Christian Roth's Story. (Stuttgart, May, 1889.) we called, Mr. Consul, (his morning, to ask, if you please, your advice On matter that gives me great worry—* Let's hear it (wants moviey T know)” Here's my oitizen-paper—(“All right.")—I was born in the Schwarzwalder Kreis, At Schramborg, and went to America forty-five | YONrs ago, ‘Yes, I'm near soventy now, and you sec that my : step is unsteady * Plenty of trocbie, 1 toll you settled in North ~~ Tiinols, And there, over since, I've been working” and sav ing up, $0 that already Tye got a nice farm, Mr. Consul, that goes by-and bye to my boys, Tow many children? There's four, three bays and agit. We've had seven; fut when the war came along, my marched away. Both of them fell on the field, and last winter the good Lord in Hoayen Called home onr dear little yoars old to-day. You, the oid woman is living, She's there with the boys on the place, And our Lina keeps house for them all. Next spring she'll be just twenty-four, She's the handsomest girl in the county; theres sunshine all over her face; 1 can hear even now her sweet voice as she told me farewell at the door. Why left? Well, perhaps, Mr. Consul, ‘twere bot tor the truth weren't told. Bat no matter--it wasn't my fast. My old woman and I had a fight. Sho ia slok and can’t work any more, and she’s idle We're both getting oid ; | Bo she's cross, and will have it that Pm always wrong and that she's always right, 1 hasn't been always that way, we worked for our broad And hadn't a dollar laid by in the bank, she and 1 were all good William and Carl Minnte—she's twelve In the days whon She has tried to be boss over me, and 1 didnt in- tend that she should. And when our poor dear Minnie died, 1 had hoped that the fight would die, too, Bat no! it lived on jest the same, and one day, sboat four weeks ago, The old woman seat out for a lawyer, and then, for the first time, I knew That she wanted to separate from me—from av, who have borne with her so. And the boys they all tried to make peate; would listen to nanght that they said, But my Lina stood up by my side—though she spoke not, "twas easy to woe, As she pat her sweet arms round my neck and rested Bor beautiful head On my bresst, that her dear heart was full of the tenderest pity for me, And lsald: “My Christina, we've labored straggied together till now; Dur children are grown, and you want us 10 sepa- rate, now we are old ? and SEVer our vow, through the rain and the cold.” Then my poor Lina cried, and she bade me re flect, and the boys they sald “ Stay" And I pansed for a moment and looked at Chris tina—she said not & word. Doe word would have kept me. wot, and 1 hurried away, And my Lina's sweet voles, * Ob, dear father, come back,” was the last that 1 heard. And so I have wandered back here to the scenes of my childhood and youth | Have stood by the grave of my father and mother— have seen the old home On the hillside at Schramberg—-and yet, Mr. Consul, to tell you the trath, § find that 1 cannot be Nappy while far from the « loved ones I roam. Bat no, it came For my sweet Lina's words, * Ob, dear father, come back,” always ring in my ears, And Pm going this day; but for fear there should come on the jdurney some ill, There's no telling, you know, what might happen, perchance, 10 3 man of my years, I Bave come, Mr. Consul, this morning to ask you n to draw up my will And I want you to make my oid woman entitled to all that I've got In case of my death. After all I can trust her to do By the children in case she survives me. Just say that 1, Christian Roth—* What! Is your nameé Christian Roth? Here's a letter ad- dressed to you here in my care.” A letter! My Lina's handwriting, and postmarked at Scott, Mineds; mother implores you to come. Bhe tenderly asks your forgiveness rand now, she _ snd 1 snd the boys" Are lovingly #%iting your coming, snd eager to welcome you home.” George L, Catlin, Iv FROM THE GERMAN OF ALEX V. ROBERTS, {The original of this translation, by Mrs Rosalie Ortheiler, of Albany, N. X., is » prize story written for the Vieuns Allgemeine Zeitung. There were seven hundred snd contribu- tions handed in, and of thess Mr. Roberts’ © It” took the first prize, 300 florins. The judges were sonte of tbe most enlightened men of German literature—Bauernfeld, Laube, Gross and several others. ] Returning ‘from a business trip, I patered my wife's boudoir, and found her kneeling before a low-chair, on which sat a boy-baby with large, round and wondering eyes. She got up and came rustling in ber silken robe de chambre to meet me. She reached ont her hand and greeted me not more heartily nor yet more Jermally than we were accustomed to greet other in those days. : : : «There it is,” said my wife, pointing to the child. + What ?” asked I; but she stooped down before the little stranger, held a biscuit close to his little upturned face, and balf turning toward me, replied: +t Well, you know—did we not read of it in the ne pape Don’t you remem- fore yesterday? And is not beautiful ?” Now I did recollect that a few nights before she hdd held the Gazette uader the light of my student-lamp, and point- with Se Bru to an advertisement, to me: * Please read that.” It was well-known appeal, the cry of de- ir from a bleeding heart, addressed sto good people.” A child was offered adoption to persons well off. “What would you think of our taking it?” my wife had said, and I had returned the per to her with a shrug of my shoul- ers. + But, Martha, what have you done?” cried I, in a tone vibrating with anger. “You have really—"' “Certainly, as you see. And then it belongs tc me; I myself have settled everything with the poor mother, who is in reality to be pitied. I have sworn to take good eareof it; and so I will in- deed.” She took the little head, with its blonde silk curls, between her white hands and fondled and caressed it. “Is it not sg, little one ?—you will be loved ?” But the somewhat sickly and delicate Tittle face showed no eign of understand- ing, except that out of the Beatt-dhabel little mouth came one of those sighs that sound so strangely from children. I at once gave up all serious objee- I years ntly © other? Our marriage was not a happy one, although we had not married for love. During the noise and bustle of the erowded exchange, our fathers had contracted this union. She had to tear her heart from a beloved one, and in mine glowed a passion not yet outspoken. But al wishes conquered. We chose to be obedient children; and so it happened. At the commencement we were to each other a silent reproach; after which followed a declared war, until finally we came to a polite but gloomy peace. To be gute She 3 Wasitioane:tul, she was good and brig sparkling. Others called her an angel. And 1? Well, I believe that I was no monster either. The analysis showed the brightest ocl- still the sun was missing. We were ears married and had no children. had heaven sent us them—well, d belonged entirely to her! I she given the ther a thousand dollars, the price of et of jewels which she sold secretly. ol you not tell me of it?” My bLorses, my dogs; her canaries, her gold fishes—that I could endure; but that she wanted to have her child | for herself alone, that was too much for me. The thought of it tortured me one, two days long. On the third day, my wife having gone outin her carriage, there came a veiled woman and de- manded entrancs, It was the mother, Like a shadow she glided into the room, and, with a half-suppressed sob, begged tosee her child once more. She dus not part from him forever without imprint. | ing one more kiss upon his cheeks. I | opened my safe quickly: ‘‘ Here, my | have not given you enough.” Hot tears | fell down her wan cheeks; she begged { me not to judge her too harshly; she { had another child, a cripple and help- | Joss; she herself was sick and would not | live much longer, and what was to be- come of the children? Then she | thought—1 mysel! had to finish the | sentence, which a violent fit of cough. ling had interrupted. * Yes," she had | thought, * I will sell the healthy one, | in order that the money may help the exinple when I am dead and gone.” we rich ones know but little of the trials | and temptations of the poor. When my wife returned I gave her an account of the call I had had, adding that I bad given to the unfortunate one exactly the rame amount as she had. “And now,” said I, *‘you see the child belongs to both of us.” She bit her lip with her little white teeth. “It is all the same to ma,” said she after a moment's reflection, and with that she pressed a tender kiss on the little boy's mouth. It sounded almost like a challenge. | “Our child!" I scarcely ever saw ik | And the changes that were made in our household for hissake were made entire- ly without me. Sometimes, most important things were decided, my consent was then askel. * We are | obliged to have a nurse, 1 hired one, | Anselm” —I nodded silently—*' We must fit np a nursery ; that room is too | warm forthe child.” [nodded silently, | but 1 heard the cound of the workmen, | who were already busy in the hall. | What could I do better? Wasit notall | done for our child ? My wife and I did not talk much { aboat the child, and when we did men- | tion it wo used only the name “It.” | But this ** It” could be heard through | the house at almost any time of the 5 | day, | “Hush! not so much noise ! It sleeps! { It must have its dinner. It should ro | taken out for a drive. It has hurt it- I self!” And so the whole house began { to turn round our ** It.” This nameless | neuter vexed me. | “It must have its own name," said I, | one day. “ | entirely forgot to ask the mother | —] mean the woman-—what its name | is,” answered my wife. ‘She intended to come again. Bat she does not | come, she is certainly sick. Now, Ieall | it Max. Max is a pretty, short name; is litnot?” “Him,” returned I, between two draughts of my cigar; * Fritz would i“ ne {also bea quite preity name.” | cannot change (he name now on ao | count of the domestios,” answered she, | shortly; and then called out loudly: { “Is Max up already?’ Never mind, | was it not our child! | Once, though, I played my justifiable | part toward our child. At dinnerit was | always served at a little table in an ad- | joining room. At such times we could | hear, between the scantily-dropping | phrases of our conversation its merry | prattling, accompanied by the clatter | ing of its spoon. My wife had no rest; | there was a continual going and coming | between us and him; the soup might be i too hot and he might eat too much! | “Wife,” said I, very quietly but very | decidedly, ‘from to-morrow it shall eat | with®us at our table. I is old enough | now with its two years.” { From that time on *“ It" ate with us. | He sat there in his high chair like & | prinoe, close to my wife; both opposite | to me like declared enemies, as it were. { The yellowish paleaess of poverty had | yiclded toa fine aristocratic pink in his | id3 cheeks, which, now becoming , quite chubby, sat comfortable on the | still folds of the napkin. It worked | had finished, set up thespoon likeascep- terin its little round fist on the table. My wife and I bad exchanged a few words, and now again we sat silent. Apparently on account of this silence, its large eyes begun to open wider and wider. They stared on me, stared at my wife, with a surprised, almost frightened expression, as if they had a presentiment that all was not right ‘between us, I confess that these eyes embarrassed me, and that 1 had a feeling of relief when Frederick entered with a dish. And I think that my wife felt the same. And the following days there were the same large, wondering eyes, like an appealing question, staring into the pauses of our conversation. It sounds ridiculous, bat it is nevertheless true; we were culprits before the child, we two grown persons ! our conversation became more ani ma‘ed. The occasional prattlings of the about; indeed sometimes there | mutual laughter at his attempts to 8 heard that before ? over my writing desk, listening, as same silvery tones ? With the first sunny spring days It" began to play in the garden, which I office. She was generally with him. I could hear the sound of his little feet on the pebbles, and then her footsteps. Now she would playfully chase him, and a chorus of twittering sparrows laughter. Now she would catch him aud kiss his cheeks over and over. Once 1 opened my window; a warm, balsamic air streamed around me and a butterfly fluttered in and lit on my inkstand Just then she came out of a green, vine grown bower; she was dressed in a dazzling white negligee, trimmed with costly lace; all over her streamed the golden sunshine, except that her face was overshadowed by thé pink of her parasol. _ How slim she appeared | how graceful in her movements! Had I been blind ? Truly the aunts and cousins were right; she was in reality beautiful! A sweet smile transformed her features; she was happy—ocurtainly in this moment she was—and her happiness came from her child. Then a voice made itself heard in my breast, which said very plainly: “You are a monster?’ 1 got up and walked to the window. *‘It is a beanti ful day,” ealled I. I know how cold and prosaic it must have sounded to her. It came like a heavy cloud-shadow over a sunny landscape. Bhe answered some- thing that I did not understand; but the brightness was gone from her little face, Then she took up the child, who was stretching out his arms to her, and kissed and caressed him before my eyes, ~ There it was when the first feeling of jealousy was aroused in me; a jealousy truly, but wha! a strange jealousy, which could not make clear to itself who was its object! If “It” mid ‘“mamma”’ to her, there came a pain in the heart; and the caresses with which she overwhelmed him almost drove me wild. I was jealous of both! It pained me that I had no part in this weaving of love; that I was not the third in the union. I exerted myself to gain a part of their love, I did it very clumsily, The child persevered in a cortain shyness, and she—had I not kept myself forcibly away from her during these long, long years? One day at the dinuer-table, after a skirmish of words, came a great still- ness between us, a stillness more pain- ful than it had ever been. I glanced down at the flowers on my plate of Saxon porcelain, my displeasure showing in my face; but I felt plainly that It” had its eyes fixed on me, and also her eyes! It was as if those four eyes burned on my forehead. Then sound- ed suddenly in the stillness, ** Papa !” and again louder and more courageous, wip 1 shuddered. * It" sat there jover at me, wondering, perhaps, 1 ¥ Paps.” | open lips trembled slightly. { my heart. | had taught him this * Papa.” Why did | 1 not spring up, bound toward her, and | with one werd, one embrace, strike out | the loneliness of these last six years? | One right word in this moment and all would have been well, It remained | unspoken ; I seemed to have lost all | power to aot; but on a certain page of my ledger are still traces of the | tears I shed in anger at my own i stupidity. | There was nodonbt about it; another | spirit had stepped in with its little curly head-—the spirit of love; and | that made me a stranger in my own | house, A precious sunshine brightened | the rooms, even when the one in the ' heavens was hidden by clouds. The | face of the servants and even inanimate objects streamed back this radiance, But me, only, the sunshine did not | toneh, 1 felt myself always more and more aphappy in my loneliness. Jealousy | grew in me; it gave me all sorts of foolish thoughts. 1 wanted to rebel against the little autocrat, but that | would be ridiculous. I wanted to give | her the choice between him and me, | 1, audacious one. I knew very well which side her heart would choose. At another time I was ready to take steps in order to find the mother, and, with the power of gold, force her to take back her child—behind my wife's back. That would be cowardly. I could no longer fix my mind on | business. I mistrusted even myself, People asked what was the matter with | me. I feigned illness. The sunshine would not let itself be | banished, and the spirit of love was | stronger than I. With his flaming | sword he drove me out. “I must take {a long journey, Martha,” My voice trembled as I said this, My wife must | have noticed it; for something like moist, shining pity shone in her | beautiful eyes. At my taking leave she held the little one toward me and asked in soft, caressing tones: “Will you not say adieu to our child?" I took up the little one, perhaps too roughly; at all events, he began to ory and resist my | QArosses, hastened away. I traveled in uncertainty through the world and behold! after the first few days in addition to an ordinary travel- ing companion, bad humor, there came another fellow who told me plainly that I was a fool, First it sounded like a whisper, then louder and louder: * You are a downright fool.” Finally, I read traced on the blue mountains; the loco- motive shrieked it to me. lieved it; why did I not then and there turn my face homeward? Well, the fool must first travel it all off before everything would be right again. ing of the heart, I again entered my dwelling. What a solemn stiliness reigned there! I could now hear the sound of whispering voices; my wife came toward me: very sick,” moaned she, ‘It will surely die!” 1 tried to comfort her. short time, however, proved that her fears were but too well grounded. little bed; she there and I here. Each of us holding one of his little hands. Ah! those feverish pulse beats!-—every stroke sounding like an appeal: ** Love We felt eventually these throbbings | and we understood the appeal. eyes met full and earnest through the glittering tears, as in a first holy vow. then. Not long after we laid our darling in | the warm spring earth. When we again sat down atour table | there was a stillness between us; but it | was not the same stillness as that which with his rting “Paps.” By wall stood his high arf-chair, and on the little board before it lay his spoon. | scepter, My wife reached her fine, white | hand over the table, and asked: * Did | you also love it?—at least a little 7" | Her voice trembled. sweet, my own wife I" called I. Then {oll at her feet and held her hands fast in mine. “I love thee, my wife, oh, wife I” After the first emotion had subsided I pointed to the arm-chair: * The little one came to teach us love,” whispered 1. “And when it had finished its teach- ing it went again to the angels,” added she, through ber tears, my wife's room, with a smiling face. He touched the little arm-chair as he passed it, saying: * Let it stand there; you will need it again.” Really? Was it possible? Had I de- served such happiness? As I held my wile 6lose to my heart hear to bend down to her biushing little face, and say: * We will love it dearly, very dearly. Isitnotso?” Lameness in Horses, zoology, Harvard university, gives in the American Agricullurist a very full aceonnt of the symptoms that | different varieties of lameness and their treatment. He says : Shoulder lameness is frequently due to a strain or to direct violence, and is shown in repose by the hanging of the limb, from disinclination to move the museles, and daring motion by the dragging and difficulty to bring forward the limb, which is done by a rotatory movement, It is also shown by the flinching when the foot is lifted and The positive signs before mentioned may or may not be present. If the elbow is affected, there will be a singular | “hanging ” of the limb and excessive nodding of the head in motion. | In splint, lamesness is usually much increased by exercise. Pressare on the limb shows tenderness, and there is in- creasad heat, with more or less swelling. A small splint in developing may give munch more pain, shown by lameness, than one fully formed. Ring bonesand ossifled side cartilages, in their early stages, may be recognized as causes of a peculiar stiffened gait, with the weight thrown upon the heels. The lameness nearly or entirely disappears before the bony deposit appears about the mjddle and lower pastern. Strains of posterior and other ligaments and tendons of the lower limb evidence themselves by the local symptoms and alteration in gait, But there are cases of temporary lame- ness, from very obscure causes, attribut- able only to a sudden strain of some ligament whose exact situation can only be surmised, The short, quiet step of the horse, with that inflammation of the feet known as chronie laminitis in which the weight is thrown upon tha heels of the fore limbs, is easily recognized. In the less frequent affection, navicular dis- ease, the weight is thrown upon the toes, the gait is short and the lameness, slight at first, is increased by exercise. Corns are discovered by rapping and pinching the sole, at the space between the bars and the quarters in the fore feet, Disease of the frog is self-evi- dent by the peculiar odor. A sand erack sufficient to produce lameness cannot escape observation. Accidental injuries to the feet will generally be known by the history of the case, Lame- ness in and about the hip joint is most frequently the result of strain, and is to be recognized by the peculiar want of movement of the hind gunarter, and if of long standing, by the wasting of the muscles of the region. Biifle-joint lameness, either the result of laxation or of disease, may be known by the dragging of the tos, and by the local symptoms, Bone spavin is maniiested by positive tine, but mora espacially by the stiffness in the bending of the hock joint and by the dragging and sud- den catching up of the limb, and above all by the disappearance of all lameness during exercise, to reappear after rest, Bog spavin, a disease of the true hock joint, gives rise to a similar lameness, | carried forward and backward. Cases In Which the Biter Has Got Motes | Hardly a day passes, says » New York paper, that a complaint is not lodged at some one of the police stations by a stranger in the oity who has been vio- timised by confidence operators, bul sometimes the confidence operator picks up the wrong man, and instead of swindling him gets the worst of the game himself, as the few instances The neighborhood of the Astor honse and the Qity Hall park is a favorite re- port for these * crooks,” owing to the woximity of the Jersey ferries, Not Jos sinoo a gentlemen was noticed by one of the fraternity of swindlers cross. ing the park, and, as he stopped to in. spect the architectural monstrosities of the postoffice, the operator approached him and said : “Oan 1 be mistaken ? Is not this Mr, Edwards, of Boston?" ‘No, sir, I am pot,” was the reply.” “My name is An. drews, I'm from Chicago.” The opertor begged his pardon, The likeness to his friend Mr. Edwards, of Boston, was so remarkable it misled him, and he withdrew. The gentleman had hardly gone fifty feet from the spot where he had been accosted when a well dressed man of perhaps thirty five slapped him on the back and said: “Why, An drews, old boy, bow are you? What re you doing so far East as this? How are all the boys in Chicago? Come in and have a drink and 1211 me the news ?' Mr. Andrews accepted the invitation, and bottle after bottle of champagne was ordered and drunk, always at the expense of the operator, Mr. Andrews explained that he had only about $10 in his pocket and a check for §8,000 that he was going to cash at the bank the next morning. This he showed his friend, and the sight of that and the diamond studs and gold wateh and chain he wore were enough to make the “orook” determine to “play” him. Mr, Andrews dined with his “old friend,” went to the theatre and then on a spree all over the city, the fritnd paying all expenses, and at 4 o'clock in the morn. ing they parted, after Mr. Andrews had made an engagement to meet his come panion at 9:40 the next morning and go to the bank, get the check cashed, and As he steppod into the hack the * crook” called and paid for, he said, feeling in his pockets: “ By the way, some one in the last dive must have picked my pooket of that §10 ei me $50 tall morning, as 1 haven't a cent in my pocket” * Cer tainly, here it is. Remember 9:45 to- morrow, or, rather to-day, sharp, Good- night.” Mr. Andrews has not yet shown up. He has probably returned to New Or. leans, where, under his own name, he runs a very popular and well-paying faro bank, P. T. Barnum was picked up a few weeks ago at the corner of Fifth ave. nue and Twenty-third street by a gen. and that his name was Ilobinson and It was not till Mr. Barnum had convinced him that he was from Bridgeport, Conn. that he was induced to depart. Not long since a man, loosely put to. fit him partienlarly well, so that he sanntering down the Bowery, when he was accosted by a man who claimed to know him well and treated him to drink for old acquaintance sake. Then a visit was proposed to one of the many side-shows, where a gambling establish- ment is the ** raison § etre.” Both men | joined in a game known as the “‘en- velope game,” and the countryman won gan to win back from him. The supposed oted what was left of the winnivgs. The tinue playing, and he finally consented, journ to police headquarters for the continuation, so as to give the superin- tendent and commissioners a chance.” his credentials as a oentral office de- teotive, and took the implements of the game as well as the dealer, the pro- yrietor and the * capper” to the station- onse, A well. known clab-man in the city “My name is not John- | son,” said the intended victim, and don and departed. But as the gentle- | fountain in the center of Madison square on his way to his club confidence-man I'm glad to see you! How's all the “They're pooty well, How's your “ (Good, thank youn; what's the news ap in Ulster county?” | i Well, there ain’t much news, ‘cept | I've been gitting mmrried lately,” and | spread over the elderly gentleman's | face. ‘Yon don't mean it; who did yon marry “Little Katy; you know she lived two | houses below the hot—" “Why, certainly I knew her; lived just below the hotel. Bo you married “Do you know my little Katy, my little { tended prey, as though delighted at meeting some one who knew his be- loved Katy. Then encirling the opera- tor with his arms, and getting a grip with his right hand on his left wrist, he began to hug the slim figure of the “orook” with the vigor of a polar bear, at. the same time expector- ating a miniature Niagara of to- bacco-juice over the expanse of shirt bosom displayed by the low- cut vest of the swindler, ecraping in a paroxysm of delight his muddy and heavy shoes down the irreproschable- clad shins of his new-found friend, and weight of an elephant, Finally the operator was turned over to the tender mercies of a park policeman, An amusing case was that of a young stockbroker, who was standing late one night in front of the Firth Avenue hotel, finishing his cigar before going to bed, when he was spoken to by a very gen- tlemanly-like man, who, after speaking of the weather, suggested a drink by way of a nighteap. The offer was ac- copted, and while the drinks were being poured out the nice - looking man said he thought he would go round to play faro for half an hour, Would the young broker like to go and gee him play and perhaps make a little money himself? The young broker said that he would, and together they went to a well-known gambling house in the neighborhood. As they entered the room the proprietor said to the young broker: * Good-evening, Willie; could you sell that Lake Shore for me to-day ?" e———————— Learnlug to Swim, There really is no mystery in learning possessed in perfection by the most stupid of frogs, More than once I have explained how any one can tea h him- self. The trunk, less the a ms, is lighter; all, therefore, that a person has to do is to acquire the habit of drawing in the breath when he is preparing fo make a stroke, and expelling the breath while he is making it, Let any one do this and keep ealm, and he will find that he can swim, . But, perhaps, it is better to acquire confidence bya prelim- inary course of floating. To do this it is only necessary to lie flat on the water, stretch out the arms with the alms of the hands downward, throw! ck the head, and whenever the body sinks low, slowly to fill the lungs with air,—London Truth. The quarrying interest in Fast Ten nessee has doubled within the last seven years, Eastern snd Middle States. Tue Pennsylvania Demooratio Bate sonven tion at Harrisburg was prosided over by George M. Dallas, and nominated a full tioket headed by Robert E, Pattison, comptroller of Phila delphia, who was chosen on the sixth ballot, for governor, The platform declares against mo- nopoly and in sympathy with labor; protests against the “boss and the *“‘spolls” systems in politios, and denounces all repudiation, Btate and Fadaral, Ax international rifla matoh between British and American teams will be shot at the Oreed moor (Long Island) range September 15 and 16, Tux Vermont Democrats al thelr Slate con vention in Montpelier nominated a full ticket headed by George E. Eaton for governor, A TRAIN known as the ** Wall Btreot express, which leaves Long Branch at 8 o'clock a, wu, for New York, when about three miles distant y its starting point plunged from a long into the mud and witer underneath, four ordinary pas senger coaches, the smoking oar, » baggage car, aud The locked behind the engine, kept the track, but th precipitated a distance of a dozen foet, The train Reven cars were in the train a Pullman palace oar, last two, ¢ others toppled fairly off the bridge, and were was filled with prominent New York business way to the city from their sum. Long Branch, an thelr men mer veaidences in General Ulvesos 8. Grant was in the smoking-oar, and was promptly he ped through the window to a by with glight scratch at the knee, minus his hat, but B. L. Bradley and George W. Demarest, New York merchants, and 0. M. Woodruff, of Newark, N. J, were killed and about seventy injured, several dan. The accident is attributed to an in. dace of safely Fireman Foster, a with his cigar still lighted, gorously, secure rail. Hanvanp defeated Yale in the annual eight oared boat race at New London, Conn Artes being out fifty-five minutes the jurors in the trial of James and Walter Malley and the murder of Jennie returned a verdiot of Blanche Douglass for New Haven, pot guilty, and the prisoners wore discharged. Cramer, at Ax ocean steamer arrived at New York the other day having on board 927 Mormon emi- grants. Of the 927 there were 620 Swedes and Norwegians, and 191 English, Scotoh and Welsh. Frye lives in all were lost by the acoldent on the train from Long Branch fo New York, two more of the injured passengers —James E. Mal. lory and William BR, Garrison, both wall-known New York business men sncoumbing to thelr : Mr. Garrison, who was forty-eight yoars of had been president of 4he Union Pacific railroad and of one of the New York levated roads and was one of the foremost Bit business men of the metropolis A crcroxe about one-quarter of & mile wide snd ten miles long did great damage to life erty in and about the village of Coal. Altogether about fifieen kad, and from twenty-five to thirty Soarcely a tree in the ling. The pecuniary and prog ville, T's houses WErs WI peracns killed or injured storm's track was left stan dawage is estimated at $75,000, Tux inquest into the accident fo the train from Long Branch resulted in the coroher's N¢ w guilly of gross carelessnosa ary finding the Ratirosd company General Grant was one of the witnesses, a, N. Y., destroyed Hoff . Three young men Theodor rt Hadden and Frank Lamareux and gone into the A rie at Ureg veel Of & Fpheo i off its effecis, were burned Hon, governor of Tue fehabod Goodwin, the fret war New Hampshire, died the other day st Portsmouth aged eighty six years South and West. Ir is ostimated that not loss than 120 persons tornadoes in ari. Tows, Nebrasks, Dakota and yesola, and total amount of prop. erty destroyed will exceed in value $3,500,000, New Onpraxs bas had s fatal case of yellow ‘ fever, bat have boen killed by the recent Esnsas, Miss thal the the victim was s sailor, who oon. tracted the disease in Havana, and there are no fears of its spreading Brreweis } and 6,000 more ple of Patrick county, Va — The ple have been helping one anoth er and are receiving sid from other parts of the Union, persons than half the Pp have been suffering for lack of food pe A aaxstan named Moentsel, while resisting arrest at Raton, New Mexio three mea and fatally wounded a deputy sheriff. Mentzol was then seized by an enraged crowd aud hanged to asiguboard. y, shot and killed lows has been voting on a liguor prohibition smendment the State constitution. Tix majority in favor of the amendment is abou $0,000, to A ueavy rain which fell at Frenchburg, Kry., raised the streams and Hooded the sireels eight fool deep, sweeping away six dwellings aod drowning Mrs John Fox, Mm Bye and two daughters and two Misses Watkins, et shocks of earthquake were felt the other day in San Francisco, The shocks lasted about thirty seconds, and houses were juite a lively way. Hexuy Cory, a Cinciannatl lawyer, became despondent on account of the loss of a daugh The other day he shot and killed his wife and Taz Bank of Commeros, of Richmond, Va, Jas suspended. A vinx broke ont in the heart of Larremore, Dakota, spread rapidly and destroyed a fourth part of the town. Several occupants of the burned to death. A coroxy of eleven men and women and three children in Dakota were massacred by a party of fifty Sioux Indians, Eowanp Forsos was hanged at Fort Bmith Ark., for the murder of two men last Ancust, Tur reported massacre of a party of colonists in Dakato, bya band of Rioux Indians, turned {| as Indians, Covoxet Joux Bamars was hanged at Oa- A large | crowd was present. After tho trap was sprung the noose around Bridges’ neck slipped, and the poor wretch struggled so hard that he srocooded in freeing his hands and fest from the cords with which they had been pinioned | and then tried to get upon the gallows again | Lut was pushed back and suffered a horrible death by strangulation. Duns a fight between white and colored | men in the court house at Brooksville, Fis, | thres negross named Turner were killed and several men on both sides were wounded, Firreex houses were struck by lightning during a heavy thunder-storm in Oregon, I, one man lost his life, many bridges, barns and | horses and cattle were killed and grain was | rained, The damage done exceeds $50,000, | Warensrours partially destroyed Manitoa Springs, Col, and the Indian settlement in | Tejon Canon, Cal. A number of lives were ! lost, Tax Indian Territory is suffering severely from smallpox. At Muscogee nearly every one | of 200 cases proved fatal. | Orrician returns give Moody, the Repub- | lican candidate for governor of Oregon, 1,428 | majority, and George, Republican candidate | for Congressman, 3,365 majority, Two horse thioves—Jack Hite and Mike | Ohambers—were shot dead near Oregon City, | Or., while attempting to escape from a posse of | officers, Coroner L. W. R, Bram, leader of the South | Caroling Greenbackers and their gubernatorial | candidate in 1880, was shot and killed by Cap- tain Hail during an altercation at a political | meeting at Camden, 8. C. Hail was put under | $5,000 bail, From Washington. {Mgr Ciro yer, from the Benate committee on claims, reported favorably a House bill appro. | priating $100 to pay for a horse ridden to death by Mrs. Mary Bullard, of Iowa, in August, 1861, in obtaining aid to rescue captured Union | soldiers near Etna, Mo, | A srrciaL census bulletin states that in 1880 | there were in the United States thirty-eight | establishments for the manufacture of fire- | arms, with an invested capital of $8,815,200, | and employing 4,579 hands. {_ Ropemt M, A. Hawk, Republican member of | Congress from the Fifth Illinois distriot, died | suddenly and unexpectedly the other day at his | boarding house in Washington, aged forty- | three years, The committee on ways and means has at | last made a favorable report on a bill to tax tho manufacture and sale of oleomargarine, Tus Prosident sent the following nominations to the Senate: Lewis Wallace, of Indiana, $0 be envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten- tiary to Turkey; Henry O, Hall to bo suvoy ex. traordinary and minister plenipotentiary to the Central Amerioan States; John A, Halderman, of Missouri, to bo minister resident and ocon- gnl-genersl to Blam; Jehu M. Francis, of New York, to be minister resident and consul-gens eral to Portugal; J. FP, Wickersham, of Penne wylvanis, to bo minister resident and consul. general to Denmark; Miochge! J. Cramer, of Kentucky to be minister resident and consul. general to Bwitzerisnd, Jamon Riley Weaver, of West Virginia, to be secretary of logation and consul-general at Vienna ; Lewis Richmond, of Rhode Island, to be secretary of legation and consul-general at Home; John T, Hobeson, of of Kansas, 0 be consul at Manila; Lorin A, be colonel Fourth United Slates Artillery showing that for the flscal year ending June 30 the postal service was self-sustaining. During June the national debt was decreased $14 560,684.70. July 1 the total debt was was $243 280 6190.78, Tue receipts from patents for June were $58 556,05, an increase over the corresponding month of 1881 of $12,574.70, from January 1 to June 30, 1883, were $617, period of the previous fiseal year of $77,198.24, FURTHER by the James Atkins, of Georgia, to be United Bates distriot jodge for the northern district of Georgia; Colonel Charles H. Crane, assistant surgeon-general, to be surgeon-general, with nominations signed; Eugene Schuyler, of New York, to be of New York, to be United States consul at Malta; Havesiea, of Alabama, United Btates consul at Traxpan, Paul Foroizan News. Asovr 1,000 Nihilists are to be tried in Ba Petersburg, Eusorgaxs are still leaving Egypt as fast sa they oan get away, Advices from Alexandria state that there have been fresh murders of Christians in the Delta villages, Arabi Bey, dria shall not be punished unless the Euro. peans who fired upon the rioters are also pun. ished, second son, has had a narrow escape from death, Spain, be hooked a large fish, to haul it in be lost his footing and was dragged into water sixteen foot deep. He was carried under four times, Afier struggling for half an hour he succeeded in reaching land, Mong than 1,000 persons were killed and wounded during the recent riots in Alexandria, EgypL, IneLaxp has been divided into six districts, under magistrates having control of the mili ary, for the administration of the repression A ross of more than $30,000 has been in urred by farmers and others in British Colum- bia through floods A STRAMTUS struck rocks outside the mouth {the Tyne in England and s number of her passengers were drowned. [Eleven persons boat, iis steward, Mr. Keone, were killed in county jalway, Ireland, while riding ins oar. The Mr. Blake was a consin snd was over seventy years old A farmer sned MeCausland bas sen with bean soyilios near Ballyclare, $80 Tue Russian polices have suoceaded in dis sovering the nucleas of the Nihilist conspiracy They have a list of the persons who contributed to the Nihilist funds, the names of the mem. bars of the central managing committee and its branches through who have joined the Hassis snd a list of all party since 1572. Three more bomb and dynamite factories and secret printing establishments have been broken up in BL, Petersburg. Tux Bwiss authorities have ordered the evac. astion of the village of of OAUSD the threatening condition mountain, An extraonlinary scene took place in the Iiritish house of commons during a session which lasted thirty-two hours. Mr. Parnell and twenty-four other by the most bitter parliamentary warfare. bh cisive sotion on the part of the government had bean looked for after Mr. Gindstone's notice on the remaining clauses of “The Bill for the Re- pression Ireland.” The Irisd mow bers used every effort during the all-night swssion to obstroct the passage of this bill, and of Crime in members was most bitter, the Irish members were charged with obstruct. ing the passage of the bill, and by a vole of 126 to 27 were suspended and ordered to if Mr. Gladstone, were also suspended, and he ll was then passed, “ Porat or Jury” was celebrated by Amer. cans abroad by banquets and fetes in London, Laipsio, Some of the English papers published con. gratulatory articles. Liverpool, Englishman, in a boat race on the Thames ‘Forty-Seventh Congress---Nenate, it, As it passed the House the bill provides for of last year's revenuos, Billa were paste | allowing to the widows of hie late Messrs, Hurlburt and Kilpatrick, Uni od Btatos ministers, the balance of one year's salary dates navy.,.. The conference report on the agreed to... . The legislative, executive and ju- licial appropriation bill was further coneid- ord wan reported... . The lagislative, executive and judicial appropriation was passed further to regulate the investment of the Pacific railroad sinking funds... Con. begun. pany was passed... ing the appropriation for the expenses of the late President Garfield's illness and burial ene Senate to return the bill to reguiate emigra tion of the bill for the erection of a Congres sional library building until December, J ae The naval Appropt iantion bill was reported back and referred to a committee of the Ww hole __..'The bill to reduce interna! revenue faa tion was discussed, but no aelion was taken A bill was reported for a new Atlantio eable the act giving public lands to the several States the benefit of agriculture snd the mechanical appropriation bill was considered, without action appropriating $20.000 to aid in orectin colnmn commemorative of the battle of mouth socretary of the treasury ate of interest... \ was further considered with- _.A message was received bearing a higher 1 appropriation bill out final action, the carriage of passengers by sea. Mr. Robinson introduced a resolution of in. quiry as to the report that the British minister had called upon Secretary Frelinghuysen and criticised remarks delivered in the House. ...A substitute for the sundry civil bill was reported ....Bills were passed making appropriations for public buildings at several places. The advisability of a Baptist ecumeni- cal council is under consideration, A committee appointed last year to con- gider the matter have reported unfavor. ably, on the ground that the Baptists are not ready for it. The report after a long discussion was laid on the table, from which it would appear that the sentiment of the meeting at least was in favor of the council, English Journalism, The first weekly newspaper established in England, we are told, one Nathaniel Butler, in 1622, Before that time English gentlemen who lived on their country estates a portion of the year, clubbed together and ewployed a news writer, who gathered the gossip of the day and sent it to thom at regular intervals, These writers were some- times retired captains, sometimes prin. tors, sometimes men who made this work a profession by itself. A peer kept his special correspondent and paid was by him & handsome salary. Milton, Dry. he first daily paper i London was t appeared in 1702, three days after the be i,m of Queen Anne. It was about the size of age of the Spectaior, was printed only on one side, snd contained that would hardly pass for news at this day. Till the year 1720 there was no | such thing ss parliamentary reports, and these were made st first against the wishes of the house of commons and the house of lords, whose members thought | the press had no right to discuss politieal questions, The plan of reporting was | for two or three persons to » into the gallery, listen attentively, then | retire to an alehouse, where they com. | pared memories and wrote out the | result, This was for several years the labor of Dr. Johnson, who did the work | in a garret or behind a screen at St | John's gate, The right of the press to | criticise the royal speeches and the | conduet of parliament oame through | the North Briton and the arrest of Wilkes, before which time such liberties bad not been attempted. To the love of freedom may be ascribed Jotters of Junius, which were ublished soon afterward by Bampson foodfall in the Public Advertiser, | This newspaper had at the time a cireu- | lation of 75,000 copies monthly. | It thereby increased in popularity, and | took a position at the bead of the Lon- | don press. The Morning Chronicle was | started about the same time, and greatly | changed the character of parliamentary | reporting, principally through the re- | markable memory of Willism Woodall, { who, it is said, could walk down to the | house of commons with a hard-boiled egg in his pocket, and then returning without a single scrap of paper write | out fifteen or sixteen short col | umns of speeches. A story somewhat | similar is told of Coleridge, who, having | to report a speech of Pitt, fell aslee and only heard a few words of