- a A a Tn the Wheat Fleld, When the lids of the virgin Dawn unclose, When the earth is fair and the heavens are y And the early breath of the wakening rose ~ Floats on the air in balm, Yitand breast-high in the pearly wheat 4 That ripples and thrills to a sportive breeze, no over thé field with its Hermes feet, And its subtle odor of southern #eas ; While out of the infinite azure deep The flashing wings of the swallow sweep, Buoyant and beautiful, wild and fleet, Over the waves of the whispering wheat, Aurora faints in the fulgent fire Of the Monarch of Morning's bright em. brace, And the summer day climbs higher and higher Upon the verulean space ; The pearl-tints fade from the radiant grain, And the sportive breeze of the ocean dies, And soon in the noontide's soundless rain The field seams graced with a million eyes; Each grain with a glance from its lidded fold, As bright as a gnome's in his mine of gold, While the slumbrous glamour of beam and heat Glides over and ander the windless wheat. Yet the languid spirit of lazy Noon, With its minor and Morphean musio rife, Is pulsing in low, voluptuous tune With sammer’s lust of life. Hark ! to the droning of drowsy wings, To the honey-boes as they go and come, To the “boomer’ * scarce rounding his sultry nogs, The gnat's small horn and the beetle's ham ; And hark to the locust—noon’s one shrill song— Like the tingling steel of an elfin gong Grows lower through quavers of long retreat To swoen on the dazzled and distant wheat. Now Day declines ! and his shafts of might Are sheathed in a quiver of opal haze; Still thro’ the chastened, but magie light, What sunset grandears blase ! For the sky, in its mellow luster, seems Like the realm of a master poet's mind A shifting Kingdom of splendid dreams— With faller and fairer truths behind ; And the changeful colors that blend or part, Ebb like the tides of a living heart, As the splendor melts and the shadows meet And the tresses of Twilight trail over the wheat. Thus Eve creeps slowly and shyly down, And the gurgling notes of the swallows conse, They flicker aloft through the foliage brown, In the ancient vesper poace ; But a step like the step of a conscious fawn 1s stealing—with many pauses—this way, Till the hand of my Love thro’ mine isdrawn, Her heart on mine, in the tender ray; Oh, hand of the lily, Oh, heart of truth, Oh, Love, thou art faithful and fond as Ruth} But I am the gleaner—of kisses—Sweet, While the starlight dawns on the dimpling wheat ! : *The dagulde. or as commonly called “bumblebee.” ~Pauwl Hamilfon Hayne. Chips was hungry. Well, there was nothing remarkable in this, at least to } Chips, ashe was often hungry, His bill of fare for the day ran thus: For breakfast, one bone, with crusts; din- ner, nothing; supper, ditto; dessert, moralizing reflections, You see, the remarkable fact would have chanced had he not been hungry. When Chips was thus carnivorously disposed he became exalted in rank, | the height of his position depending | upon the keenness of his appetite. If he was mederately hungry, he was a lord; if hungrier, he becamea duke; at the very hungriest—a prince. i At this epoch he was a prince. When in this state Prince Chips, often held imaginary conversations! with invisible individuals, wherein he | was expected to be answering such | questions as “ Will your lordship deign | to partake of this salad?” or,” “ Will | your royal highness condescend to ac-| cept this mutton ?" with the general] answer, spoken in all complaisance, | “ No, thank you, my good fellow, .I} hav» sufficiently dined.” i Chips palace overlooked the sea— | being at the foot of Liberty street. | It was large—for Chips; moreover, it] was well ventilated, * Well," solilo- | quized Chips, “folks needs fresh air in | winter as well as summer, an’ when | they wants things to keep they allus| put ‘em in the cold.” And again: “A | feller might growl, but Old J ack | wouldnt let up on his toes all the| same.” In addition to being a prince Chips was also a philosopher. Every | morning his royal highness emerged | from his palace with his implements of | trade—his box and brushes. “A prince | blacking boots I” you exclaim, in won- | der. Well why not? When it pleases | our noble lords of the present day to | metamorphose themselves into stage- | drivers cannot a prince, with equal] right, be a bootblack? Every evening | he returned to his palace and bed of straw. “Straw!” you cry. Well, why | not again? A few centuries ago royal | personages received visitors of state | sitting upon rushes. It was merely a | revival of ancient customs. Chips was | not “tothe manor'born,” that is, he | had not . always rejoiced in a title. | He could remember a time once | when he Thad slept under a roof and washed his face, i Far off? Oh, very far off; down améng the ‘shadows of that strange distant past he could dimly trace a] ray of light. Jt was the thought of a| gentle face that had once bent over | him--eyes with their light of love] shinigg into his; lips with a tender curving, whispering low, “ My son.” He fancied that he remembered, sometilies, how a strange white pain had settled upon the face, how the brightness in the eyes had been but | the gleam of tears, and the smilé upon | the lips became sadder than any sigh. He was not gnite sure of this, how- ever. It might have been but a fancy of his, but there was one thing that he remembered well: A picture of a darkened room, and a face resting upon pillows whose whiteness was not purer, and a voice crying out, faint yet strong in its intensity of emotion: “My boy, promise me—ne, your mother, dying—that you will never, never take what is not yours!” And | seeing dimly the clouds that rested | above him, and awed by the shadowy | wings that hovered near, he had prom- ised. The vow stood out amid the bewil- dering chaos like a star that éhines among the somber clouds of a mid- night sky, and he had kept it ever, Now to-day it was not alone the bill of fare that troubled Chips, al- though that was not such as an Astor, much less a prince, would have rel- ished. But, alas, some one, unknown, had stolen his box and brushes, Yet his philosophy deserted him not. “When a feller’s got property,” he soliloquized, “he must expect ter be burglarized when he don’t lock up his safe.” | Ife walked up Broadway—he did not care to go hone to the palace-— and stopped before a restaurant, Oh, but there was such a tempting display-—such flakey pies and great doughnuts, and—and in the eenter— how brown, how nice-a crisp, fat turkey. Chips, looking, was almost inclined to believe himself hungry. As ft was, he amused himself watching the waiters inside, faccying the great bustle and preparation was all for him. One spruce servant stopped another, What was it he was saying ? * His imperial highness dines here to- night, Sam. Dring in the turkey in the window.” i ~~ “Darn his imperdence!” muttered 4 Je thinks I can swallow a gobbler. Blamed ef I'll step his old grubshop a’ter that!” and pursued his way with roified, much-injured, air. alone could create a | Shakespeare himsetf, { Apart from the crowd, however, standing in the shadow of old Trinity, the fair vision of the tempting fowl coming again before him, he mur (mured: “My eyes! but that gobbler wor a buster!” Hesat down upon the steps and rested his face in his grimy | hands. What is it you say ¥--he looks {coat and battered-in hat? you know he is in disguise, “I wish now,” he soliloquized, after a space given for silent reflection, Qh, tur the Chinee Injuns, that a few cop- pers hed a rolled right down here” Chips had been to church once, had “seen and heard.” few moments’ fallen fortunes: “If that feller hadn't nabbed traps,” he muttered. * Darn him!” a sudden heat of passion, He Now, after a meditation upon his in A man was with tie, “My boy,” he said, in reproving ac cents, “yon cannot realize the enor. mity of your offense when you utter such expressions as the one which just now sullied your lips.” Chips glared at this reprover a moment, He blazing with anger against the unmaculate dress and spotless un- at hand he transferred his rage to this individual so conveniently near, More over a mak is never particularly an- gelic' when particularly hungry; neither 8 a boy, “Go to blazes I" he growled, turning his back, Thereat was philanthropic personage greatly tle stood for an instant gating at Chips like an accusing angel then iN on the B it t i this {instance of smile far-fetched), turned and passed by-— not “other side,” the crossing being too muddy, his way home He knows his man’s weakest point. “What of your wife," | ~**she whom you have never per { mitted the winds of heaven to visit | too roughly. How can she, cradled in { luxury, bear privation and poverty? | Think of the woman you love?” | Christopher Mamyu stretches out his { hand. The devil has won, Chips walks slowly through the streets, Yes, his philosophy has quite { deserted him, He struggles, but can. not regain it. A hard line creeps { around the corners of his mouth, a strange light dawns in his eyes, “Darn it I” eries the boy, standing {still on the hard pavement, “I'm { hungry.” And in this cry and the { banker's groan there is equal pathos and equal despair. Somebody passes | him here—-somebody walking hastily jand with a desperate look upon his | It is the man whose head was bent above his desk an hour ago { the man who fought that terrible bat- tle of a moment's space, and who is rushing now to ruin, He jostles | against Chips as he goes headlessly on, A breath of wind blows open his coat; | something falls, but either he is deat { or insensible now to sound: he | blindly on. The boy stoops and picks up the packet. Is he dreaming? He { rubs his eves, pinches himself, stares, {he amount is marked upon the wrap fper. A wild joy leaps up in Chips’ heart. The irresistible tide of hunger overwhelms him, Oh, what a dinner i he will have! The old gobbler He {stops with a quick cry. He has no { Might to this money. Then wary old Satan comes to him. The boy stands in the windy night, Up above him the stars sltine; below the gas-jets flare and | flicker: within a tumult-—a Waterloo, Napoleon or Wellington, which is he? He trembles in his excitement. His | eves shine like the lamps in the street. i face, too, gous the side on which is the restaurant, He is so hungry. There—hush ! Through the night, the warm glow of his. own hear stone, with the savory from a well cooked dinner filling the room, he forgot to sigh. Left alone Chips’ heat | cooled. © How unbecoming a prince to | allow such trifles as the omission of ¢ dinner he drew himself up sharply, he not dined two hours previously at Delmonico’s? He went over again the he had given, “ Waltz in yer turkey, boss. Bring on that puddin’, plenty o plums!” wl » Ogos here Had orders Of what was he thinking, to | be wishing for dinner? Well, but let | us leave him now, here under the shadow eof Old Trinity-—than which there is no place more fitting, some people might say. 1 think if Chips 1d been consulted just then—a res taurant! But then, you know, he was seldom consulted. Oh, bythe way, did you ever have the honor of Mr. Chris topher Memyu's acquaintance? In. Just come with | me and I'll introduce you, No; upon | second thought, I will not. Mr. Chris- | topher Memyu is very busy just now, | But stand here outside and you can Memyu is just eight-and-thirty, re. puted to be wealthy, and—such a pity! match-making mammas deéelare—mar- ried Such a dear woman; such a oretty, tender-hearted little woman, such kindly beaming eves as she has, | such a helpful smile, glad and sunny for all! Mr. Christopher Memyu does | not agree, at all with mateh-making mammas. There was a little boy ful young tyrant, whose hair exactly matched the little strip of sunshine that every. morning comes in at his office window. But alas! Greenwood holds | many a sunbeam like that which lighted Christopher Memyu's home, and it holds his. There is no needless re- pining, though. Perhaps the wifely | eves will always grow dim at sight of | that shining curl ‘that lies between | the leaves of her little Bible—right | there "at the place where the mighty heart of Israel's king breaks forth in | its anguish, “Oh, Absalom, my son, my son!” And, perhaps, a little quiv- ering pain will always reach the father's heart when he hears a voice like unto “the one that is still” ery out “Papa I” But their eves are not shut to the sunshine of life, and none of its work is left undone—ay, it is better done, It is he “ who never felt a wound” who jests at scars, and it is not the old veteran, furrowed by the bullets’ fall hail, who sleeps at his post. i What did you say? Christopher Memyu has put aside his papers now and is eoming out. Yes, he has turned ; you can see his face better now, and Y hy, why, what is the matter? Helis as haggard and pinched in features a= any man of sixty. Surely, Mr. Chris- tophér Memyu must be in trouble, At Yr 1% watch. What! you will lose your train? So we will if we do not make | haste. © What can be the matter with Mr. Christopher Memyu's ? Chips does not sit long on the old stone steps. Somehow he seems grow- ing reckless. He thinks he will go! Alas, the pitiful word! There—no. He will go back down | Broadway, he thinks, and so he comes now down the street, Here is the restaurant at whose window he stood an hour ago. ‘He does not stop there | now, observe; he walks hastily by, | with his head turned the other way in! a very resolute manner indeed. i Chips has almost decided to become | a king. He walks on and stops right | The light shinés out with genial | warmth; it attracts the boy and he | softly climbs the steps. The snug office looks cheerful. The man with his back to him seems comfortable. “He's a swell un,” mutters the prince | to himself; “he's"—witha sudden thought of happy compromise—* et two dinners,” > The man turns about, Chips see his | face and recoils. | What sadder sight does the world | hold than the despair of a human face, | Moved by that instinctive pity which | one wretched mortal has for another | equally miserable, Chips presses nearer | the stove, as if thereby he was closer | the suffering. > Suddenly the man flings up his arms, | “ Ruined, ruined!” he eries, and sinks | i$ i : § i down, his head buried in his hands, | resting upon the desk. i There is something sacred in misery. | Chips felt it as he moved quietly | away. Within Mr. Christopher Memyu, | banker, with millions slipping from | his grasp ; without, Chips, bootblack, | shelterless, supperless. Of the human world to-night, these two—seemingly | so far apart, measured by that great | divining rod, capacity for pain—were not, perhaps, so far distant after all. “Only a few weeks,” muttered the man—-“ but a few more weeks and | could safely tide it over, but now Something comes to him just here, something that causes him to start and recoil with ashiver of horror, but something that keeps coming and coming and coming. In that drawer yonder lies $50,000, No one knows it is there but him, for he holds it in trust for one who is on his way across the Atlantic by this time, If— The devil, they tell us, tempted Christ in the ‘wilderness for thirty days, and in the end Divine Majesty rose trivimphant. Alas for us for whom the tempting is oft but thirty seconds, cry, “Get thee behind me, Satan!” But Christoplier Memyu has been the soul of honor. Never before has he had cause to blush for act of his. Shall scribblers seem he now?—no, no! He turns away. te hears his mother's dying cry, he remembers his promise, He looks up the stars that shine down upon him as if smiling a bless. “ You'll let Him know,” he says, He starts man ing. in a choked sort of voice, on & run; how he flies! The is “Say, hold up, mister I” Chris topher Memyu turns, for Chips has hold of his coat, panting, breathless, 1 in the other's hand. “Yer dropped it,” he says, answering the man's look of amaze ment, Yes, he is amazed, bewildered, Chris- topher Memyu. *“ Boy,” he says, with a sudden thought, “do you know what this packet contains ¥” ‘You bet; ain't it a pile, though? Golly, what achase I had. You're a walker, you are.” joy I” Christopher Memyu is trem- bling. “You are poor?” Chips waits a full moment. “I hain't had no grub to-day,” hesays at length, “I'm hungry !" “Why—why !” The man can scarce- ly stand. “Why did you not keep the money ?" Chips draws himself up, Did ever on ancient battle-ground look grander? “She's up there,” he says, pointing to the starry sky. “I told her I never would, an’ she'd a knowed. Besides, 1 know it's mean.” The next moment he was amazed, for Christopher Memyu has caught him right in his strong arms. * God bless you, boy I" he cries, his voice chok- 12 “You've saved me !" Chips slept in a bed that night ; no better. And there is anothér son in Christopher Memyu's happy home. Happy, for honor dwells there, and, withal, he keeps his title. For of good fellows you will he declared * the prince.” the packet ro hero gr i it b so Fae vith sobs, t t 1 i iF him oft Condensing a Telegram, There was a big smash on the rail- at Dallas Center, Towa. To an- notunee his escape from a horrible death one of the passengers, a tall man with a thin neck, handed the telegraph ope- rator the following message: Mus, Sanat H. Forrassnew, Darras Cexren, Towa. ~My Dear Wile: 1 left the city early this f moming, ter eatin with Professor » to Dallas Center this gre by 8 o'clock this even~ sunot help it . 1 am your AINSHER, love for mother and t Rouen K. Fou The operator read it, smiled, and said: “ You can save considerable ex- nse and tell all that is really neces- [I presume, by shortening this message down to ten words, We have no wire directly into Dallas, and will have to send this message part of the way over another line, which adds largely to the cost of transmission, Shall 1 shorten this for you?” “No, oh, no,” the man with shawl replied, “ I'll fix it myself.” The tall man with the short panta- loons went back to the desk with his message, It was a stunner, for a fact, and the man heaved a de- spairing sigh as he prepared to boil his “letter” down to ten words. He 1 i SUry, th once or twice, and then scratched out “Pallas Center, Iowa," as though everybody knew where he lived. Then he erased “early,” and drew his pen slowly through “breakfast with" and the temperance,” Then he over “dinner with,” and went on to erase “and narrowly es- caped.” And so he went on through Occasionally he would hold it from him at arm’s length, after making an erasure, to get at the gen- eral effect. And at last, after much sighs, he came to the window and said: “ Here is this telegraphic dispatch to my wife. 1 have not been able to con- dense it into ten words, and do not see how it can be done without garbling the sense of the dispateh, but if you can do it you will oblige me greatly, as I do not wish to incur any really un- necessary expense.” And with that he handed the opera- tor the following expunged edition of his original message: Mus, Sanan II. Forvivsner—My Dear Wife: 1 left the city--this morning after eating— Professor Morton alive--cause 1 expected to eat—you at home. But we were delayed by a terrible rallroad accident on the railroad. I—being killed—terribly the conductor-cannot can.--1 hate—mother and Rocer K. ForriNsnee, The operator smiled once more, and’ in his quick, nervous way that grows of his familiar association with the lightning, made a few quick dashes with his pencil, and without adding or changing a letter in the Dallas Center—but I Sagan H, Forumnsmer—~Dallas Center, Tow Left city 'smoming ; delayed by accident; home ‘sevening. Rooen K. FoLLuixanee. “There, that is all right,” he said, in twenty-five cents if we had our own { next spring, too; saves you several | dollars, sir. T'hat’s right, thank you.” | And the man with the thin neck and { thin hair went and sat down on a | chair by the stove, and stared at that | operator until the rescuing train came { along as though he was a worker of | miracles. { AIO | Free libraries are a great power in {the United States. Forty-nine new ones were opened in 1879, containing | 3,842 public libraries of all classes. | mmm A happiness that is quite undis turbed becomes tiresome; we must have ups and downs ; the difficulties which are mingled with love awaken passion and increase pleasure, THE FARM AND HOUSEHOLD, Leached Ashes. The New Hampshire Mirror and Farmer says : Leached ashes are good for almost any crop, but should be ap- plied with other fertilizers that con. tain vegetable substances, like barn | manure ; thus applied on most soils, and for nearly all crops, twenty-five cents a bushel would be cheaper than commercial fertilizers, Fifty bushels of ashes applied to an acre of land in connection with two cords of good stable manure would produce better results for most crops than 150 bush els applied without other fertilizers, or five cords of stable manure applied with no other fertilizer with it, i Cracked Corn for Chiloks, The proper way to feed corn is to give this grain in a “crushed” or *oracked condition. Common cracked corn may be fed to them or it may be scalded to advantage before feeding, It should be given to the fowls fresh, however, as, if mixed with water any other meal, it quickly grows sour if not used. There are other advan- tages in feeding it in this shape as compared with the use of whole corn, and those are that in the broken state it is taken up much more easily than are the whole kernels, and when eaten it digests more readily, while the pro cess of devouring a given quantity Is slower, and the birds, if ever hungry, cannot “gobble it down" in bulk, as they incline to rush at the whole seeds. But too much care can- not be taken to provide of this article only what is eaten up clean at a feed- of 80 atable and unsavory. Rolling on Light Sols A New Jersey farmer, writing to an exchange, SAYS: Rolling is another popular process that may do much mischief upon light soils The soil quired to break up lumps. and eclods, and the harrow will compact the ground sufficiently for all purposes, The roller packs and hardens a light soil, and causes it to dry out very rapidly, while to retain moisture it should be kept and soft. The difference between rolled and harrowed fields | very marked after a long continue drought. The rolled fields dry ou, rye and wheat being light and small. The only useful effect of the roller on light soil, I am confident, is in the upon grass or grain fields only to level and prepare them for the mower or reaper. loose % § i 1g sprit Tralnlag the Tomate. In small gardens, where it is desira- ble both to keep everything in neat (trim and to make the most of the limited ground, there is great advan tage in training tomato plants erect to an eight-foot rod or stake, well sharp- ened and set. Fewer plants are need ed; these few occupy much less room than if allowed to sprawl about; the fruit is not so liable to rot, and tains completer size, form and The training is so simple and easy if { begun in time that the attention re quired by a dozen plants is more a pleasant recreative amusement than a weariness, be close to the plant; or, better, the | close to the stake; and the stom should be led up quite erect, so | as to be able to support the weight « | fruit and foliage, which may attain to twenty pounds or more. No | branches allowed, as : { would not have support, and without it would be bent or twisted that they could not fill out the fruit on them for want of free direct calculation. Every side branch is nipped out as it appears, but { if one is already formed and bearing | blossoms, it is best to pinch it so as to | leave but one leaf and confine its growth to that. | leaves and fruit will be | and thicker for this prompt i all wasteful wanton about every eight main stem to the stake—allowing some room for its enlargement—will enable it to carry its burden safely, if the stake is firm enough to resist the wind, This is a much simpler and neater { method than the use of frames, which often cause the plants to strangle either | by too great a crowd of shoots, or by the top bending over and becoming i constricted by the weight of its fruit, { This is a favorable season for amateur | gardeners to acquaint themselves with | the useful art of finger and thumb | training by applying it to a tomato { plant. It is equally available on gar- | den vines and trees—W,, in New York | Tribune, ‘he stake should sed plant growing § i are due N41 above the blossoms, Both larg: r SOON : inches to Farm and Garden Notes, | Paint your tools and fences. You | can do the former under cover on a i wet day. Sprinkle the melon and cucumber | leaves with or road dust, fine | plaster or slaked lime to drive away | the striped bug. |001t | Give grapevines plenty of well | rotted manure. Fresh manure may | excite a luxuriant growth of vine but | Will not mature it or insure fruit. Keep the harrow going in the spare time all summer. Not one farm in a { dozen gets all the harrowing it needs, {nd on no farm is the harrow ever used too much. Verily a little thought the farmer much, and the through this means, even on a small | considerable capital. | an Illinois writer recommends to | sprinkle the plants with flowers of sul- phur as soon as the white butterflies make their appearance, and repeat after a rain, | A Nashville (Tenn.) farmer's rem- edy for the army worm is to draw taut a rope thirty or forty feet long, and drag it over the wheat. The worms are unable to climb back, while the younger ones that return are shaken | off the next morning. The distinguishing characteristic of | the class known as Noisette roses is the | habit of blooming in clusters. The | plants of most varieties are vigorous | growers, the flowers are beautiful and | are borne in profusion. They require | protection during the winter when | grown in the open ground. No better remedy exists for the cur- { rant worm than hellebore, extended with plaster or finely-sifted coal ashes, For the striped bugs that attack melon used alone, or in place of them fine plaster, dry or slaked lime, charrcoal { dust, soot or fine road dust, A Wisconsin lady says that one-half pint of salt and one ounce of copperas { dissolved in a gallon of water is all that is needed for a eut-worm preparation. | She dips the plants in this solution be- fore setting them. Says she has used it for years, and never knew of a plant | being cut off after taking this precau- | tion. | All who have Italian bees bear testi- | mony that they show more energy and | more power to eradicate the worms | than the black bees manifest. Give them well-made hives and keep the col | onfes strong, and you need have no fear of worms. In fact, where Italians have long been introduced, the worms have almost disappeared. German observations show that the annual yield of milk rises gradually | from the birth of the first calf till the | fifth, reaches its maximum after the | sixth, sinks gradually until the tenth { calf, when it is about the same as at | the first calving, and after the thir | teenth or fourteenth calf is only one- yleld. | Experienced cultivators know that {in the dryest times soil kept well cul tivated will show a certain degree of moisture two or three inches below the surface, and when not cultivated it will be dry as powder several foot deep, The influence of culture in this re spect is truly wonderful, and especislly when the subsoil plow has been em ployed, This greatly increases the power of the to draw moisture from below in a time of drought, soil The Drovers’ Journal says: The man makes the business pay the man who carefully selects his breeding ewes, annually culls out the old and in ferior stock to fatten for market, and constantly keeps at the head of “sd flock a thoroughbred male, if he own- not afford to start with purely bred No other kind of stock raising present as sheep 8 EWEN, pays so liberally at growing if properly attended to, To be a successful dock master you must keep your flock young, feed well and breed with judgment Grapevines can be grafted, although grafting has not been much practiced in this country. Various methods of grafting have been recommended, but the following is probably as good as any. The old vine should be eut off below the ground early in the spring and before the sap has started, and cleft in the same manner as an apple or pear stock. The cutting pros pared and inserted in the manner usual with other grafts, The stock is bound up apd the earth replaced. The cut. ting should have one eve left above the ground.— Lewiston Journal, is Hecipes. Svocorasit—Take a pint of shelled with hot water, let stand five minutes, pour off, place over fire in hot water, and boil fifteen minutes; have ready corn from six good-sized ears and add to beans; boil half an hour, add salt, pep- per and two tablespoonfuls of butter, Be careful in cutting down corn not to ent deep; better not eut deep enough and then scrape; after corn is added watch carefully to Keep from Mr scorching, Prax Pie-Crust.—For one large pie use half a pound of flour and two tablespoonfuls of very hard sweet lard "ut the flour into a chop ping bowl with a saltspoonful of salt and chop the lard or butter into it in large, thin flakes; stir in sufficient cold water to just wet the flour (about half a pint), turn the paste out on fl pastry board, and roll it out about quarter of an inch thick, Do ne touch it with the hands more than absolutely necessary, and work very quickly and lightly, sq that the lard or butter may not be melted. As soon as he pastry is rolled out, cut out the y erust and lay it on one side of the i: ; mainder of the rust to line the sides or bottom of the late, lining only the sides for a tart and the entire plate for a ple, Some times when a richer pastry is desired the top crust may be half spread with thin flakes of butter, and doubled and rolled out; this may be repeated three The consists or butter, f i a floured i“ it in i i astry boan nse the re or four times, secret of in wd working, a4 quick, in a rather in baking o boil them until they are soft. Squeen them and add the juice to the water any s » which anay be left from quince and yruj h Preserves, Io eact sugar 1 pint of juice allow a agven to heat ; it must be watched and stirred to prevent burn. ng. Let the juice boil for five min- utes, then pour in the hot sugar, stir- ring until it is entirely dissolved and skimming any scum that may rise; there will be very little, Let it come to a boil, then take from the fire and put in jars or glasses. The jelly will be clesr, of a good and keep well, All Kinds of jellies can be made in this way, and it saves much labor in the time of 1 g the juice and the trouble of skimming. | ArrrLE WATER ~LJuite a variety of drinks can be made from the jelly of apples, orit can be converted into a dain drink. The following is from Drs. Fothergill and Wood's book of recipes: Cat up one pound of apples into quarters, without paring; bake them until soft, put them in a pitcher, with half a pound of brown sugar, pour two quarts of boiling water over them, Let it get cold; pulp the ap- ples, juice and all, through a cullender, and bottle for If the mixture is too much of a jelly, add more boiling water, On this foundation you can vary the drinks, A piece of bread, toasted very brown, and added to the apples before the boiling water is poured on, makes a nutritious drink, Or you can boil a half a pound of put in the ui tp COOL, il ALL 1 Min Hse, to the apple water, Dr. PARKES’ “ OATMEAL DRINK.” The proportions are a one-quarter pound of oatmeal to two or three quarts of water, according to the heat of the day and the work and thirst ; it should be well boiled, and then an tounce or one and a half ounces of {brown sugar added. If you find it | thicker than you like, add three quarts of water. Before drinking it shake up the oatmeal well through the liquid. In summer drink this cold ; in winter hot. You will find it not only quenches thirst, but will give you | more strength and endurance than any other drink. If you eannot boil it, { you can take a little oatmeal mixed with cold water and sugar, but this is I not 80 good ; always boil it if you ean, If at’ any time you have to make a | very long day, as in harvest, and can- not stop for meals, increase the oat- meal to one-half pound or even three. | quarter pound, and the water to three { quarts if yon are likely to be very | thirsty. If you cannot get oatmeal, | wheat flour will do, but not quite so { well. Those who tried this receipt | last year found that they oould get | through more work than when using | beer, and were stronger and healthier i at the end of the summer, The World's Letters, The international postal bureau at | Berne has issued its statistics for the | year 1R79, covering the twenty-five | principal countries belonging to the | postal union, During the year 8.200, { 000 i | | which 4,900,000,000 were letters and | postal cards. Of the fnormous total | 5,624,000,000 pieces are credited | Europe, 2,366,000,000 to America, 205,- | Ha and 12,000,000 to Africa, pieces of mail matter per 000,000. In the use of postal cards | Germany came first, with 123,000,000 { and England followed, with 114,000,000, eae sam————————— Conditions of Health. The conditions of health are few but imperative, 1. Pure air. 2. Pure and nutritious food. 3. Proper exercise, 4. Undisturbed sleep. 5. Regularity. 6. Temperance in all things, 7. Pleasant and active moral and social conditions, 8. Right bodily positions 9. Cleanliness, 10, Sunlight,—Herald of Health, | HKastern and Middle States, | he Harmony Mills, Cohoes, N. Y., the scene | of the recent great strike, | New York Anti-Monopoly party, held in New | York city, it was decided to hold a Btate con | vention at Barstouga on September 18, their annual meeting in Saratoga, N, Y,, re York, and listened to the reading of various papers on financial topios, all parts of the Union were in attendance, Wins Alexander and John Gilohrist and sitting-room of their residence fin West Charlton, N. Y., at 9 ». nu, the front door suddenly opened and five masked men pushed into the room with drawn revolvers, Two attacked Alexander, two John, and one Margaret. A terrifio struggle ensued, in | whieh Alexander grabbed a three -tined steel | fork and used it so effectively that one tine | broke off in the body of one of the burglars The burglars then knocked Alexander down | with the butts of their revolvers, handouffed | bound and gagged him. John suffered a shmilar fate, and Margaret was handeuffed | and gagged. After scouring the family the | robbers took the gag from Alexander's mouth, and with a pistol at his head asked him to disclose the hiding place of the key to the safe, [ he was again gagged, and, with John, was taken to the cellar and tied to a post | Margaret was left upsiaire. The robbers | then began to search for the key, which they | found between two feather beds. The safe | was soon rifled. It eontained §800 in money | and $150,000 in bonds and mortgages. The { robbers left with the booty, and Margaret | soon afterward slipped the handeuffs over | her wrists and liberated her brothers, who ax and hammer. | vention 225 | nine towns, were present, and a full ticket | headed by General Benjamin F. Butler for | governor was nominated. A platform was | adopted, in which the many concessions | are referred to with satisfaction. A check { upon the power of wealth and its unjust scen- | mulation is demanded. The payment {of the national debt as {as the revenues will allow, | the abolition of theNational banks as banks | of issue, are demanded. The resolutions af. | firm that eight bours should constitute a legal | day's work. A board of arbitration, to be | composed of an equal number of working. | men and employers, for the settlement of { labor troubles, is demanded. The system of | poniraet convict labor is opposed. The ar. | bitrary imprisonment of American eitizens in | British bastiles, and the misrepresentation at | the court of St James by a minister who condoot of the British government are deplored. sanctions the illegal Hexuesy Sresces, the eminent English | scientist, arrived in New York a few days since { from Europe. Marshfield, Mass., was destroyed by fire. The boarders, about 100 in number, eseaped, many of them with only their night clothe ing, Many were obliged to jump from the upper part i Busy shila, of the building to escape the Paesipext Asmara called a meeting of the New York the present cabinet at his residence in day, all the membs being tion of Seoretaries Teller other th the ¢xoe] wi and Howe, of the interior and postoffice depart- i’ ments. No business of Pa r strike of the A Prrmsouso four n from cents to three has ended in their defeat, who could obtain work at in. why Hie nd all the striker Hon have pone The struggle, i most ro. it dis. monies since own uf th n the four and a he » When the wen add down their pioks, hey have lost in wages 8250000, The oper. tors have lost thelr snmmer contracts and he market, lost footing in t HOPAny to some extent th and the raiin ils | avidly in fraiglits mado has very - Tax Maine Independent Republicans have nominated Warren F. Vinton for governor. iv a collision between two trains near Washington, N. J., a conductor and a boy were killed and two men wore seriously in- Jjured, inated for governor and Charles B. Lore for Congress, South and West, Tug lowa Democrats have nominated a full State ticket with T. O. Walker at the hoad for secretary of state. Arren long and at times great suffering from cancer of the tongue United States Sen- ator Benjamin Harvey Hill died at Atlanta, , aged fifty-nine yoars, His death had been expected, and upon its announcement the Atlanta church bells, fire bells and loco. motive engine bells in the various railroad yards began to toll, and continued tolling all day. Every business honse, public office and ia Nearly every residence on Peachtree street, { the street upon which Mr. Hill resided, was | hang in black, Many business houses were closed daring the day, and: the Atlanta city conneil, board of trade and the Atlanta bar resolutions of sorrow. The record of Mr, Hill's life briefly told isas follows: Born in Jasper county, Ga., on September 14, 1823, he was graduated from the University of Georgia in 1844, with high In 1845 ho was admitted to the bar passed appropriate honors, His entry into public life began as a member of the Georgin house of representatives in in 1850 and 1860, In 1855 he was the unsno- cessful “ American’ candidate for Congress, and ag the candidate for the same party was defeated for governor in 1857. presidential elector on the Fillmore ticket in reranining in the Union until he found that | secossion was inevitable, delegate to the Confederate provisional con. In 18065 he was arrested by the Federal an- At the close of the war he was elected to the forty-fourth Congress and was re-elected, | but resigned his seat before the expiration of | his second term to take a seat in the United States Senate, to which he was elected in 1877. His term would have expired next March. while returning home ina buggy from a | passing train and instantly killed. | Benaron Hrr's funeral at Atlanta was nu | merously attended, the United States Senate | represented and 20,000 people assembling on | the streets to view the procession, | Tux Utah congressional commissioners ar | rived at Salt Lake City. The Mormon church has engaged four law firms to defend the | county officials who are about to lose their yositions under the provisions of tle Ed. | munds bill, A tELeonaM from Governor Roberts, of Texas, was received at the treasury depart. ment stating the suffering condition of those | sick with yellow fever, and of 2,000 persons | in Brownsville, Tex., out of employment on | aceount of the quarantine, and requiring aid. | Acting Secretary French replied that the de- | quarantine at suitable stations if the gover- | nor desired it, but that the State of Texas | must support all persons not in hospital. A sraae near Globe, Arizona, was attacked by robbers, the messenger was killed and the | treasure-box, containing over $5,000, was | taken. | Cnarues Warp, a negro, thirty-five years old, who eriminally assaulted Dorah Eller- | ago, was executed at Ban Antonio, Texas, | The eriminal had lost a leg and when hanged | held a crutch in his hand. He spoke for justioe of his sentence. | of the county was discovered; that a quiet | immediate death, He KTR ny in existence since 1 and the conspirators to number about 400, \ Tun boiler of A. B. Perkins & Company's saw mill at Ballivan, Ind, exploded. George Inglewright, Irwin Bailey and George Morris were probably fatally injured. Breoias correspondents in the West report that an enormous wheat erop growing corn is favored by good weather, Ar West Las Animas, Col, 8 man named | Rymer, charged with murder, was taken from jail and hanged by a crowd. At Rock Creek, Ww hanged him to a box ear. From Washington, Mg. Lowa, the Ameriean consul at Alex- andria, was attacked by about forty natives; but seizing a clab he defended himself vig: orously until some soldiers arrived, dispersed the crowd and arrested the ringleaders. It appears that the natives had attempled to stop Mr. Long as he was driving. He be- came anpoyed and urged on his horse, in- flicting injuries on some of the party. Foreign Nows. Born houses of the British parliament have adjourned until October 24. A max named Joyoe and his entire family | were murdered in their own house, near Congin, county Galway, Ireland. The fam. ily consisted of Joyce, his wife, mother snd They were fired at and killed by a party of Two were { wounded. It is believed in the locality that i the Joyces gave information relative 10 the | murder of the bailiffs of Lord Ardiloun, whose bodies were found bound together in Lake Cong. A raponer while working on board a steamship at Liverpool that had arrived from New York found five Colorado beetles. The privy council ordered that they be killed and sant to London, Tux village of Lindeburden, West Prussia, has been burned, and 200 persons have been rendered homeless, Ix a fight with the Apaches in the Sahus- hops distriet, Mexico, the Mexicans lost forty-five men and the Indians left thirty- eight dead on the field. Eighteen women and twelve children were killed on the road between Sabuahupa and the Trinidad mine. daughter. men. boys also Leigh Smith, has arrived at Peterhead with boats to the straits through the ice. A pervraviox of Irish members of parlia. Man protection of evieled tenants to secure as. sisianoce, slightly wounded. His assailant has been ar. rested. brother to the man who attempted to assess. nate the Duke of Edinburgh at Sydney in ng ¥ March, Isoa" white horses that were 10 be used during the czar's coronation. Tex prisoners were identified by witnesses | Ireland, as having taken part in the murders, Apvices from Central tinues its ravages and { mated citizens are now falling victims. -— The Trouble in Egypt. General Sir Garnet Wolseley, the English | commander, with the authority of the khe. dive, has issued & proclamation to the people of Egypt, representing the sole object of the British to be to restore the authority of the khedive. It says that all peaceful inhabit ants will be kindly treated, the mosques will be respected and all supplies paid for, Gen. eral Wolseley held a conference with Ad. jisa} Seythdisr and all the generals. The London Daily Telegraph has the following dispatch from Alexandria: ** Major General Alison held a consultation to-day with Gen- eral Sir Garnet Wolseley, the result of which of the British troops pending the present de- liberations of the conference. General Wolseley Sodny inspected the military posi- tions at Ramleh and surveyed the country around from the tower of the water-works, A heavy mirage obscured the view beyond Arabi Pasha's first line of intrenchments.” An encounter between a British mounted ! patrol and a party of 500 Bedouins occurred pear Ramleh, Five of the latter were killed. A belief in the hopelessness of the struggle is said to be sp ing among the Egyptians. The Suez canal was occupied by the British troops, A dispatch from Port Said, the en- trance to the canal, says: and bave disarmed the natives, w po resistance, Several of war are anchored here, bering seven is coming in. Dee and Don have entered the Rear Admiral Hoskins, Port Said, reports as foll our arrangements yesterday for | Commander Edwards, with the squadron, during the night the canal, taking possession of dredges, barges, eto, and also occu | Kantara Before daplight Captain the x | fax owcupied Port 8 and Captain Fitzroy, of the Invineible, held Ismailia. All went | well and there was no difficulty. dred sail Jory marines are on gunboat Dee, Db 80 | Captain Fitzroy. One ship is ashore in the canal, but other vessels can The ships net Wolseley on board are in sight.” A later En from Port Said says that the troopship Serapis and some of the | boats entered the canal with troops. | ocoupying force numbers 600. Two hun. | dred and fifty-two Egyptian soldiers were | disarmed without resistance. The govern. ment of the khedive has been reinstated. ! The commandos of the Egyptian troops are | prisoners in the offices of th ; Be r, and the telegraph office is occupied by | the Brit In an engagement at Shaluf, a town on the canal about ten miles above Suez, the British killed and wounded about 100 of them and captured forty-five prisoners, The London Daily News has the followin, account from its correspondent at Suez: * } nessed the conclusion of a fight in which 2 of our men, including Highlanders, jackets and marines, brilliantly twice their number of the enemy, the afternoon, 5 o'clock in of nearly i firing able for coolness ! The Gatlings in the i boats worked with | and did much execution among the enemy who advanced to within a hundred yards of the bank of the canal. steadiness, the and top of diffienlt nature of the country, Lieutenant Lang, of the Highlanders, gal. ewmy on the right flank. fought bravely. killed.” tho authorities to implicitly obey General Wolseley, who he says, 1s authoriz order in Egypt. i ish in regard to the Suez canal. everything would be over in a few days, but present. fully satisfied with i of the Britis i i guns, HEALTH HINTS, | A sun-bath is a ready remedy for { rheumatism, Health should be the rule, and sick- ness the exception, in human life, No sick person ever gets well until Air is food. To have good health Those who are sick have added to wnken medicinally, To treat sprains give the affected | part rest and apply warm fermenta- | tons. If inflammation has set in put | on leeches and cooling applications, | which may be removed at intervals when necessary. When the inflamma An excellent medicine is sunshine, The world requires more of it, morally and physically. It is more soothing | than morphine, more potent than pop- | ples. It is good for liver complaint, | everything. Make go house so as to command the sun- light all day long. Low vitality may result from anx- ety, watching, over-work, intemper- ‘ance, vice or from a lack of uate nourishment, High health offers little lodging-place to the germs of disease, somewhat as the seeds of weeds find no room in a well-cultivated grass field. Low health opens a chance at almost every point. Few things, however, so let down the system as insufficient or improper food and want of sleep.— Dr. Foote's Health Monthly. Por aoaghar Colin sore dhiroat, NR aachitia, laryngitis consumption in its says nothing equals Dr. Bio's “Golden por Discovery.” Itis a great blood purifier and strength. restorer or tonie, and for liver t and costive condition of the bowels it has no equal. Bold by draggists, oil rock rg ¥ he West Bhore are rll near Milton, N. Y., a very iar quality, It is as poisonous ss the ivy and some other vines, the slightest scrateh bys piece leaving s troublesome, running sore. What's Saved in kingmen will economize ieroe’'s Medicines, His Pos gative Pellets” and “Golden Medics! Discoy. ery" cleanse the blood and system, thus pre- venting fevers and other serions diseases, and curing all serofulouns and other humors. Bold by druggists. = Prowrsess, milky whiteness of complex. fon, puffy eyelids and swollen skin, mark tically the arsenic enter, says a Clove. physician, a a Young, middle-aged or o'! wen suffering from nervous debility or Lindred affections, should address with two samp for large treatise, Wonrd's Dsressany Mesicar As socio, Bu lo, N. Y. Taexx are five man the United Btates, ga. M nti Pu, July 18, 1881. H. H. Waisxes & Co.: Sirs—Your Safe Kid- hey and Liver Oure bas en y cured me of malarial fever of two standing for which 1 conld never find any pelief oo Muss Kare Kino. A svrewon well at Palatka, Fla, discharges $0,000 gallons of water every twelve hours. Mexsuax’s Perroxmen seer roxio, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nu- tritious properties. It contains blood making, foroe-generating and life-sustaining proper- aluable for indi jon, dyspepsia, ner- prostration, and all forms of genera] de- conditions, whether L000 REWARD tor ence 5 * Merchant's por, NT, . 8 gi HN HODGE, ly = Fostetter's Wor Dr. ufscturers of quinine in PEASE! CASTLE! WARE GO MS: 97 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK. Books oth ARE OT COOD NEWS JeADIES Ea > " npg sending on $508. Bewsrs oaiag a - for : TEAS hat are being Fr erd wed feirtmentel lo besiito-aiow poiers. Deal Bovess and with Brot bends IY possitia, Ko buming. * ST, New i vous miso, in all enfeebled | the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, { overwork or acute disease, particularly if re | sulting from pulmonary complaints, | Hazard & Co.,prop'rs., NX, Bold by raggiete, ! The Frazer Axle Grease | Is the best in the market. It is the most eco- | nomical and cheapest, one box lasting as long as two of any other. One greasing will t received first premium at for ew THLE eRe & PANY to the | medals at various State fairs. Buy no other. : “Rough on Rats.” . i Clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, ants, | bedbugs, skunks, chipmunks, gophers. bc. | Druggists. O Bex gee an { Great improvements have recently been {| made in Carboline, a deodorized extract of | petroleam, the great natural hair renewer, | perfect as an exquisitely perfomed hair dress. | ing and restorer. Sold by all druggists. 25 Cents Will Bay { 4 Treatise upon the Horse his Diseases. | Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner | of horses, Postage stamps taken. Sent sostpaid by New York Newspaper Union, 150 Vorth Street, New York. | The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation, 8 | medical work for every man--young, mi | aged or old. 125 invaluable prescriptions. A A —————— | 25 Cents will Buy a Treatise upon the | Horse sand his Disssses, Book of 100 pages. Valushie { (0 every owner of horses, Postage stamps taken, Sent | postpaid by NEW YORK NEWSPAPER UNION, i 150 Worth street, New York. THE MARKETS Block for meet 2 mr In America-Ro ELI 68 Yon SLoN. Too P.O. Box 1987. MAKE HENS LA Y. An English Veturinary Sutgoon and Chemie, He says that Shevidan's : 4 Tutely pute and an will make heas lay Hike ‘s ons teasposutul safe | h of Beoid 300 Agents Janted.- 30 active, sober KEW YORK, Boel Cattle Good to Prime, Lw Calves—Com'n to Price Veals, BROOD. ..vversesnssrsrssansnes Lambs AENEAN EERE RRR RE RRA Hoge—1ive. .....coomennsness | Dressed. oity......c00s Flour Ex, State, good to fancy Western, good to choice Wheat-—-No. 2 Red. ....c000ess No. 1 a i to raved and De 118% 1194@ e116 ™ HERRERA RR RS Barley Two-rowed State. .... { Corn Ungraded Western Mixed Yellow Bouthern...... Oats White Btate., ... cesses Mixed Western, ..oeee Hav—DPrime Timothy...coeee Straw--No. 1, lve Hops—State, 1881, chalice... Pork-— Moss, new, for export... 21 = - - » - €E0660686660 ae oo - Bil] a Nan BUBERERESE br dw dad Rela on ned. corres diB0 tis i. i. Ne 8 @ 92 @ is @ 8 2 Refined .. case nnes BITY Lins anvsnnnnsane Western Im. Creamery Foclory .....osnsnnnee BKIME ..ovcasqsssnsm Westen... | Eggn—State and Penn... ou. Potatoes 1. L, bhi BUFFALO, EE EE 66é | Lambe Wester ..ooivananes | Sheep Wotord ..covivssnsnss Hogs, Good to Choice Yorkers, , Mour—C'y Gronnd N, Process, Whest—No. 1. Hard Dututha., Corn—No. 2 Mixed....coeesnes { Oats—No 2 Mix, Went, .... | Barley—Two-rowed State... gw Oe ON ue ee E2BEREENY CER 656666660 06608088 008 Ov (ILD Coins Wanted. —Send 3c. in stomps a fox cota Of pres. M. Thurbe:, £. Worcester, XX: ONE MILLION COPIES SOLD. EVERYBODY WANTS IT! EVERYBODY NEEDS IT! KNOW 578 THE SCIENCE OF LIF SELF- Pi ESERY AFTON, OF Is a medical treatise on Exhausted Vitality, Nervons | BOSTON, and Physical Debility, Premsture Decline ia Man: | Beef—Fxtra plate and family. .18 00 @20 is an indispensable treatise for svery man, | Hogs—Live., 81, ard, Hogs—City Drossed.. es ssaess THE SCIENCE or 1 | Pork—Extra Prime pet bbl... SERV A | Flour—Spring Wheat Patents, , Corn Huet Mixed, .... ssanss . ! Oats—Extra White. ....cvveuse | Ryo—S010 10ousuasinansianase {| Wool— Washed Comb & Delaine i Unwashed * - WATERTOWN (MASS) CATTLE MARKET, Beef Extra quali’y. cvseeese 170 @ 875 “Jive weight ..eenienss 0 6 6 @ Ti 74 6 i » - RN OR, SELF- *o EESUEUBE.8 ERLEEBEST 750 @. p or single 4 ither require ar wish to know but what - Tally iF li uv . THE SCIENCE OF LIFE: OR. SELF PRESERVATION, > Instructs those in health how to remain so, and the id how to become well, Contains ome b BaCIE vali nndred al twenty-five invaluable prescriptions for all forms o acute and chronic diseases, for each of which a» first class physician would charge from $ito $i. —Jeondes Lance! THE SCIENCE OF JAE OR. SELF. PRESERVATION, Contains 30 , fine steal engravings, is su bound in French muslin, embossed, full gi marvel of art and beauty, warrented to medical book in every sense than can be obtained else. where for douhle the price, or the money will be refund. ed in every instance, — Author, THE SCIENCE OF LIVE: PRESERVATION Is so much superior to all other treatises an medica subjects that comparison is absolutely hapossible,— Bosian Herald, i THE SCIENCE OF 11FE: OR, SELF. PRESERVATION, ’ 1s ment by mail, securely sealed, postpaid, on receipt of price, only $1.25 (new edition). Small iilust rated sauples, Ge. Send now, . The author can he consnlied on sl! ‘diseases requiring skill and experience. Address PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, or W, I, PARKER, M. D., 4 Bulfinch Street, Boston, Mass. 25 CENTS, Postpaid. A TREATISE ON THE TF O IR = B= v ‘AND HIS DISEASES. a poison. A Table with an Engraving of the Horse's Teeth at different ages, with rules for the UNITED STATES or CANADA, for 25 CENTS. CLUB RATES, 1ES..............10 00 One, Two and Three-Cent Stamps received. Address C i 5 5 eat dri ie) frie Horse WO Ch OT IDAR den ect ST antl Shel A valuable collection of Receipts and much other valuable inforu.ation. telling gh. i Go0-P AGE BOOK SENT POSTPAID to ANY ADDRESS mn FIVE COPIES. .....cievntrsennsraeansstl 00) TWENDY COPIES. ....connrenenssenees§3 00 TEN COPIES. .,....cots0etvennsesessss 1 70] ONE HUNDRED COP HORSE BOOK COMPANY, 154 WORTH STREET, NEW YORK, | Shee | Lam .ea | Hogs, Northern, d. w i PHILADELPHIA, {| Flour—Penn, Ex, Family, good 550 @ 550 Wheat—No. 2 Red... iivnveeee 114 @ 1 14 | Rye—8tate....covesssecanscer WN 97 {| Corn—-State Yellow, ...cceveee 60% | Oats Mixed 9 {| Butter—Creamery Extra Pa. .. 26 Fall Cream. 14 | Petroleum: ~Crude... cous sess 7 Refined... coves 7 THRESHERS frea THE AULTMAN FF TAVIAR ON EL OR. SELF. T™a Bont fe the chenpest. Tiling. irated prise lis Manssiald 01 Phonography, or Phonetic Shorthand, Catalogue of works, with Phonographic alphabet and Hustrations, for beginners, sent on application, Ad. fress Bann Pitman, Cincinnati, O. If yon want to learn Belegraphy ina few months, and IW certain of a