teaspoonful to one pint of food. Sold everywhere, or sent by mall for § letter stamps. 1.8, JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass. formerly Bangor, Me, JOINT THIS OUT TO YOUR NEIGH. BORS. Now open, THE VANDERBILT HO. TEL: new house: new furniture; Lexington ave. and 42d st: one block east of Grand Central Depot, New York City, Don't pay #4 or § per day when you can get the same kind of goods for $2 and $2.50 per day at the Vanderbilt upder the superintendence of Charles Leland, of Ocean Hotel, 3% Puch. JS WHEAT Proprietor. 1 nN NEY nT ~ SOMETHING NEW. Elegant Photographic Easels, with picture of Gar fi Mrs. Garneld, Graot. Arthur aud other leading Pibiie charactors. Five for 3c. Sent by mail on receipt of price. FRENCH & CHOATE, Stationais’ Bpecialties, 4 Bond Street, New York. Hi IRES IMPROVED ROOT BEER. 3c, package makes 3 gallons of a delicious, wholesome, sparkling Tem. perance beverage. Ask vour druggist, or sent by 2 ¥ mail for 23¢. C. E. Hires, 48 la. a hila. & MORPHINE ATIN A Treatise on their speedy cure SENT FREE. Dx J.C. © wr— 1 1 OF FM AN P.O. Box 138.Chicago lil $30 ver Werk can be made tn any locallly, Samethine entirely pew for agents. $3 outn: tree, LW. Ingrahem & Co. Boston, Mass. Lf Inventors to know that 1 make nofs charge for obtaining patents until a * WANTED the patent is actually alivseed. Book - PPRPRIRIRE free. CASH ARI AW, 11 Court St. Boston. FAIRE A Morphine Habit Cured in 10 aPIuM to 20 days. No pay till Carved, + Da. J, STEPHENS, Lebanon Ohio 90 bon sample Address Jay Brouson, Detroit. Mion ODS AI YT oy . rs t to learn Telegraphy i YOU NG M EN fou want to aloe a n Ar situation, addiess Valentine Bros. Janesville, Wis, $66 “a week in your own town. Terms and #5 ontit PUY free. Add's H. Harrerr & Co. Portland, Maine, 18 MIGHTY. Pro’ MARTINESR, T R uU T™ he Sra Spi a Autviter ¥ balagtet, will, for cents, wi e At of ores and iock of dair, send s CORRUCT BIC F usband or wife, with ame, time TURE of your future bi 3 i ering, snd date of marriage, payehol a. place of merlin ie. | af ehlag liy Lenn ney a b READ THE CERTIFICATES. WARRANTED FOR 35 YEARS AND NEVER FAILED : trying it will be without § ; over 808 CROUP Children’s lives Saved. w N.Y. is to y that 1 have OF SET an FROM THE REY. LP. YEG. New Yous, 11, Creo Pi aor rh Reka tried out ¥ his ¥ Fry eg RRR Ry Bot be without his A ey ie WHAT HORSEMEN WANT. A owen -l a Botton aad Derby Condition Powdap meat. FROM COL. PD. McDAXIEL, Some of the Fam EE i De Fes Sold by all Druggists. DEPOT, 42 MURRAY ST, N. Y. REMOVAL The Wilsonia Maguetic Clothing Company beg to announce to the public that in order to accommodate greatly increased demand for thelr agnetic Carments have re- moved their principal salesrooms and offices from 465 Fulton St., Brooklyn, to 25 F ~»t 14th St., New York City, where all communica- tions should be rddressed, and all checks, drafts and P. 0. orders be made payable. WILSONIA MAGNETIC CLOTHING CO, 25 EAST 1th STREET, Ncw York City, TWO DOLLARS, A NEW DEPARTURE YOR | DEMOREST’S llustrated Monthly MACAZINE. The Largest in Form, the Largest in Circulation best in Ah - a 3 TWO DOLLARS A YEAR. There it no publication so cheap or #0 good in the "or circular of fall address W. JENNINGS DEMOREST, 17 East 14th Street, New York. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE - . th discovery meat of the New World ‘etc. etc. It Contains ory oF Se RE Se Bondi nen oxirs terms 10 Agente, \ATIONAL PusLisuing Co., Philadelphia, ————— A A A — ons refer to fire Foti Eaisalf RESHER TH zi trea. TEE AULIMAN & YAYLOR OU. Manteid O Br aime: EVERYBODY NEEDS IT! on re KNOW THYSELF. SCIENCE OF LIFE; PRESERVATION, OR, SELF- Nervous in Man; PRESERVATION, com the most ed or si nit hat s Tully explained. PRESERVATION, well. Contains Jrescriptions for gz seases, for each ” would charge irom $94 1 PRESERVATION, Pages, fine steel engravi Superbly m o pre fll tl isa and beauty, Jatfunied 19 k in SYert sohse 2 Sal Instance 4 uthor, ¥ OR, SELF. PRESERVATION, ; Ty at PRESERVATION, sealed, postpaid, on receipt Small illustrated The author can be consulted on all diseases re- Address or W, H, PARKER, M. D.,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers