The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 17, 1882, Image 4

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    —— . oo ”
An meee
An’ pitsned ih ad om tents within a grove contig'us to
We've harvested such means of grace as growed
within our reach;
We've “tended all the mornin' talks, we've heard
Bishop preach
An' (hing went pleasantly, until we had a
whim
My wile and I--one breezy day, to take an ocean
swim,
We wouldnt ha’ vent'red ont, I think, if Sister
Sannyhopes
% ged ns over an' ag'in, an'ssid she knew
the ropes,
An' told how sate an’ sweet it was “in ocean rills
to lave,”
An’ ®gport within the foaming surf,” an’ “ride the
crested wave "|
An'so we went along with her—my timid wife an’
a
Two inland noodles, for our first acquaintance with
the soa.
They put me in a work-day rig, as usally is done
A wampns an’ short overhauls all sewed up into
one,
Ihsd ud pull an’ fuss an’ jerk to make the things go
un
{You are aware my peaceful weight will crowd three
they said
is
They pay my wife into & dress too short by full a
bit absard,
You know she's rather tall an’ slim—somewhat my
Opposite
An’ soiies that are not cut for her are likely not to
t .
mee
Ax’ formed our first acquaintance with the incon
“ sistent sea. ’
Miss Sannyhopes she went ahead, a-lookin trim an’
sweet ;
She'd had Aer Sthia® suit all fixed an’ trimmed from |
to feel: §
An’ I went ontan’ grabbed the rope, just as she told |
me to;
Au’ wife came next, s-lookin’ soared, scarce knowin’
what to do.
But Sister Supnyhopos to me a smile o sweetness
half dozen bisonite I bave wrapped uf
in a napkin to Mr. Covert, down the
street, numuer fifty-four.”
“Yes, ma'am; an'will I say who
they're from, ma'am ?*
“Leave word,” whispered Oarrie,
“that they are from Aunt Sadie Hall,”
“All right, ma'sm I" rejoined Mary,
who suspeated a joke. And taking the
biscaits off she went,
“1 feel so sorry I quarreled with
Aunt Sidie,” thought Carrie, shortly
afterward, “for she is good and kind
to me, and his almost taken the place
mamma held in my heart before ahe
died. But her prejudice against Mr,
Covert is sadly misplaced. Poor fellow
~1 must ask pope to call on him. And
oh, wen't he be surprised when he re-
eeives those biscuits, with the message
they are from Aunt Baaie? I will not
say anything about it to any one, and
vi,
An’ ni, “Now watch your chance, an’ jamp-—-here
oomes A lovely wave!”
Imust hat jumped, 1 rather think, the wrong time |
ot
moon;
Atany rate, the lovely wave occnrred to me too
SOO!
It took me solid, with a rede an’ unexpected shoek ;
It baat the stoutest pair o* horus there by in all my
flock.
An’ then, to top the elrens out, an make the sot
more ine,
1 tied to kick the lovely wave, relinquishin’ the
ne.
On country fairan’ tection days, in walkin’ through
ao
I’m rather rm to jostle ‘gainst—perhaps it makes
we proud ;
But if it does, that wave discoursed bow sureness
DOVET DAYS |
An’ seemed to shout, * How small is man, no odds
how much he weighs |”
Ttsat = me, it jumped on me, 1a spite of right or
aw
An’ whisked an’ whirled me all about as if I'd been
a straw,
An’ then tine oe on the beach, right thankful for
wy life:
An’ seratabifee up, 1 gave a gare to find my faithful
wife:
But she had sort o' cut the wave, with all the edge
Ie 4
An’ stood a-holdin® to the rope, uncommon moist
an x
While Sister Sunnyhopes, with smiles, was lookin’
proud an’ gay, :
A<floatin’' on her dainty back, some several rods
AWAY,
She looked 20 newish-pretty there (an' knowed it
too, the ell),
The crowd was all admirin’ her, an’ so was I my-
I grasped the line beside my wife
seit.
An’ while
of rut
Xy eves rove to Sister 8, her beauty an’ her
youl:
When all af once another wave, tremendoos broad |
An adep, :
Come suashin’ down on wife an’ me, an’ tossed os
in abeap.
Head over heels, all in a bunch, my wife across o'
An'l phe uuincky folks who happened there
My Bey satied an’ foated off, an’ loft my bald head
When we got ont, if I'd ha'spoke, it woold ha' warmed
We dra 2 good part of the sea—my gas pin’ wife
nN
While Sister 8, still floated soft, again’ at the
sky.
We voted that we'd got enough, an’ crawled ont of
Balore pd wave arrived, an’ bid the sea good.
We looked as like two drownded rats as ever such
With pe + ms mighty fool, particniarly bald,
Bat, iike 8 woman true, she said-—my watchiul wife
~10 me,
“We will pot mind: there's others here that looks
as bad as we.”
Xow Sister Sannyhopes, by-n’-by, came back into
our tent
ent,
As sleek or sleeker than before, an’ asked ns when
we wenl > 2
Says I, “My dear good Sister 8, please do not now
rete
You aa pot see our v'vage through, and mark its
dolefn] end. ;
If you wonid play the mermaid fair, why, sach I'd
ave you be;
Put we're too old to take that part—imy faithfel
wife an’ me.”
— FH Carleton, in Harper's Weekly.
“Dear me ! Aunt Sadie, is Mr. Co-
vert ill? Yes? Then I cannot take
my music lesson to day.”
TL to feel happy for that re-
“Oh, dear, no! I rather prefer tak-
inz my lesson.”
Aunt Sadie glanced sharply at her
niece, but that young lady's face was
calm encugh.
“Tt strikes me,” observed the old
lady, “that you do not dislike Mr, Oo-
vert as much as you seem to.”
“I never expressed any aversion to
him,” replied Carrie, demarely. “In
fact,” she added as she molded the bis-
cuits she was making with deft fingers,
“J think I like Mr. OJvert very much.”
“Humph I” sniffed Aunt Sadie, con-
tempiucnsly. * He is only a poor music
teacher, and you cannot afford to marry
a poor man with no pros n
“Well, I declare!” flared Oarrie.
“Do you think it follows as a conse.
quence that must marry a man I like?
Aunnt Sadie, I am surprised at you!”
And Carrie took up the pan contain:
ing the dozen little round balls of
dough and it into tha oven
with such s bang that the old lady
dropped her knitting and almost fell
from her chair by the range. Then
Carrie flounced out of the room indig-
nantly and went upstairs to dress. Ten
minutes later she came flying back to
the kitchen, and her pretty little face
wore a look of great consternation.
“Land sakes alive! What's the
matter, child 7” eried Aunt Sadie,
“I have lost my garnet ring, Aunt
Sadie.”
“ Perhaps you left it on the table be-
fore kneading your biscuit dough,”
N 8 ihe on ad the unhapp
No,” ully repl eu ¥
little cook, phn 1did not; and I
have searched all over my room. It
was a present from papa when he got
the pastorate of his new church; and I
am doubly anxions to find it because
Mr. Covert wished it on my finger—"
“There, now, you are going off at a
tangent about that man again!” ex-
claimed Aunt Sadie, in an impatient
a.
“1 don’t care; he's real nice, and he
is good, and he is handsome, and I like
him, and you are adverse to him, Aunt
Badie, beca you thought he was
coming here to carry away your daughter
Mamie for his wife, and he undeceived
on.” -
y There, there! That will do, miss!”
eried the old lady, starting up angrily.
“1 vow, this is nice talk for a minister's
daughter! You should respect your
elders.”
“1 am sorry,” retorted Carrie, “that
poor papa’s teaching does not make a
d impression on your mind—at
least ensngh soto your conscience
the fault of looking down on Mr. Covert
because of your disappointment.”
“ Well I” gasped Aunt Badie, with an
jneraduions aren Sassie, Za the
ps of her cles, always
heard that as a general thing ministers’
wives and danghters ain't the most ex-
emplary of mortals; and now I believe
it. The very idea of yon—you, Carrie
‘Ray, talking to me in this way! It
beats anything I ever heard of before!
‘What my religious principles are is
none of your buginess—do yon under.
stard ? and when my sister Sally—your
‘ mother— married Parson Ray, I kinder
some such goings on as this
here, twenty years ago|”’
The ring was forgotten now, but the
biscuits in the oven began to burn, and
scenting them, with a seream of dismay
Oarrie turned fom her angry sunt,
opened the oven door and took out the
There were a dozen besutifaliy
‘browned biscuits in it—one or two
alightly scorched, but not enough so to
them, .
~ “I #'pose those thiugs are for your
ither’s su >
when he is well enough to call there
Yes, there was to be fan, bat a differ.
ent kird from that which Carrie ex.
peotad. That evening she asked her
“Ham! Number fifte-four did you
say asked the stout minister, * That
is right on my way, as I was about to
drop in on our new neighbor.”
“Innumbar forty five?” askad Carrie.
“Yes, my dear, an old bachelor, I
think,” replied her father, **Isawhim
in my church Sanday night, avd I think
1 have seen him somewhere before, too,
but where I canvot recall to mind.”
When her father had left the room;
Aunt Badie entered.
“1 hope,” she said, frigidly, “vou are
a little lose combative to-night, Carrie”
and she sat down in a chair and stared
“Oh, Aant Sadie, forgive my rude.
ness this morning.” cried Carrie, ro
pentantly, as she sat on a low ottoman
at hor aunt's feet, “for I was very
angry ”
“You should lea to control your
temper,” replied the old lady, severely;
“ but we will forget it, dear.”
She kissed her niece fondly. The
door burst open at this janoture, and in
rushed Mamie Hall, her daughter, quite
out of breath from running. She wasa
tall, angular girl yet in her teens,
snd had a somewhst pretty face and
charming manneis,
“My gracious, what's the matter?
eried Aunt Sadie. .
“Oh, dear me!” panted Mamie
“The funniest thing happened to me
just now! I was returning from Ada
Gray's house, and passing No. 45 of
this street, a tall, thin gentleman in a
long white duster ran out after me,
waving his arm®¥rantically, and called
for me to stop. He looked so strange
that I became frightened and ran, and,
wculd you beliave it 7 the wretch had
andscity enough to chase me. I passed
Uncle Benjamin, who was going by on
the other side of the street, but as I
did not wish to implicate him in any
trouble I did not stop him. And now
~hark! what is that? Some one at
the door! Oh, good gracious! I really
do beliava that old monster is there!”
There cams the sonnd of a vigorous
bang I" at the door, and then the ve-
hement voice of Mary in stormy alter
eation with some one. Then they heard
a tremendous crash, and with simulta
peous shrieks of terror the three
parted. Carrie dove under the bed
Aunt Sadie bounced intoa closet and
closed the door, while Mamie sought
refage in flight upstairs,
“It's a lunatic!” was Aunt SBadie’s
agonized thought, while horrid visions
of dire tragedies floated through Car-
rie’s mind.
They heard noises below stairs which
plainly indicated a souflfa of some sort;
then shortly after theve sounded foot-
steps on the stairs
*‘ He has killed Mary, and is coming
up herd to butcher us!” thooght the
trembling old lady, as she eronched
further tack in the darkest corner of
the closet, while Carrie kept very quiet,
althongh she was on the verge of
screaming.
Patter, patter, patter, sounded the
approaching footsteps, nearer each mo-
ment; then there was a panse, and they
distinctly heard heavy, labored breath-
ing. The suspense was becoming in-
folerable to the two ladies, and dim
thoughts crossed Mrs. Hall's mind of
breaking from her concealment, of
rushing valiantly ont, confronting the
intruder with a poker, or some other
implement of self defense, and by star.
ing at him dauntiessly drive him from
the room; she had heard maniacs could
be subdaed by unflinching courage, and
a stare as nowavering and giant-like as
that of an owl. Bat before she could
put her theory into practice the door
opened; thea Aunt Sadie sprang out, a
low ery escaped her lips, and she sank
feebly back into a chair.. For the per
son in the room was Mary. That female
was in a stormy frame of mind, and
there was a vicious look on her generally
good-humored face.”
* Och, ma'm I" she cried, ‘I've had |
such a roction wid the aould feller az
got thim biscaits this very blessed
mornin’, down at the dhure, that I'm
nearly dead now, so I am!”
“ What does all this mean?” demanded
Aunt Sadie.
‘‘Shure, ma'am,” returned Mary, in
perylexity, “I don't know meself. in
I tok him Miss Ouarrie’s biscuits this
mornin’ wid your compliments—"
* With my compliments 7’ echoed the
bewildered old lady. “Why, you are
bereft of your senses, girl! Who did
you give biscuits to this merning with
my compliments?’
“Why, the sould man sz kem to the
dhure jist now, sxin’ for your blessed
self an’ Miss Mamie, shure. Faith, hs
was that wild I wonldn't let the likesav
him iu, an’ bedad we had a tussle which
same ended in mesell givin’ him ther
fut an’ landin’ him in the airy, whin I
schlsmmed the dhure in his onmannerly
face, 80 I did, or yez moight arl 'ave
been kilt! If he'd a kem dacintly an’
axed ter see vez, gracious only knows
what "ud a happined |”
“ Who was that man ?” asked the old
lady, in bewilderment.
“1 don’t know, ma'am, for he’s on’y
moved into this strate; he lives beyant
in that ellegant house, numbar forty-
five, an’ 8 more deceivin’ man I never
see, It's moighty yuare he is, for this
mornin’ he was all schmoiles an’ graces,
an’ this avening he sasmed to be clane
garn in his upper story,”
At this interesting juncture Carrie
emerged from her retreat, looking very
foolish. That May had carried her
present to the wrong honse she had no
doubt. Number forty-five and number
fisy four are numbers widely different,
and by not paying attention to what was
said the girl evidently had gotten the
numbers transposed in her mind, and so
made the blunder,
“Well, I declare!” exclaimed the
old lady. “I am at aloes to understand
what this all means.”
“Aunt Sadie,” inte Ogrrie,
gently, “it is partly my fault. This
morning I sent Mary with that half-
dozen of my bisonits to Mr. Covert, and
told her to say they were from you; but
she carried them to the wrong house,
and the man who followed Mamie was
the recipient of them, and probably
wished to ask her why they were sent.”
“ Well, I never I” gasped the old lady.
¢ That accounts for it.”
Though she said nothing abont it,
she appreciated her niece's kind act in
saying she had sent the biscuits; al-
though, coupled with this intended
kindness, Carrie had intended perpe-
trating a joke, Theexplanation seemed
satisfactory enough, teo, but the little
shadow of mystery surrounding that
day’s doings was only just developing,
and the following day they were to be
very much more surprised.
“It’s odd your father has not returned
for tea,” obperved Aunt Sadie, after all
the dishes, save one for the absent min-
ister, had been cleared away.
‘“ He said he was going to make seve-
ral calls,” replied Carrie,
“He is always late,” grumbled the
old lady.
* Aunt Sadie,” said Carrie, ‘what is
the matter with you to-day—you are so
out of temper?”
For answer, her annt burst into tears.
Carrie looked at her in surprise.
~ “Dear Aunt Sadie, have I offended
Myou?" she asked with » troubled look,
as she kissed her affectionately.
I knowl
“ No, Carrie, that is not it.
am a burdensome old creature, but I
of heaven. You don't know what I
mean
* No, I do not,” replied Carrie,
i not dead.
believe 80."
“ No-~that is, I do not fmow,” mid
the old lady, * He left me to travel for
ness, and went ont West, A month
gence that he was thought to be dead.
been wrecled
bridge.
by falling
time, Mamie was a little child then,
abont three years o'd.
find his body, nor have I ever heard
from him since, and it was supposed
river. To day. .was the fifteenth anni.
versary of the frightful event, and
bearing on my mind so all day it has
greeable,”
It waa late that night when the Rev.
ruched off to his Library in great haste,
and sat there nearly the whcle night
through, smiling benignly, and polish.
until it shone again. No one in the
house knew the occasion of his joy, nor
day.
“Qarria,” said he, at the breakfast
table, ‘did you send Mr, Covert a nap-
kinfaul of bisounits yesterday?’
The girl blushingly admitted that she
had done seo.
“ Well,'my dear,” said the old gentle.
man, ‘I am glad you did, for it has al-
most cured him of his illness, and he is
coming here to-day to thank’ you for
them; you know I called on him,"
plexity, and the old lady returned her a
glance of the same sort,
delivered them to some one alse, and
the old madman who got them ohased
Mamie last night, giving us all such a
do.
“ Eh?” said her father, glancing over
his spectacles at her, *‘The wrong
party got them, did he? Oh, I guess
not I"
Carrie and Aunt Sadie gazed at bim,
more bewildered now than before.
‘‘ But Mary said so,” began Carrie.
Before she finished speaking there
came a “bang!” at the door; it flew
back on its hinges, and in rushed the
old fellow who had pursued Mamie.
They all started to their feet and the
ladies would have fled had he not
barred their exit by standing in the
doorway. Then there sauntered other
footsteps in the hall, snd before Aunt
Sadie could resist the stranger had her
in his arms and was erving:
“ Sadie! Sadie! At last I have yon
in I"
“My husband I” she cried.
thank God I”
Yes, it was Aunt Sadie’s husband, and
the old lady olung to him, weeping for
joy.
“ And, William, here is your little
Mamie."
There was no fear of the supposed
madman now, snd Mamie found herself
clasped in a loving pair of arms and
felt her father's tender kisses with hap-
piness indescribable, while Oarrie
looked on in astonishment.
“So you thought me dead, eh ?” said
Mr, Hall. * Well, it was all a mistake,
I received severe injaries in that rail.
road accident, but soon recovered,
owing to the good care [ received at the
hands of the miners’ wives to whom I
was carried,
stake out a claim in their mining re-
gions, and I did so. 1 was not rich,
you know, Sadie, and 1 saw prospects
of sudden wealth in miving, and my
hope was realized after years of work.
Once the gold fever was on me I could
not leave there until I accomplished
what I meant to do,
written you, but resolved not to de so
until I could return and say * Iam rich,’
or ‘I am a beggar.’ Thesurprise to you
now is more delightful, isn’t it, my
dear?’
“ Oh,
she remoustrated.
“1 thought that, ton—but I knew
gence.”
expostulated,
knew it wus not,
“ I was at the gate of my new house,
after you,” he continued; * for I learned
while, either, when Mamie passed by,
I knew who she was, despite her growth
into young ladyhood while I was away-—
fd® she is the image of you—and I ran
after her—with wnat result you know.”
in. He was young and handsome, but
somewhat pale.
“An! Uovert,” cried Mr, Ray, * you
are up?’
“Yes, Carrie's biscuits half ocnred
me,” he said, langhing,
“This, then, is the gentleman,” sdid
Mr. Hall, “for whom the biscuits were
intended? You see, sir, your name was
written in pencil on the napkin, with
your address, and I saw there was »
blunder on the servant’s part in deliver.
ing them to me. And when Mr. Hall
came to my house I showed it to him
and he took the parcel to you; soit
went all right, after all.”
“Then Mary must have told him they
were from me,” thought Carrie,
Bat half an hour later she was unde-
ceived; for, on finding herself alone in
the parlor with Mr. Covert, that gentle-
man explained the mystery by handing
her a little parcel,
ring she had missed when making the
biscuits,
“J found it in one of the bisenits,
finger,” explained he; then taking it,
he added:
place it on your finger to bind the ae-
ceptance of my love for you, Carrie 7”
léarned that she loved him; and Mamie
suffered nothing, for Aunt Sadie was
made her his bride.
Remedies for Vegetable Poisons,
The most dangerous of the vegetable
poisons at this season of the year are
the hemlocks (inc’uding the lant
dropwort, water hemlock and the com.
mon hemlock), fool's parsley, monk-
shood, foxglove, black hellebore or
Ohristmas rose, buckbran, henbane,
thorn apple and deadly nightshade, In
a case of vegetable poisoning, says
Knowledge, ‘‘emetics (the sulphate of
mote vomiting. Where these measures
fail the stomach-pump must be used,
should be used to canse vomiting, Be
daring the nausea they produce before
vomiting is excited the poison is more
given until the poisonous matter has
oftener—to half-hourly doses—in cases
of greater severity, Whee there is
walking about, and if the stupor is great
cold water may be dashed over the head
and chest. Burong coffee may be used
where the narcotic effect of the poison-
ing is very marked, It is all important
that in css s of vegetable poisoning a
medical man should be sent for at
once,”
Twisted magnetic wire loses its
power by being twisted in the opposite
direction.
WORLD'S NEWS.
i
|
Eastern and Middle Sates
Bran from a locomotive set fire to and de-
stroyed about thirty square miles of trees fu
i Ocean county, N. J., oocoasioning a loss of
| $250,000,
Tur not funded debt of New York oily on
{ July 31 was $87,508,338 88,
| at Pittaburg, Pa., and vicinity on account of a
general belief that one of the large fron manu.
to resume operations with non-union
brought from abroad, Bpocial policemen were
| sworn in at the latter place for any emergenoy
that might arise,
Ars meeting of the New York Hepublioan
State committee it was resolved to hold the
State convention at Saratoga, September 20,
Tue sunnal meeting of the National Civil
Sarvice Reform league opened at Newport R
Resolutions calling for obvi service reform were
adopted,
Rean-Apainar Joux ( Bravmowny, United
States navy, died suddenly at Durbam, N. H,,
where he was spending the summer with his
Admiral Beaumont was boru in Penn.
svivania, sixty-one years ago, entered the
pavy fn 1838 as midshipman, and took an ao
| tive part as & Federal naval officer in the late
War,
Wire Barnum's show was being transferred
from Troy, N. Y., the elephant Emperor be
came unraly and suddenly entered a rail mill,
| cansing a stampede of the employes. The ele
phant stepped upun some hot metal and
Goaded to mad
ness with pain the huge animal rushed through
man with probably fatal results before be
Ware fighting the flames in a burning car.
precipitated ten firemen to the room beneath,
fatally,
Two of the cadets at West Point had » fight
Anrexvas Hare, who was the oldest living
water, Mass, in his nipely-ninth vear He
A TRAIN of seventeen oars heavily loaded
The wreck was strewn promiscnousiy
Bix men were instantly killed, and
Brany, champion English wrestler, was de.
Tux amounts of the forgeries of Charles M.
Hilgert, the absconding member of John Hil-
reached $500,000, The great total was all on
soceplances of weil-known merchants,
Laowrxing caused serious damage at Stam
ford, Conn., one bolt striking the Presbyterian
buildings wore also struck and badly damaged.
all the mills in town and some sixty dwelling
Many families saved only the cloth
About twenly sores were burned
LR
Arvin being on » strike about eight weeks
been compelled, by their necessitios, to resume
wouth and Wesl
Near Brownsville, Nebrasks, one day re.
four logs. Al last sccounts it was alive and
well.
Maxy parties in the South are now experi.
menting in the manufecture of sugar from
| watermelons. A bright, clear syrup is made
| in the proportion of one gallon to eleven gallons
of jaice,
Daxaor amounting to $500,000 was caused
slong the Ohio Central railroad by the recent
waterspout and food,
Cuanvres A, Vooeren, janior member of the
| firm of A. Voseler & Co., proprietors of “St.
i Jacobs OIL" died the other day at Baltimore,
| & business that amounted to $1,000,000 a your
and gave employment to 800 persons.
Warren Haytnrow Yearrs was hanged at
Chatham, Va., for the murder of Presley E.
Adkinson, s young merchant. The day before
{ the murder Yeatts was married to a» young
| woman, and Adkerson had expressed rogrets to
her because she was going to marry a dishon.
est man, which statement was caused by the
fact that Yeaita had passed on Adkerson »
bogus check. Armand Coleman (colored) was
hanged at West Point, Miss, for the murder of
Georgia Bright at Jackson, Fla. Harrison
Qarter (colored) was launched into eternity for
killing Lewis Adsms (also colored), and at
Fernandina, Fla, Merrick Jackson suffered a
similar fate for the marder of a colored boy.
All three hangings took place on the same day
Dunixo a plonic of working people at Chicago
a small boat upset and four persons—an old
lady and three married men —were drownad,
Ax unprecedented rainfall produced such a
sudden and mighty flood in the narrow valley
| between Rendvills and Corning, Ohio, that the
railroad track, cars, houses, barns, fences and
live stock being borne along together, The loss
is variously estimated at from $100,000 to
| $300,000. In Michigan floods have oarried
{ away many bridges and done much damage to
| property.
Bean Apsirar Danio D. MeDorvaar, United
“tates navy (retired), died in San Francisco,
| aged seventy-three years,
A TRAIN near Winnsburg, Texas, was wrooked
and four persons—~the conductor, mail agent
express agent and a messenger—were killed and
| several others injured,
Yerrow fever ia reported from several places
| in the Southwest. The dread disease was
brought from Matamoras, Mexico, where it
rages with considerable violence,
Tar boiler of the steamer Gold Dust ox-
ploded, and the vessel was burned to the
wator's edge and sunk 200 yards north of Hick.
msn, Ky. Firat reports stated that about
twenty persons were killed and nearly fifty
wounded.
Mns, Boovirie, Guitean’s sister, has applied
in the Chicago courts for a divorce from her
| husband, the assassin’s counsel, on the charge
i of ernel treatment,
Tux Democrats were victorious. by a large
majority in the Alabama State clection. The
senate is Democratic with about three exoep-
| tions, and ia the house the Democrats have
about eighty out of the one hundred members.
Ar Metropolis, 111., A. G. Leonard, editor of
| the Cairo Gazelle, was stabbed three times,
| with probably fatal effect, by George Tanner, a
prominent local colored politician. Tanner
was arrested,
From Washington.
A priv was passed by the House granting a
pension of $37 a month to woldiers who have
| lost an arm at the shoulder,
Tre President has approved the act to
amend the statutes in relation to copyright ;
the joint resolution for the relief of Earah J.
8. Garnet, widow of H, H, Garnet, late min-
ister to Liberia; the act regulating the car-
riage of passengers by sea; the act granting
| right of way for & railroad and telegraph line
| through the lands of the Choctaw and Chicka-
tions three and four of the act of February 21,
| 1879, to fix the pay of letter-carriers; the joint
to each State and Territorial library.
Conrmuarions by the Sonate: William Hale,
of lowa, to be governor of the Territory of
Wyoming; Paul Lange, of Towa, to be United
Hiates consul at Bt, Stephens, N., B.: Andrew
W.Smythe to be superintendent of mint at
New Orleans,
Nomivamions by the President: Andrew W.
Smythe to be superintendent of the United
Btates mint at New Orleans; John 0, Kinney to
be United Biatea marshal for the district of
York, to be envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary to Italy; William Lowber
Welsh, of Pennsylvania, to be United States
consul at Florence,
Tux state department has received a oabis
message from John RB. Young, United Btates
persons were killed
Rear-Admiral Clits,
the Asiatic squadron, has been instructed to
and two
wounded,
Fenrues confirmations the Beaate
by
tiary to Italy ;
States consul at Moscow ; Charles Seymour, o
Wisconsin, to be consul at Canton
consul general at Madrid ;
and Bohiuy ler
tana Territory; Henry K. McoOoy to be United
Biates judge for the northern district of Geor
gia; John C, Kinney to be United Biates mar
shal for the District of Connecticut,
Rean-Apyigar Nicmorsox has in.
structed by the navy department to send ves.
sels to Tanis and Tripoli to remove the con
been
now impending.
and Willis Henry Trescot to be commission
ers to negutiate s commercial treaty
Mexico,
Jane 30, 1582, says
year, embracing both imports and exports of
merchandise and specie, amounted
the preceding fiscal year, showing a falling
of demestiec merchandise from
able magnitude was petroleam,
the imports of merchandise into the United
Biates during the year amounted to $724 623.
817, as against $043 664,628 during fhe pre
cading fiscal wear, showing an increase of
$51,908,680, or 12.7 per cont,"
Dunixa the fiscal year ended June 50, 1883
the
coin and bullion amounted to $49,412.576, as
against $10 406 847 during the preceding wear
~ af increase of $30,005 720 ; and the imports
thereof amounted 0 $43472300, as against
$110 575,497 during the preceding year—a fail.
ing off of $68 103,107,
value of the exports of gold and silver
Lieuten-
from Siberia thie
Srcuerany Onax pren has directed
bodies of Lieutenant Delong and his con ass
ions of the Jeauneite expodition.
Ar the final sdjourument of Congress the
House did not tender a vols of thanks usually
close 01 8 son
to Mr, Keifer, as Mr. Bobeson was waraed
that i" a motion to that effect
was offered it would be opposed bythe Dem
GUIRIA,
just closed lasted 247 dave during which 281
and elghi-four
int resolutions became laws
enacted daring
the private aot
the who o of last Congress. Of
in, and seventy-two are for the relief of indi
vetoed, while st this session three met the sams
a ———-
acoompanied by & number of troops. The fight
Torres, who was wounded,
were strongly fortified and completely am
bushed the troops.”
M. Lo Blond as president of the council,
England, to witness the departure of a regi
ment for Egypt.
Tue new French
pounced as follows
dent of the ¢
affairs; Clement Fallioros,
cabdoet is officially an.
Charles Daclere,
minister of the
Jules Duvanx, minister of public
Jean Billot, minister of war; Admiral Jean
Jauregriberry, minister of marine; Louls
Jochery, minister of posta and telezraphs ;
Francois de Maby, minister of agriculture;
Plerre Légrand, minister of commerce and ad
interim of public works. All of the abows
named officials accepted office at the invitation
of Senator Duclere, who, submitted the list to
President Grevy,
A MILITARY ogavention has been proposed
between England and Turkey.
A pEsTRUCTIVE fire has occurred in Stavropol
and along the Kuma river, Russia
covering an area of eighty square kilometers
have been burned.
Crops
stationed at Concepcion, in the Jauin wal.
ley, has been massacred by the inhabitants
The soldiers had illtreated some women.
Riot, misrule and suarchy are fairly enthroned
in Peru,
Two men while stiempting to climb over the
railing of the Tuileries gardens, Baris, during
a display of fireworks caught hold of an elec.
tric wire usad in the
M. ve Lusseps, projector of the Suez canal,
declares that the whole of Egypt has embraced
intelligent defense to check their enterprise il
poesible,
Tun khodive of Egypt has issued a proclama-
tion declaring Arabi Pasha and his followers
rel ols, and accusing Arabi of the massacre and
pislage of the 11th of June, and of being the
canre of the destruction of Alexandria and ol
the massacres at Tantah and Benha,
The conference report on the naval appro.
pristion bill was agreed to... A report was
received from the secrecary of state respecting
the cases of American ci'izens under arrest in
Ireland..,.A joint resolution was passed ine
structing the secretary of the navy to couveue
a court of inquiry in relation to the loss of the
Joannetie, °
FORTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS,
Benate.
The river and harbor appropriation bill wa
pasead over the President’s veto by 41 yoas to
16 nays, being a necessary two-thirds majority,
The folihwing is the full vote:
Yeas—Aldrich, Allison, Anthony, Brown
Butler, Call, Camden, Cameron, of Wisconsin,
Cookre'l, Coke, Conger, Davis, of West Vir-
ginia, Dawes, Farley, Forry, Goorgs, Gorman,
Grover, Hampton, Hoar, Jackson, Jonas, Jones,
of Florida, Jones, of Nevada, Kellogg, MoDill,
McMillan, Maxiey, Milter, of California, Miller,
of New York, Pugh, Ransom, Baunders, Saw.
yor Bhorman, Bister, Vest, Voorhees, Walker,
Williams, Windom —41.
Nay«—Bayard, Blair, Oameron, of Pennsyl-
vauin, Davis, of Illinois, Frye, Hale, Harrison,
Hawley, Ingalls, Logan, Morrill, Pendleton,
Platt, Rollins, Banishary, Van Wyok-16,
Messrs, Chuloott, Haris, Plumb, Lapham and
Beck who anpounced that they would have
voted ** Nay,” were paired with Messrs, Groome,
Johnston, Falr, Lamar and Hill (Ga.), respec.
tively, who were absent. Mr. Garland, in the
affirmative, was paired with Mr. Edmnands, in
the negative; and both were abront, Mr,
Vance, who would have voted “Yea,” was
paired with Mr. Mitchell, absent, Mr. Sewell
was also paired. Attor the vote was announced,
Mr. Lapham, who had rospod led in the nega.
tive, explained that he had overlooked the fact
that he had been paired, and withdrew bis
volta,
The conferees on the naval appropriation
bill reported an agrevnent and the Lil was
passed, .... The 8 nate ree dyd fio n its posi.
tion with Jogardj the - encral defic @ 10y bill,
«+e. The knit goods Lill was paseed.,,. Mr,
Anthony, from the conference on the bill for
ted an agreement by which the -enate
propriation of $219,
000 to pay for the work retained. This ac-
tion contempiates the printing gf 800,000 copies.
the section of the revised statutes im
export tax on tobacco, and referring the claims
wf the captor of the ram Albemarle to the
loss of the Jeannette,
directing an Investigation during the recess in.
to the labor strikes,
be made by the committee on education snd
tive conditions and wages as compared with
like olasnes abroad os
clos producing strikes
recommend
The commities is to
leglalation to remove of
tuelr recurrence, aud ia empowered to send
for persons and papors, administer oaths snd
au laquiry no the division between labor an
capital and of their joint productions in 1he
home to the Garfleld Memorial hospital was
passed... At 3p NM, scoording to Agreement,
and after a session lasting 247 days, the pre.
the session of the
** Fenators
sension iu which the Senate has performed ie
part of the public duty faithfully, we are about
to separate. My thanks are deg to each and
every momber of the body for generuus con.
sideration and for friendly support in the ehair,
Wishing you all health and happiness | pow
House
Mr. Page, of California, under unanimous
instractions from the commities on com mercs,
A fer
tions therato
bY a vole of yeas 123, nays 60. Foiowiag is
Yeas— Messra, Atkins,
Bisckbarn
Browster, Buck,
Barbour,
Blanchard, Bliss, Bow
Backner,
Bingham,
Hinds, Dgwes, De Motte, Deuster, Dibrell
Daun, Dunnel), Ellis, Fereit, Evins, Farwell, o
lows, Fonl, Forney, Falkerson, Garrison,
of New York, Harmer, Harris, of Massachu
softs, Harris, of New Jersey, Hazoltine
Hatch, Hazelton, Henderson
Hoblitge'l, Hoge, Horr, House,
Hubbell, Jones, of Texas, Jones ol
Arkansas, Kenna, King, Latham, Lewis, Tord
Lyneh, Mackey, Manuing, MeCiare, MoCoid,
Melave, MeMullin, Mills, Oates, O'Neill, Page
Iige, of Ohio, Rice, of Missouri, Rice, of
chuselts, Rich,
oT
Richardson, of New York,
of Mississippi, BSonils, Bpsulding, Speer
Spooner, Stephens, Stone, Strait, Telbot, Tay
lor, Townsend, of Oda, Tucker, Upson, Urner
Vance, Yan Aernam. Van Horn, Wait, Ward
Washburn, Webber, Wellborn, White, Williams
of Wisconsin, Williams, of Alabams, Wilson
snd Wise, of Virginia 122.
Nays Messrs, Anderson, Belmont, Blount,
Briggs, Browne, Brumm, Buchanan, Caldwell,
York, Deering, Diogly, Ermentrout, PFisller
Gosshalk, Hammond, of Georgia, Hardy, Has
kell, Hewitt. of New York, Hill, J
man, Hutchins, Jacobs, Jadwein, Kasson
Ketcham, Klotz, Leadom, Lafevre MoKinley
Miller, Mutohlee, Noroross, Pesle, Randall Ray
Heed, Robinson, of Massachusetts Robinson o
Obio, Robinson, of New York, Ryan, Seales
Tarper, of Kentuoky, 'Bmith, of Pennsylvania,
springer, Btockelager, Townsend, of Illinois
Updegrafl, of Olle, Warner, Whitihorue, Willis
Willete and Young 59,
An anawsis of the vote shows that seventy
one Repablioans, forty-seven Democrats and
five Greenbackers voted in the affirmative, and
twenty-nine Hepublicsns, twenty-aine Demo.
Forty-five pairs wore sunounced, |
Beveral ineffectual atiempts were made to
have private bills considers! and then at 11:15
the House took a recess 1ill 12 o'clock. Tmme.
the Senste amendment to the House
lution for the flpal adjournment of Con.
gross was comeurred in. On motion of Me
Hiscock a committee of three members was
authorized 10 wait upon the President and an-
journ, and Messrs,
Atkins wore appointed as such committes,
The Hou then at 12:35 took 8 recess until
When the House sssemubied Mr,
The Speaker sunounced as members of the
into the
ne ia American shipping,
(Cal), Candler |{
Dingley (Me,)
(Md), spd Cox { Y
hour of 8 o'clock Jbaving srrived,
Keifer addressed the House as follows
House {s about to terminate its first BORRIgD
13 has been an important one to the country.
With thanks for the generoas and kind treat
ment on the part of the House and with my
best wishes for all ite members, regardless of
party, 1 now, as authorised and required by
the concurrent resolution of tue Seuate and
House of Representatives, declare this House
adjourned without day.”
2
Messrs, Page
05
War in Egypt.
The following is an secount of how a Britis)
outpost at Alexandria was alarmed sod put
is a clump of trees on the Sweet Water ocanyd
about in the center of the British line of oat
posts, which was guarded by a company of the
sixtieth Kifles
sisting of a corporal and six men wae
duly posted there last evening. and ons
Honel by Major-General Allsn as
the necessity of maintasnin
ness, and were ordered, in the event of an at
tack in foree, to fall back in order on a barr
ty the shie of the canal, These in:
were apparently fully understood,
in the morning the enemy suddenly appeared
on the left of the British outposts with infantry
sod cavalry,
Ir and unobserved, and, before the Dritish ha
time to check their advance, they charged the
clump of trees at a great pace. The
fired » single volley and then trokeand ran
along the. bank of the canal, The outlook
wouid seem to have been very defective, and
worse sti |, the retreating troops neglected all
the orders concerning a raliyiog point, aud neve
stopped until they bad reached the fortified
water works bill, aboot a mile distant, Fom
of them even ran until they reached the camp,
where they spread all sorts of ridiculous
rumors, such as that they had josi all thes
comrades and bad last seen Major Ward sun
rounded by the eneray, A company instant!y
moved forward to the bank of the eanall The |
enetny had apparently not followed the fogi.
tives far, bu. had taken the rifles they had
thrown away in their flight and secured their
reserve of ammunition. The condact of the |
Rifles created a terribly indignant fooling
throughont the British camp. The position
they sbandonad bas been reccoupied, and the |
men composing the fugitive picket have been |
placed under arrest. A harmiess demoostra- |
tion was mado against an exactly similar posi- |
tion on the previous night
The official report of Admiral Seymour con
Alexandria, is as follows: “Our force con.
sisted of 200 men of the naval brigade, with
Thirty-cighth and Forty-sixth regiments and
all of the Rixtieth regiment. We had a skir-
mish with the enemy, which was 2 000 strong, |
with six guns and six rockets, from 5:30 to 7:30 |
o'clock in the evening. The total casuaitios 10
the naval brigade aud marines are two killed
and twenty-two wounded,”
The following is General (llison's report of
the engagement: * ‘Porsistent native reporis ex-
isting during the past few days that Arabi Bey
was retiring from Kafr-el-Dwar upon Duman.
hour, I determined npon & reconnoissince to
ascortain cloarly whether Arabi still held his |
original position strongly, The left column
began to advance at 4:45 ». M1, from the advance |
vickets of the Ramileh lines, moving by both
a of the Mahmoudieh canal, and soon came
into action with the enemy, who was strongly
pasted in a group of pam trees on
the eastern side ana in strong, defensible houses
and gardens on the other side. These positions
were carried. At this time Licutenant Vyse,
of the Sixtieth, aud one soliier wero kitled, |
The enemy then took a second position half a
mile in the rear upon the east bank of the
canal among high crops and hou -es and behind
the irregular banks of the canal. From this |
rosition, also, the enemy was driven with
great loss, [| scoompamed the right column
myself. As soon as the enemy observed us
they opnad fire with artillery. le pushed on |
as rapudly as possible till 1 reached a point |
whore the railway approachol nearest
to the Mahmoudieh cand and opened |
murketry fire upon the enemy lining
the banks of the canal, Two nine-
pounders were dragged on to the embank-
ment and came into action against the
enemy's guns, the forty-pounder firing over |
onr heads against a point where the onomy's |
forces were beginning to appear, 1 now |
threw forward two companies to carry a house |
near the canal and Ibliowed up by throwing |
four companies st ll more to my loft upon the
banks of and across the canal, thus attaining |
the position I wished and forming a diagonal
line across both the canal and tue railway
The envmy retired slowly before us. The
fire of tueir seven-pounders and nine-centi.
meter guns was speedily got under by our
artillery, The object of my reconnoissaunce
was attained and I determined to withdraw.
This movement was carried out with the most
periect regnlarity and precision. The troops fell
back by alternate companios with the regularity |
of a fleld day. Every attempt by the cuemy |
to advance was cruslud by the beautiful pre- |
cision of the torty-pounder and the steady
firing of the nine-pounders. The losses of the
eneniy appear to have been vory great, They |
were 80 dispirited that, contrary to tho nsual |
practios of Asiatics, they made no attempt to
follow up our withdrawal, As a reconnoisance
the success of our move was ail that L could |
wish, I regret to state that our loss was some- |
what heavy. Lieutenant Vyse was one of the |
most promising officers I ever met. Our total
loss was four killed and twenty-nine wounded.”
SINKING OF THR ALBEMARLE,
Thrililog Joeldent of the War Reenlled
A report from the Benate comiiittee
on pensions, in the case of Daniel OG,
George, contained an interesting story
ram Albemarle, told by one of the par
tioipants in that remarkable exploit, It
forms » part of one of the alidavits in
the onse, Mr, George, as coxswain of
Lientenant Walker's boat, heard Cash.
ing asking Walker for volunteers for
the blowing up of the ram Albemarle
snd Mr, George volunteered and was
the first volunteer. On the night of
October 24, 1864, the expedition went
into Plymouth harbor, jassed a hun-
dred Confederate picket boats who
were on the lookout, as they
had been on the night before; could
net find the ram in the darkness, snd
passed down and out the harbor,
the Qonfederates thinking the bout was
alongside a Federal vessel, and so were
on the lockout the next night. The
put a battery of artillery and a thonsan
men to defend the ram, and pested
lookouts to giye the alarm should any
boat cross a belt of light on the water,
made by the harbor lights, As the vol.
unteer party orossed this belt they were
held with, *Who goes there? Cash
ing avswered, ‘Wankees, d— you."
Then came a shower of bullets,
which riddled the gunwale of
the steam - launch. The daring
volunteers now discovered the ram by
the flash of her big guns and made for
her, passing round her twice before
they sucoceded in jumping their boat
over the boom that surrounded her
Mr. George and 3 chum named Haden
dropped the torpedo of 186 pounds
down under the ram; Cashing gave the
order to reverse steam and k over
the logs, which they were unable to do.
Oushing, finding that they could not get
oul, gave the order: “Pull her off,
Dan; we'll all go to bell together.”
“Dan” pulled the lanyard and the
0 opened a seam twenty feet long
and an inch wide, and susk the ram in
two hours. The attacking party were
blown into the sir and all but Cashin
and one other, Haden, were taken pris-
oners. Mr, George and the crew were
federates, who wonld have killed
them on the spot had it not been
for the esptain of the albemarle, Cooke,
who rushed to the spot, revolver in
hand, snd declared be would shoot the
first man who injured the Yankees. Baid
be: “Ihave been thirty-five years in
Mr. George was sent to Falisbmy
prison, was there eight or nine months
till the wir ceased, when he returned to
the Chicopee and was discharged on
April 26, 1566, buving served four years,
8ix mooths apd sixteen days, and having |
been sngaged in twenty one battles,
besides many skirmishes, Last fall Mr.
George was thrown from his team and
had his shonlder broken, which disabled
him from work all wibter. He bas
wife aud five small children dependent
Mr Geo ge would
probably never have applied for a pon-
sion but for this accident,
WISE WORDS,
i—
What makes life decay is the want of
nn
The first and woist of all friuds is
to cheat one's self.
Vouch- for your neighbor's honesty,
not for payment of his debts,
The manners of nature mske a man ;
There's not a string attuned to mirth
but hath its chord in melancholy.
Everywhere in life the trne guestion
is not what we gain but what we do.
Have you a beautiful kome? If you |
bave, keep it so ; if pot, make it so.
Much of the charity that begins at
home is too feeble to get out of doors.
There sre few occasions when oore-
mony may bot be dispensed with;
kindness never.
The talent of success is nothing more |
than doing what yon can well without |
s thought of fame.
In seeking converts it is always well |
to make sure that they are worth con
verling. A cause may be injured by the
character of its adherents,
Pope said that narrow-sonled le
and narrow-pecked boitles are alipe, for
the less they have in them the more
poise they make in pouring it ont. :
Whether perfect happiness wold be |
procured by perfect goodness this worid |
will never aff .rd sn opportunity of de-
cidiog, but this, at least, may be main-
tained, that we do not always fiad visible
happiness in proportion to visible
virtua,
Forget the evil. Why dwell on the
evil side of life? It is the good that
should be ewphasized and portrayed.
In all our poetry and art, inall our lit-
erature, let e best and highest
thoughts and imagivations be brought
to the front, and the inferior be dropped
out of sight. In all our business, in all
our social intercourse, in all our amuse:
ments, let the good be made prominent,
let heroie deads and generous lives be
knowr and admired, and thoss of an
opposite kind be baried in the silence
they deserve,
The First Monument to a Woman,
In New Orleans, at a meeting of the |
Margaret Monument association, the
plan was adopted for the decoration of |
the triangle at the junction of Camp |
and Prytania streets, and the contracts |
let for the erection of a monument to |
Margaret Houghery, the recantly de.
ceased benefactress of the orphan asy- |
lnms of that city. It will be one of the |
bandsomest works of art in the United |
Suates. Margaret was the widow of an |
Irish sailor, She could neither read |
nor write, and it is said she never worea |
kid glove or a silk dress in her life; yet!
she made an immenre fortune in the!
baking business, which she herself ex- |
pended to the amount of hundreds of |
thousands in building and endowing |
asylums for orphans, regardless of their
feith. Her pall bearers were thegover-
nor apd mayor and the most dis-
tinguished of the citizens, and hers was
the grandest funeral ever known in New
Orleans, the streets through which it
rendered impassable, This is said to |
be the first monument ever erected to a |
woman in the United States.
Sugarcane produced in Louisiana |
and Mississippi occupies 150,000 sores,
and yields annually 208,750 hogsheads
of sugar.
i —— J———
Sadly Aflicted,
“My boy was badly sfilicted with rheu-
matism,” said Mr. Barton, of the great stove
firm of Redway & Barton, of this city, to
one of our reporters. * We doctored him a
reat deal but could find no cure; I had
i] so much of the «flicacy of St Jacobs
Oil that I finally determived to try it. Two
bottles of the Oil fudy cured him.—[Cin.
cinnati Enquirer, .
Mrs. Oarrie Chase lives in Bingham
ton, N. Y., and is a shoemaker by trade.
She has pegged forty pairs of boots in
ten hours, and averages twelve cases a
week of good work.
——————————
The local editor of the Springfield
(Mass) Republican, Mr J. H Mabbitt,
says: “ We have used St. Jucohs Oil in our
family for rheumatism, and f un it to ba
a first class thing." [ Boston IHeisid
The arm of a man, foreleg of a quad-
raved, wing of a bird and fin of a fish
all present the same bones, varied and
modified.
str ——————
Nervous Wot pas p! Aa Impotence,
y toss, Ly:D pain, Im
Roxual Def i cured hy 4 'olls' Hoalth Rs
nowar” $1 Lyaggists Send for slat
tol 8 Wars, Josey City, N. 3, Sanyiga
Ia your hair falling out or your soalp diseased ?
Carbaiine, a deodonzed ¢xiract of petroleum,
as now improved and pertected, is just the arti-
cle you need. Day a bottle; yon will value it
as the choicest of all toilet preparations,
The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation, a !
medical work for every man—young, middie. |
125 invaluable p! tions. :
"With Qratefnl Feo
Da. Mt hate: Eh I
“Golden Medical Discovery” and
Peliots™ hinve cured my
swellings and o sores &
your “Favorite Prescription” has
wonders in restoring to health my
had} been budfant for sight onthe from
wonkuess, I am, with gratefn ings
truly, T. H. Loxa, Galveston, Texan,
ATHENS, G., has four cotton
grogating 20,000 splodies, snd a
508,080.
A
cleanse the blood from all impuritles, from
of all kinda, skin and diseases, its effects
are marvelous, Thousands of testimonials
shin diseases, Address Wonro's DisFesainy
Mepicar, Assocation, Buffalo, N. ¥,
w. P. Pouvis, of Edwards, Miss, has ut
monial policies on himsel! amounting
$200,000. :
* Fale Gtr] Graduates,”
whose sedentary lives fucrease those troubles
peculiar to women, should use Dr. Piered's
“Favorite Preseription,” which is an unfailing
remedy, Bold by druggisia
A vespraare fight between & sturgeon and a
porpoise at Bavenosh, Ga, ended in the death
of tho latter,
Warner's Safe Hidoey and Liver Cure.
Tux largest peach crebiar i in the world Is ip
Alabama,
————————— ¥
Fou pysrersi a, NpioesTion, depression of spire
sts and general debility, in their various forms;
also 84 & preven ive agsinst fever and ague and
other intermittent fevers, the “Ferro-Phosphor-
sted Kiixgir of Calisaya,” made by Caswell,
Hazard & Co, New York, and old by all Drag-
gists, is the best tonic; snd for patisuts recover.
lug from fever or other sickness it hes po equal.
reper Axle
One greasing farts two weeks; all others twe
or three days. Do not be imposed on by the
hambug staffs offered. Ask your desler for Pra.
zer's, with label on, 14 saves your bores labor,
and vou 100, It received first medal st the Osa-
teonial and Paris Expositions, Sold
The new circular of the Cayugs Lake Military
Academy, Auroras, X, ¥., is & handsome book of
40 pages, full of information, Maj. W. A. Flin:
is Principal, Heory Morgan Eeq., President.
. 23 Cents Will ay L
ae Trestise upon the Horse his Diseases,
Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner
of horses, Postage stamps taken, Sent
id by New York Nom mnr Union, 150 Worth
treet, New York,
EE ———— ST —————
23 Cents will Bay sa Treatise upon the
Dorse and his Diveases. Book of 100 pages. Valuable
to every owner of homes. Postage stamps fakes.
Bent poftpaid by NEW YOUR 5 £WSPAPER UNION,
156 Warth Sire 1, Now 3
TUE MARKETS.
NEW YORE,
Beef Catile Good Prime, Lw
Oalves— Comm'n to Price Veals,
Bleep
A ———
-
tit oth
oh
®
= Ld
EEC ESRBEREEGE6ED
Jreaned. SHY. ....000n00
Flour— Ex, State, good to fancy 4
Wastern, good to choice §
Wheat No. 2 Hed i
No.1 White. ........ i
Ryo—Btate,............. cess
Barley —Two-rowed Rute
Corn— Ungraded Western Mizad
Yellow Boeuthern
E > - =n whe
Fa
82
x
rSEes
3°
ay
BARTER
a
Hay--Prime Timothy
Biraw-—-No LL Bye. ...o0nveiss
Hops—Siate, 1831, choioe, ,...
Pork — Mess, new, for sxport...
Lard City Steam
Befinad. .....
st
S66
Sek
BER LL ESNEBES
yd
a
oe
@
2
Butter- -Siate Creamery. ......
Dagry,
Western Im. Croausery
Factory
i Busnael
6300EEH00 66060666668
BUFFALO,
Steers Tish to fair... .. ne
lambs Western
Bhoep-We tem, ..... aa annens
Hogs, Good to Choles Yorkers, ,
Flour—O'y Ground N, Process,
Wheat -5o LL Hard Duin,
Corn—No. 3 Mixed............
Ouste~No. 2 Mix, West
Bariey—Tworowed State,
EON OY ee
BRUNLEERR
ago in
BOSTON,
Deef—Extra plate and family. 18 00
Hogs Live . 82
Hoge City Dressed t
Pek Jxtra Prime per bid... 1
Flour Spring Wheat Patents. .
Qora Hien Mixed
Oats Extra White
Bro--State
W 00l— Washed Comb& Delaine
Unwashed * "
WATEETOWS (MASS) CATTLE MARKET.
Boef—Extra quality Bw 300
Seep ~live weight .......... S%@ BY
Lambs 5 @ §
xe
55 @55
8
8
Wi ws
EEEUEERE.
Pi of
" . g PHILADELPHIA,
our--Penn, Ex. Family, good
Wheat--No, 2 Bed...
Rye—Biate........000n s000s
Corn-—State Yellow, ..........
Outs — Mixed
Butter Creamery Extrs Pa. ..
Cheese—New York Full Cream.
Petroleum —Orode, ...........
Befined |. .. .
’ ; FO y
What a Three-Cent Stamp Will De.
a.
71 will do more than any other ploce of paper
of its size and value in the worid. It accom.
iishes what would, a few years ago, have been
Seemed impossible, That talissanic placard on
the corner of an envelope or kage commands
the use of capacious and beautiful buildings
wherein 10 receive your letters, orders trains of
cars to carry them, and siarts an anuy of men ©
deliver them, It brings information from every
ection of the country and tidirgs of pleasure as
well, But the crowning consideration is the fact
that a three-cent stamp sent to A, VosrLzn &Co.,
Baltimore, Md, with the applicant's name and
address, will procure a copy of 81. Jacoss Calen-
iar, replete with Interesting reading matter, and,
better than all, containing fie instructions
for the treatment and eure of rheumatiom, nea.
ralgia and all painful diseases by the use of Sr.
=
JaconsOt. | Concerning the efficacy of this won-
derful substance, the fol wing must impress the
reader :—Hon, Thomas L. James, Postmaster
General of the United States, when Postmaster of
the City of New York, concurred in the following
testimonial from Wm. H. Wareing, , Asst.
General Superintendent Third Division Mailing
and Distributing Department, New York Post
ples of 81. Jacons OL isA for distribution among
the clerks of this office, have, as far as they have
been tried, proved equal to all that is claimed
for the O11, The reports from the several super
intendents and clerks who have used the On
agree in praising it highly. It has been found
eficacions in cuts, burns, soreness and stifbess
of the joints and muscles, and affords a Tend res
lef for rheumatic complaints” Col. Sqmuel H.
Taylor, Washington, nd, and ex-Postmaster of
Cumberland, Md, was cured of rheumatism by
: HOR ITAPS Stomach
Bitters extirpates
dyspepsia with
greater certainty
and promptitude
than any known
remedy, and is a
most genial inviger.
i and
18 MIGHTY. Pref MARTINER,
he Hiren Rpaiet Sear. A
i. Y
Re a CORRECT FP
will,
ma of wad book of aid pend |
Ba avaraad i ai aot to
10 Mosi'y Pi. Boston, Mass.
A ILIA handsome set of cards for Se. stam
(CARD A. BE BA=SE™P, Rochester, N, ¥
25 CENT
NOX-ENCIRCLING HALF-BOSE SUPPORTER.
CHAS. HARLOW, Troy, N.Y.
and
HISTORY = U.S.
BY ALEXANDER H, STEPHENS.
Hoontains 300 Kiss ¥ sue
es
CONSERVATORY OF
DLY. FURNISHED.
INTHE HEART OF BOSTON.
RARE ADVANTAGES.LOW
L
ONE MILLION COPIES SOLD.
EVERYBODY WANTS IT!
EVERYBODY NEEDS IT!
THE SCIENCE OF LIVE, OR, SELF.
PRESERVATION,
Vitality, Nervous
and Physical Dehility, Premature Decline in Mang
is an indispensable treatise for everr man, whether
OR, SELF
PRESERVATION,
OR, SELF.
PRESERVATION,
Sret-clam physician would charge from $3
PRESERVATION,
Pe ais erabomad: to
a) be
or ihe money
‘OR, SELF.
PRESERVATION,
cal beok in e
for double
OR, SELP«
PRESERVATION,
postpaid, on receipt
The author can be consulted on sll diseases re
quiring skill and experience. Address
PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE,
or W. H. PARKER, M. D.,
4 Bolfinch Street, Boston, Mass.
aid.
Containing an Index of Diseases, which
Table Riving
# poison,
A valuable collection of Receipts an:
100-PAGE BOO
rules for telling the age.
25 CENTS,
One, Two and Three-Cent Stamps received. A
“EBIREsRnN EEN