the en of it; yet having received a few hints | from others, he proceeded to write out a brilliant oration, whose authenticity was only discovered some timo after ward. The Morning Chronicle invented the leading editorial, which, through | the skill and learning of Coleridge {in the Morning Post and | Courier, LL developed into | & work of art. This was near the close | of the eighteenth century, about which | time English journalism to take | the shape it has at present, with edi | torials, public reports and other depart- | ments covering every branch of news. | But as Charles Peabody, the author of | this interesting volume of Oassell’s Pop- ular Library, remarks, the story of Eng- | lish journalism is yetto be told, snd | there is certainly no place for its elab- | oration in these columns, In the San Francisco Evening Bulletin we observe that Mr. Rosenthal, of the wells | known [iinting firm, Hosenthal & Roesch, 538 California street, that city, said to one of their reporters * We all know of Bi Jacobs Oil, and are perfectly amased at the suddenness of the melief it affords, Uf you know of any ove who is suffering with | rheumatism, bruise or sprain, tell to | use St, Jacobs Oil, * EE ——I IAA vonntered on the Doctor, Dr. Louis, of New Orleans, who is | something of a wag, called on a colored [*minister, and propounded a few puzzling questions. * Why is it," said he, “that you are not able to do the miracles that | the Apostles did? They were protected | against all poisons and all kinds of | perils. How is it you are not protected | now in the same way 7” | The colored preacher ed | gromptly | “Don't know about that {dootor. I spect I is I've taken a | mighty sight of strong medicine from | you, doctor, and I is alive yet." Qurtaioty an elegant remedy for all aches and pains 1¢ St. Jacobs Oil, says Dr. J. Tur ner, of Shirrell’s Ford, N. C,, in the Ravens | wood (W. Va.) News. A man sued an Ohio editor for $10.- | 000 damages and was awarded one cent. | It beats all how accurately a jury will | occasionally size up an editor's pile.— Bloomington Eye. “Thelr Pn tien Gene. RY. Prguce, M, > Patino, N.Y: Twas at | tacked with congestion of the lungs, serenoss | over the liver, severe pain in the joints, a burn. | ing fever and general giving away of the whole | system. Failing to find relief in remedios pro. sori 1 tried vour “Golden Medical Discov. ery.” It effected my entire cure. Your medi | eines have only to be used to be appreciated. | If every family would give them a trial, nine | tenths of the doctors would, like Othello, find | their oocupation gone, Yours truly, _ i L. B. McMizax, M. D., Breesport, Ir is estimated that upward of thirty thon. ! sand lives have been destroyed by the explosive | products of petroleum, -» ‘ould Hardly Stnnd en Her Feot {| RV, Pizsor, M. D., Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir | I must tell you what your medicine has done | for me. Before tking your “Favorite Prescrip | tion” I could hardly stand on my feet, but by | following your advice I am perfectly cured. The “Favorite Prescription” is a wonderful medicine for debilitated and nervous females I cannot express how thankful I am to you for your advice. Yours traly, Coaxxria Arrisox, Peosta, Ia. | Tan highost price ever paid for a borse, as ! far as known, is $70,000 for Doncaster by the | Duke of Westminster. The World's Dispensary and Invalids' Hotel, | at Buffalo, N. Y. Foetroyed by fire 8 year ago, is rebuilt and full of patients. For “Invalid’s | Guide Books,” giving parionlare aud terms ol | treatment, address, with two stamps, WonrLn's | Dispensary Moioal Association, Buffalo, NY. Tarn are fifteon Bessemer steel works in the United States, of which eight are in Penn- syivania. sss : Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Care. Taenx are thirty-three schools in Russia astablished for the instruotion of railroad em- poyes, | Pune 0oi~taves orn, from selected livers, on | the seashore, by Oaswell, Hazard & Oo., NY | Absolutely pure and sweet, Patients who have | once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians declare it superior to all other oils. LANDS, 108 jos and rough skin CHAPPED HANDS, face, pimp cured by using Juniper Ar ugh Co., New York. Cae- ow “Cents Will Buy a Che Horse and his Diseases, | Book of 100 pages Valuable to every owner : of horses, Post o stamps taken. Sent wid by New York Newspaper Union, 160 Worth Skinny Men. “Wells' Hoalth Henewer” restores health and vigor, cures Dyspepsia, Impotence, Sexual Druggiste, Send for pamphlet to E. 8. WeLs, Jersey City, N. J. A at improvement has recently been made in that useful produoct—Carboline, a deo- dorized extract of petroleum, which is the only article that really oures baldness, It is now the finest of hair dreesings, RESCUED FROM DEATH. Whiltam J. Coughlin, of Somerville, Mass , says In the tall of 1876 1 was taken with BLEEDING OF THE LUNGS fol lowed by a severe cough. I lost my appetite and flesh, and was confined to my bed, In 18771 was admitted to the hospital, The doctors sald I had a hole in my lung as big as a half-dollar, Atone time a report went around that 1 was dead. 1gaveup hope, but a friend told me of DR WILLIAM HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS. 1 got a bottle, when to my surprise, I commenced to feel better, and to-day 1 feel better than for three years past. 1 write this hoping every one afflicted with Diseased Lungs will take DR, WILLIAM HALL'S BALSAM, and be convinced that CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED. 1 can positively say it has done more good than all the other medicines 1 have taken since my sickness. 25 Cents ‘will Buy a Treatise upon the Horse and his Diseases. Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner of horses, Postage stamps taken. Sent postpaid by NEW YORK NEWSPAPER UNION, 130 Worth Streot, New York. Nervous Debility, Weak Home cure by simple herbs, Sufferers may learn faethe Gots (er adh Rhee A KEN ess her! hy . HER CURE, Yowark, Now Jersey. 'S BRA IN FOOD !--Most reliable tone AREY Bland Goneratys Organ 1 tively cures 0 bin Sold by druggists. i ens, Eto. bite Beem, ne fet su of Life, or Self. m work for ev IAD JOU send or old, 135 lsvalusbie p! - NEW YORK, Boaf Cattle ~Good to Prime, Lw Calves Comm'n to Choice Veal, rr AVE, . cov vussrnennnnnne Flour Ex. Sta nd to fancy Western, Wheat. No, 2 to choloe No. 1 White Barley Two-rowed Busts... . 1 Corn Ungraded W Yollow Bouthera...... Oates White Blats, , ....ov0vi ne Mixed Western sent annn — SCRA OT 10% 560 147 82 © - gg3ss a ed Egeess en oBBEEae —Eomoacn © sgesss= ER : D0 SE 8 wy Ng a SEAR" E..8 58 6066066658 E EaoenEot.s 2% Fes gEseREsE,y a = sara R ARES sama EIERRS ew rw FESR SEISISIRIOSCLISS ON _ sas Renn srEE RAEN RN x srRREEARRE SN Eggs--Btate and Pann... .... Potatoes Early Hoss, State, bbl BUFFALO, Btears-Good to choice, ...... Lawbs Westorn Hogs, Good to Choloe Yorkem, Flour-C'y Ground N, Prooms, Wheat No. 1. Hard Duiutas, , Corn-—-No, 2 Mixed........oon0 Osts—No. 2 Mix West, ...... Barley Two-rowed Biate,,... BOSTON, Beef Extra plate and family, .18 Hogs--1ive ......... sasnnsere ity Dressed... sits Pork Extra Prime per bil, 1 Flour g Wheat Patents, Corn--High Mixed, ....c..0000 Oats Extras White, ...vonvine 00l--Washed Comba Dalsing nw A wi WATERTOWS (MASS) CATTLE MARKEY, Beef Extra UAE. + 200essss 850 9 Hhenp--14vs Weigh sesssnnene BN Hoge, Northern, d. w Flour Penn, Ex. Family, Wheat No. 2 Bed Ryo State . Corn-—Btate Yel mw Osts-—Mized : Butter Creamery Extra Pa... Chess New York Full Cream. Patrolenm-—-On 88. ,.0 2000 vane el ‘ime Test: From timo § omemoria! the horse bas been man's best frien 1. Buta few yoars back we ean sll remember the comparatively live attention paid to this most indispensable of suisis. We say comparatively little attention, the horse was fs well groomed, and certainly ss well fod. a3 now ; andasal those Caity ShOWS—y0oi} Ww pe’ soo eo of Dont and Sete stables and Put Ba mEgoom-a © SEEKS BE - ® wl sa o~ EY assembled there was a conspicuous want of noble drsugld horses, and ss for speeders—well, 2:40 was ihe great ultimele limit that owners 17 1 a0 days desived to strive for, But how g 2 an'mal bs esteemed a fair n r, and fine animus only deserve the ti-me when they cin Shade the find quarterof the third minute, ‘There have been im- mense strides {rward inthe 1 tof borseflesh inthecivilized © of the as shown by tse timerecords of Lhe ravens Fi =. ra rs draught rity of the humbler, but really more useful, work-borse. Many things have conspired to effect this desirsbie end, chief which have boen the intelligent care and cons i bestowed u the animal in his every relation —int & word, upon the breeding. And this has not felled to include a very serious modification of the oid methods of treatment, doing away, in many oases, with the Inhuman and really sav dans pursued in the eradication of evea me tsorders and ailments, and substituting rational messures of relief justond. A prominent factor of this reform, and one indorsed by owners, breeders, farmers and stockmen the country over, is Br. Jaocoss Onl, recognized by all who bave used 1t as an exceptionally good remedy for the ailments of the horse and stock generally, meol ing more indications for its use and cfecting lar beller results than any article of a curslive or remedial nature ever introduced, Puch ere and horsemen as Aristides Welch, Bag. of Erden- heim, near Philadelphia; Mike Goodin, Beg. Belmont Park, Pa; Calvin M, Priest, formerly in charge of Mr. Robert Bonners stock, New York; and thousands of others th t the country, who could be named, are on the 1st of unquali- bod endorsers of the efioncy of Br. Jacons OIL. WYN U—34 HOSTEITE The feeble and emacisted, suffering from dyspepsia and indigestion in any form, are advised, for the sake of their own bodily snd men. tal comfort, to t¥y » a ————— —— Frere COOD NEW - TO * Mozy Bose or Dold Sand Tea Bet" {#4 ploves, eur ews | . Une est beautiful Tes bole gives away i Snbieng a Chub tor $38.00. Bewere of Los soanilnd ” thet are being advertiped—they are Sangrrowe Pesl only wilh reliebis fend for pound Then got up » club. variety «F Sf WELLS, of er NEW RICH BLOOD! Dion wil) b chan : eutire avstem in Ah ht from lis wi 3 Bn pomored to sgund health if such 3 th hold everywhe sent UY me 1 CT ONNEON & CO. Boston, formerly Bangor, Me. _____ ooo FRAZER AXLE GREASE . at tn the world. Get th sentt e. By ckuge has sur t A 3 Erneetle, SoLb EVER VYWHERE ~~ WHY WASTE MONEY! Young moan or id. " wait a aryriu ans a pA $e ER ENG THEY ad INVIGORATE the HAIR snywiure dont be baw! great Spanish dawn whieh bas X FAILED, Send ONLY BIX TENTS wo TEE. Bos 1040, Deston, Mase. Nesare Cl WODE, ¥ Dr. J. GON of ali imitacions R PLINDS-ATAR Retaiacrs woh, ghia % postage x 6 Ar Con 214 West 26th Street, Now York City. Morr tne Habit Cared in 10 (1) o apne Nopay 11] Cared. WE M Di. J. STEPRENS, Lebanon Obl OX A MONTR-AGENTS WANTED =80 best : : {clos In the world ; Tsample A $22 pv rm os Fronson, Detrots, Mich: SEN If yon want to learn Telegraphy in YOUNG MEN a fow months, and be certa of & situation, addiess Valentine liroa., Janesv'ie, Wis, $66 a week in vonr own town. Terms and §3 outfit free. Add's H. Hatierr & Co. Portland, Maina, YAR DA handsome set of cands for So. stamp. Clinctors A. ¥ RARSE , Rochester, N. {. WEEK. $12 a day at nome sasily made, Costly $72 SER Add sThUE & De Agusta. Maioe. i881. Recently closed nt INSTRUME ther; tosts and comparisons, extending through a Of made of medals and diplomas, in on oO Separtments of musical art and manufacture. For moniums of all descriptions, European and Am THE CRAND Their mi 0 ocoasion BEE TH RL i ae Lo CALALL the reat WORE IRD UNTRIAL have received the HIGHEN IMPROVEMENTS, Organ by them, TYLE years ELEGANT STYLES {& ranked with the very NUT, ANY, ABH, now received fr EASY PAYMENTS. Jha orean, A NEW ILLUSTRATED (CATALOGUE, an PRICE L1sT8 and circulars, free to my organ without having seen MASON & Mb Tremont Street, BOSTON; 46 East Don't fall to follow directions. Keep the botile well corked. beg to announce to the public that In order to accommodate the reatly increased demand for their agnetic Carments have re- moved their principal Ray HAVE ra and offices from 465 Fulton St, Brooklyn, to 28 East i4th St, New communica- York City, where all bo addressed, and be made payable. WILSONIA MAGNETIC CLOTHING CO, 25 EAST Mth STREET, New York City. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ICTORIAL HISTORY emus WORLD Embracing full sad of — a a of the and fall of the Re middie ages, the crusades, the ref ion, the discovery and fe hitoral cos Es, An = : re ad ex Er to Agente, Gress NATIOBAL Penman 0. Fatiadeliin LO MAKE HENS LAY. AY. ling iu this countre. says that most or be liom and Usttie Powders sold bere wort s Condition Powders ae a Bheriaai’s Condition dere. Dome, ome taaspocttel to one pat of food. a or sept by msil SONNE 0 Boston Mase, formers Bangor PROVED ROOT _B $e aa mates § gallons ol 8 nh ars thet en ¥ pure wil ake H IRES i haolosonse, sowrkiine 1 porance beverage. ASK 3 our we, mail for 23¢. C. KE. Hires, & x. Deda. ave, ay, or Phonetic Starth: and Lin, Vig DEE with Catalogne alphabed and Hustrationh, for boginmers, sent on applioss tion. Address, Deny Pitman, Cincinnati, 0, SAWMILLS THE AULTMAN & TAYLOR OQ. Mansfield. Otic. ONE HILLION COPIES SOLD. EVERYBODY WANTS IT! EVERYBODY NEEDS IT! KNOW THYSELF. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE: PRESERVATION, 1s » medion treatise gn Exhausted Vitality, Nervous and Physical Debllity, Premature Decline in Man; is an indikpensalie trostiso for every man, whether roung, middle aged or @}d, THE SCIENCE OF LIFE: OR, SELF. PRESERVATION, is all sagaparsan the most on evar published. Therels quire or wich to on, SELF. not or ie ait SEES a THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR, SELF. re VATION, Instructs those in health how to remain eo, and invalid becaae well, ins one sad twenty five invaluable prascipions far all forms > ud ob 1 Gud dc Pia eden ve frome to $e Lance, THE SCIENCE OF LIFE: OR, SELF. PRESERVATION, seal engra’ is superbly posed, fll Kit, It is & a RI be hotd price ot the whhor, THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR, SELF. PRESERVATION, 1a 26 muck supariar to all other treatises on medion) X P TIE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OR, SELF. PRESERVATION, 1a sent by mail, securely scaled, postpaid, on receipt of price, only $1.20 (vew edition). Bmall {lustrated samples, 80. Bend now, . The author can be consulted on all diseases re- quiring skill and experience. Address PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, or W, II. PARKER, M. D,, 4 Bulfinch Street, Boston, Masa. $510 $20 [inns Saint Mis ORDINARY COLLECTION OF MUSIC. a Mien the t LIRA, has OAL of manufactures, After exhaustive sxaminationt Sloot exccllonce attained in the various MENTS, including Organs and Ham GANS. of the ON INA were h OPE ox! : PERE a or will be rented until rent
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers