ARituim, "Sin: is dead; and the autamn winds weeping, Wail amid the leaves that Intely were green, 4nd tell how the year is with feeble steps creeping To join with the numberless years that have been, When the sunshine was bright, and the birds softly singing, We dreamed not of cold, or the sky's ing mien; We saw not how swiftly the glad hours were winging; We heard but sweel voices with happiness ringing. Summer is dead, and the year's hopes are dying, The hopes that were bright spring tide was young ; When we each came with eagerness forth to life's trying, With step that was firm and a heart that waa strong, And what oan we bring as the cause of lie $ failing? Was the daylight too dim and the darkness too long? Were the storm-waves too wild for the ship's sailing ; Was the helmsman unnerv'd by the winds and their wailing? Summer is dead; coming, And the leaves that are yellow, and britile, and dead Will revive once again when the flowers are blooming, And the boughs will wave green once more over our head. Will the hopes then revive that are now swifily waning? Will the life come again that is now nearly sped? Shall we hear once again the world’s mirth and complaining? Ab, that oatist bo left for death's certain ex. plaiging. 8 chill. when the ay, but springtide is A ‘sov's STORY. Men It all came of my having a railway key and being made to take music les SODSs, h Thompson gave me the key when he was "leaving last term. I don't know how he came by it, or what good it was toshim, as he never saw a train except when he went home for the the convenience of having such a thing when you are traveling, and hinting atthe mysterious penalties the company, might inflict if they caught you using it. He gave it to ma in exchange for a bit of Letty's hair (she's my sister, and Thompson was dre adfully in love with her) and a scrap of the bonnet | trimmings she wore in church. stole that, but had to ask her for the hair, and she brought out a whole bundle and said I might trade away the lot if I chose. “Hair wasn't worn much now.” Music was another thing altogether Herr Otto Finke was an old friend of my father’s, and lived at Luckboro, our market town, He took a fancy to me—bother me; and actually persuaded my father and mother to let me come over to Luck- boro’ every market day, with my father, for a lesson in German and music. I didn’t mind dining with him | first (uncommonly queer messes we had, and lots of jam with them )-—but the music was simply disgusting—(in | the holidays, tco!}—and the lessons generally ended by Finke getting to | the piano himself and warbling songs of his Vaterland by the hour. He did so once too often though—and now 1! have got to my story. We used to come and go between Mosslands and Luckboro’ by omnibus. There was a Mosslands station on the line between Lueckboro' but my father never went by it if he cold help it. When he did, though I | had the key with me I never dare use it, and began to think I had made a bad bargain with Thompson. One Tuesday, however, last winter, Finke got so carried aw ay by his own | sweet singing that he Kept on long after I ought to have started to meet | my father, and then got so remorseful | that 1 thought he was going to ery; | or perhaps want to keep me all night. | “ Look here,” I said, “it doesn’t mat- | ter. There's a train that gets in as | soon as the 'bus. I can eatch it if 1 ran—good-bye!” And off 1 scuflded, one arm in and one arm out of my | top-coat, for 1 was sure he'd object, or | want to see me off. I had money, and | there was a train which came up long | before I had seen all I wanted about the station. I made a dash at a carriage. It wasn’t locked, as I half hoped it might | be, and in I scrambled, but was ne arly blown out again by a volley of the | strongest language 1 ever did hear. | The train started and jerked me dow n| into a seat before I'd time to get my breath. I was not used to bad expres- | sions, and my fellow-traveler's remarks made my blood run cold. There were ladies in the carriage, but he didn’t seem to mind that, He had a red, scowling face, with heavy! red eyebrows and bloodshot eves. All the rest of him was a mass of railway | rugs and wraps. I had tumbled over his toes into the middle seat opposite, | where 1 sat scared and speechless, till I caught the eyes of the lady next to | him fixed on me. Ugh! such a bad old face! A tight, cruel mouth, with all sorts of coil-lines | about it, and wicked, sharp gray eyes | | that screwed into one like gimlets, 1 didn’t care much for Redface by this | time. I didn’t believe he would “twist | my neck and chuck me out of the | * window,” as he suggested; but I hated | her all over at once, from her sausage- | curls—grizzly-gray, two on each side — to her hooked claws of fingers that | were twitching away at ber Knitting- | pedis in and out of a-big gray stock- | “ ‘Hush, Sammy,” she said quite | sweetly; “the poor child means nd) harm, and he can easily get out at the | next station. Where are you going to, | love?” 1 could only gape in reply, and she | must have thought I was a softy, for | she twisted my ticket clean out of my | hand before I knew what she was 4 Mosslands. Very good. That's the next station. I'll see him safe out, Sammy, dear.” Sammy growled an inarticulate re- sponse from under his rugs. The timid passenger had neither spoken or stirred. She sat on the same gide as the other two, covered with a big plaid rug and a blue woolen veil tied over her head. 1 could make nothing out except that she seemed to beasleep in a very uncomfortable atti- tude. I sat in the middle, opposite the old woman. It was so disagreeable find- ing her sharp eyes on me while her needle elicked on just the same] that I thought I might as well pretend to go to sleep too. So I curled myself up and gave one or two nods, and then dropped my face on my arm so that she couldn't see it. Presently I heard the needles going slower and slower. I peeped, and saw the big bonnet #hd sausage curls giv- ing a lurch forward and then back- ward, once, twice; then a big snore; and then she was off too. I didn’t stir for a minute, for I saw ‘that « Sammy” was up to something. He leant forward and peered at her as if to make sure she was quite asleep; then cautiously groped in thesea’ be- side her and hauled up a little black He opened it softly, drew out a silver-topped flask, and closed it just asa jerk of the train roused the old lady. Sammy dived back in his cor- ner; and she sat bolt upright, rubbed res hard, felt suspiciously around found the bag, stowed it away Sn A A I AE HS OR 00 aa | behind her and resumed her knitting. Only for a few moments, though; with a weary groan she let stockings, needles and all down with a run, and dropped back sounder asleep than be- fore, Then from Sammy's corner came a gurgle —-soft and low.~ many times re peated—then all was quiet, Now was my time, 1 began to look about and think what 1 should do first. Whether 1 daved get up on the : seal and [00 how communi ation with the guard worked and what would happen if I pulled it. If train stopped 1 could make off RA) it was Sammy. He was half tipsy now and people wouldn't believe him, First of all I went to the window to look out a little, It was piteh dark outside, and all 1 could see was the re flection of the carriage and of the iady in the blue woolen veil. She was site ting up now and intently at me. What ¢ uncomfortable set they were, to bes I look round at Was very young and she's J ust but 80 thin and ¢ 1 felt very unhappy abou She fixed her big, bright eves on me, and put up her finger. “ Don't speak, she said, in a clear whisper looking out of the window, hear what 1 am saying ¥” I nodded, and wen and now then woman, “If they me dead woman, You Will you help Mey l nodded i hard looked at the guand, she shook - No, that's away at the Can you stop he m I didn't believe could have thrown a rug over Sam on him for a minute or t that old woman was too muel I felt that directly she woke what 1 was thinking of, me before I could minutes were flving Buyin 8 past us in » go he the 3 looking She you unger seventeen righte ned t { etly, and pretty looking that her, ight ‘Keep Can you t on, at she and looking , 3 the ald to London I am a my last chance, get are indeed, Hl with LN ne me ¥ 1 mn my "Wi Wa, far ma 1 AW NY, she'd the gloom ful eyes were fixed outside save me if at but " J ast one ¢ get them,” she panted. chance—aonly All at once 1 hat did one! * Loo} and held up m open this door, da can hold on outs stops, Rus n straig line, The i5 OI) on the top, Lo There y ou on the Do vou hear ® y iE down hed it nearer oa 2 Luckbore’ I was quite with whispering could. She caught as I could think it, : What with the cleverness, hatred of that woman and delight in and pity for the poor girl, 1 felt as brave as any fellow, however big, could be, and full of ideas as well. : “Give me that,” 1 said, pointing to her blue veil. “They won't see you're gone if I sit here with it tied over | head.’ n “Oh, no, no! “Not them! 3 road. hot out of breath as plain as 1 feeling of my own nasty old Spin r ing her, girl ny They'll kill you.” They can’t rriere me.” (I declare, 1 as if I could fight Sammy and a dozen old ladies just then.) “Quick, now or never.” I tied the veil over my head and lowered the window as | softly as possible, There was no time to lose, for the train was slackening | speed even then. I unlocked the door. She gave me one look that made me feel braver than ever, and inclined ry, both at once; and in a sec was out on step. The train stopped. 1 saw her skirt flutter in the stream of light that fell from our open carriage door across the down line of rails, and that was all—-and I was huddled down under the Lig plaid rug the woman, wide awake, { standing over me. “ Drat the boy. porter ; he's got side.” “ Call-un-yre-self, all in one word. She pul he door to and tramped back to her seat, taking no more notice han if 11 been a cushion of the carriage. “It don't matter if has broken his neck either,” she mut- tered, “perhaps we'd better make no fuss.” The train was off again. 1 ddred not jump up while she was in int LE It fel to ond she hi ol call the Wr ng Sammy, out at the " answered Sammy, Yad $ A008 | he chance at the next station. “Old my bones and body!” she “Oh, what a Sammy!” 3 vy ine No answer. “Sammy!” Si 3 was up again 1 think she hauled him up and him, for something fell wi ith a like a broken bottle, “ You idiot, and shook crash "she screamed. “When {you want all the brains you've got and more too! To play me this trick ? Serve you right if I get out and leave ¥ou at the next station—ugh!"” It sounded as if she were banging carriage. him. He got up and put his head out of the window for a short time, and then replied, slowly and impressively: “ Now, look here, old woman. None of your nonsense. When he's wanted, Samuel Nixon is all there. And no " he went on i solemnly, holding caref ully on to one word till he was sure of the next. As to this business, I ask you—is it mine or is it yours? Now, then? “ Yours, I should think; as it's your " {1 wish I'd left you to fight it out your- * “ Stop this,” said Sammy, who was savage. “I'll not have it put upon me. I didn't want to marry her; that was your doing, and I don’t want to make away with her; that's I'm not the one to swing for it.” “ Heaven forgive you, Sammy,’ the old woman, evidently scared. “Don't ye talk that way to your poor old mother—don't. If the poor creature was only in her right mind she'd be the first to say her * said horribly and left her.” Here she snifiled a little, gave a sort of derisive growl. “And as to her marrying you; it stood to reason that she must marry somebody, sometime, left all alone in the world with her good looks and her son? It was luck for you, Sammy, | though you turn against me now, There you were, just come home from | foreign parts, without a halfpenny in | one; and there was she without a re- lation or friend to interfere with you— stop her doing as she chose with her- self and her money. chance, Of course, my handsome lad as good a gentleman as the best of them.” Theold woman seemed to be talking on and on pur- child to keep it quiet. again in a milder tone. “Oh, yes. Say it'sall my fault, do ! pleases you.” “It was your fault, Sammy. might have lived happy and peaceable if you'd chosen. Haven't I been down on my bended knees to beg you to let | that shameful that the whole country | side was ringing with it. You know | if she'd as 1 ex. life to in the spoken up bes glad to do it it then, 1'd like 8 —— | you what, Mr. Samuel Nixon, been found de nd in her bed, pected every morning of my hear, there wasn't a servant place that wouldn't have fore the coroner--and Who'd have swung for to know ¥" The brute was mastered, | him shuffling his feet uneasi then, in a nu adil n =“ drink, nothing e ting, winni on me, old won thn, heard about iv: whi: and Ways 1'm sur in handsome to all vow Wararava be hard e I've given or HNN * Because you coukdn you fool, Now youl» have your poor old Your wife may talk as pleases now, Who'll l Ww got written dowd grand l« doctors that mad as mad can be her it mdon e've Aren't just for talk, or any one eld we taking her up to 1 good of her health, Wii 1H ha in COUrse place and tl you, '" 3 {0 KNOWS it jHease, his was awful! wr tool don where they I can't I was ill for tried to tell po but no even now t in rome \ MARY Weeks, mber 1.3 would ane OQ Hake | Life in a Montana Frontier Town. The of the mixed isfromE. V.S New Northwest,” ontana town li Ke as roughiv-ch doors of the group of Indian od g on the hours playing of cards of {ine are best Crowds of aroun loons, been two game breaks up. the eards alr Seen wd jhe sidewalk mysterious n invent % juaw 8 thro herse elf, secures the across her her moceasined feet toeing inward in the raditional Indian fashiot he wears a gown made of a scarlet bedquilt, with leg of stuff; but she has somehow managed to get a civilized the child. They all go off to their camp the hill nearby. Some blue-coated soldiers from the neighboring military post, membering the roll-call at sunset, swing themselves upon their and go galloping off, a little the for the bad whisky they drinking in the saloons. in blue woolen shirt canvas trousers, with a hat of as tonishing dimensions and a beard of year's growth, trots up the street on a mule, and, with droll oaths and shuf- fling talk, offers the animal for sale to the crowd of loungers on the hotel piazza. No one wants to buy, and, after provoking a deal of laughter the miner gives his ultimatum: “I'll hitch the critter to one of them piazzer posts, and if he don’t pull it down you may bave him.” This generous offer is declined by the landlord; and the miner rides off, declaring that he has not a solitary four-bit piece to pay for his supper, and is bound to sell the mule to somebody. Toward nightfall the whole male population seems to be in the street, Chinamen in the laun- gings s0me biue dress for on ree horses Worse been miner and brown have A by blowing water out of their mouths, find these indus- One and forth from the hy- drant, carrying water for the morning wash in old coal-oil cans hung to a stick balanced across his shoulders, More Indians now- “buck” and heavily clothes and buf- rope tied around jaw is the ordi- bridle of the Indians. shuffles back i laden with tent, falo robes. A a pony's lower nary halter and at the saddler’s shop. They do not go in, but stare through the windows for five minutes The saddler, knowing | the Indian way of dealing, pays no at- tention to them. After a while they all sit down on the ground in front of the shop. Perhaps a quarter of an hour passes before the saddler asks what they want. If he had noticed them at first they would have gone away without buying. : A Burning Lake. There is in Russia a fountain of | naphtha which has formed a lake four { miles long by over a mile wide, and {two feet deep. This sheet of inflam- mable oil recently took fire, including the central fount, and the effect was {most imposing. The quantity of { naphtha on fire was estimated at four and a half million cubic feet, and it | was feared that the flames would ex- plode the subterranean sources, KEven the earth saturated with oil was on fire, but no explosion occurred. The heat was intolerable except at a dis- tance of 1,000 yards from the edge of the fire, and the trees and buildings | within three miles of it were coated | with a thick layer of soot. *ASTRERN ANI Ar the New York Republican State eon the Sia ented as their candidate ex-Male vention in Sarato Iwarts through i Sharpe JY chairm Wri Lene for Madden, while through United hiate {Om pOrary in bBonator the anti Administration men Neuntor Warner Miller Pitta, S461 to Congre Matos nominated Moenator BE. Li Madden was cho Judge Folger, Gos Yadsworth en by a vole of ‘ornell, Fhe Marin and Gen MREON Were nominated for ge a of Walter A, Wood being tont he first ballot re pliad jn SK es fo Folger, 180 for Con 19 for Blarin and 6 Sa or received 257 rth IN Un iiriat HINA Zernor, with. Wi fram the con il, Gi fon Oi Senator ¢ Folger was made unanimous, snee of the Seventh 2 held Hal see He pgroal ANNO SOD As crowded wit! FF 4) of the flood, gave wa the were reporie re injured. at from £400,000 to §1,000,0xx), Doniso gf f the of t Nothe n Any tion company, s Taye thas Rotterdam, the Br New York Franklin sugar re ucture, has bout $1,000,000. Wilkes m of fire damp, lndelphia the nena brick str hoon nm mine, y an exploai jen and fatally injured a fall of Lona dav an a heavy nt y igslard mine y miner and seriously Twofarm hands at Centre died from the effect mushrooms, Tue lington Brothers & pended, with lial S700,000, Tay factory of Masgra. M #8, manufacturers Sqr Pa., a for 3 of eating toadstools fi are, f Wal of Wel youls of Boats wh ole alo dry or h MISE Co., 1, has su ilition aggregating about JIthy, Stevens ted and cocon has heen the » 150,000), f at Birmingham, Conn., destroyed by building, stock a on Carram Jose Ma of the , has re Calf ni rel the interest of the United 8 todd in the bali ved | EY fish com dines y be of mission. The {rip resul Very of a new food great value, Josnuva P. ored there the ard nt RB. minister, eights d Ly poverty. po Philadelph four ye col died ualor Enpy, a old, t of Ars othar in the mids Upon investigation it,was found thot he wed proper more than $100,000. He owned thirty -sev houses in different parts of the cit Camden, two farms in New other property. ly worth on nine in Jersey and SOUTH AND WEST. Ar Pensacola, Fla., yellow fever is reported ly on the increase, many new cascg Jan nominated for INOCTALS, #8 B. Guaxrt has been convention of the Anti. in Palinyra, | Mo, d delegates fepresenting more than "200 | | lodges attended, Ar the BStUonal ssociation held \ CHAYMAN 1a. for Jack Belleview, ool re I A TERRIBLE #iX a desl Freveny men lost their live ing dispatch from Howar v of John Keeley, it f, OWI ¢ was hanged at murder of Jealousy and another duel, in whiol | reported in the follow four nver, Col rd of i herd of * George S$,000 eattle, und §, 00K), wor His the ple i, the Ae Howard was to Kansas City hward to Den An to it wins finally + battle he Ao \oh party. mjured wore or A ye which | the greater greater part shihitis Poe ¢ oh 1 th WW ire, with all { §2 Baron Texren: 50 (Xx), cretary of ly Brit wand. Taz rebel} is still in progre Ir is offic Wolseley a to the recent services in Wire PDrave, part bagan iragging with ally peerage in near Esze cars cont furl Thirly and many others w A DISPATON the ght mon i ugh. fron ch lis vidence under traordinary istence of a wid i al y and m9. veral day # of K } Leron Galway, in Lyden. and insisted When the ted the con row I outside, y leave the i the meian.- South America Gane yar will ber that Soeym nowledgment of their ph. was or and 4 itched into the the pa { H i wore of rma ’ 1 with trea ly boen 1} romand in ordered not to sl Mun. Grapsrox n. declaration tions land, a i he pre ingly. SaavLnrox South Afriea. in rwan recently, 1 party of to the Fre French cou neh di his men were at C king of gland. Town the Zulus, ape that marauders at reporis near ol horsemen belonging The ven of killed and i. The brigands loat $inhabitar Nevada, one saloon to every co. v z olorado California. . Oregon. .e Now Jersey. “ New York......... Louisiana .......... Ohle...... vai ans Connectic ut, ‘ar Massachusetts Delaware . Pennsylvania Rhode Island......... Iinols. Maryland Wieconsin .......... | Minnesota | Missouri | Michigan.......... .. ita, 2067 208 81. 887 450 and Population, | Inhabitants Hampshire, one gnloon to every, Town Indiana Kentucky. Nebraska Tennessee, , Texas..... Arkansas iis Alabama, ........ Georgia | Florida. . .s ra Mississippl.......... Virginia. .... North Carolina.......7 Maine. s¥ndn | Ve rmont.. ats | West Virginia. ais Kansas, .............. South Carolina. ...... 81a i | | i | | - A I AU POS The Elections of 1882, Alabama elected Demoerntic State officers and legislature Augnat 7; will elect cougross men November 7 Arknns and legislature Beptember 4; men November 7 Californian will elect Btate officers, legisla ture and congressmen November 7. Colorado will elect Btate officers, legislature and CON rossman November 7, Connectiont will elect State officers, id congressmen November 7. logislnture Lo —— —— will sleet son Ves login lature ma AS and oom Fl ida will ele man Ne 1 Georgian will elect Bt ber 4; cong will « ove m OY, ber § sire will elect sressmnn Novem t legislature and congross weiner J ito officers sen NN and legis einber 7 rinendent and congressmen lature Oot Hlinois instruction, le leet trea ginlniure ter, supe af November Indiana will Big ho elect minor Blate officers, rene judges, legislature and congressmen wember 7. pled a June 27; will rolibit elett minoy men November 7 elect Mate n Ne lows adi WY nm y Offi cera CONEToss Kansas will officers, legislature | wember 7 Den is Angus t 7 nh War eleot congressmen Novem noeratio x 1 OENLLICD Usians will ted Repub! ind eongressinen lana ea November 7 wine elee loan governor, legis Beplember 11. Plate will ¢ Judges and oon whuselts will elect bt Hoers, 1 and oon " Ler 1 gia ff 1 Loeors, legisla inture and con ppd will elect congressmen Novem will aleot minor and an amendment con » Nove Blate offices, Mig reasn and vols g the bate ol, aera governor, rail ature and con legislature and eon , Hentenant of ay governor f the ¢ en, and Jee i Of BAG 1 assOCiate Bi BU Glacler Accldents in Switzerland, Glacier accidents generally from falls into rifts hidden under a layer of snow, In the summer of 1629, | the day being Tuesday, as three men of Lenk and anothe r——were crossing the Wild: | horngletcher on thelr way home, lat. | ter had the il-luek to full into a con coded crevasse, hurt that he could not call out, he was FOPOS, Trachsel while name the Mo it was agreed that { should remain hy the crevasse, {the third man, whose {record has not reserved, went to { the nearest habitation for ropes and help. When he returned Trachsel | had disap peared, and the rift into which Blatter had fallen could not be found, The third man and the men { he had brought with him after search. | Ing al id night gave up Blatter for lost, and went away without the least hope that But, to the surprise and almost con. his neighbors, he turned { uptwo days later at his own house, not tnuch the worse, seemingly, for his ad- | venture, hi he escaped is not men. ti , probably by running down one water which run under acier, lo d avli y » Trachsel, who had left Lis post | Bilpy b walling i mr | they should see him again, | unspeakable | sternation of | Lioned | of the | every g : Jit : | on the : Wolly MITBOS, gl . Hilne h tried at Lenk Being 1 he was sen- nment and signified ask. of God and man the had creva of Tor deserting ol of * | tenead to three days’ | to do the Herdfall, | ing pardon publicly i knees for Dende Wis companion, i convict Haithlessness™ priso vhiel W i | on sin he unitted uly, 1 Lia "se in i, & similar accident be fell Chri n Bohr hs of Grindelwald As rossi the upper Grindelwald pe ier towand the Mort nberg a snow avalanche tl him into a crevasse feet deep, Fhough his arm : wen and his wrist dislocated in | the fall, he managed to work his way der the glacier to the stream at its and after a desperate struggle of he succeeded in escapin Ww W re 3 ase, Wao o days g FOR THE LADIES, Wows and Notes for Women. at Geneva, at ved that, nitlad as mem. hieen, neat is 8 Ix oil to 86 LIAS uakes §3 a mal chure oh Nhe Ons, teacher to nes ntiy deceased hi ¥ ¥y 5 fia i’ an asviums of that in Wis- suffrage has been oppositic n od women advocate the superior i has devised WeeeR Of scientific great 1 this direction. Normal manitestad sem novel of ad- in most that a anxious to who re { the heroine (8) every 1 who saw this ight the novel to Li led the imaginary German he line inserted stating Hit da notice wu ans, ole CONUS: riageaige wom ane uncement ix S00 much she resemt referred to, seauty Fashion Notes, lingotes and polonaises in various are very fashic high with gold braid al present, blue are fre- » hat or bonnet. Ivory white trimmings are a { of small quently combined in one let old Xe go woolen overdr aney Two shades op wi huss jackets, embroidered are worn in Paris, ar skirts with plain silk and ill be much worn, Bi ides will wear undressed kid gloves buttonless wrists this sea- (SSN WwW h loose A golden brown shade called avan- furine combines beautifully with ficelle gray. Iinils, we fraises for the and very hand- and high ruches neck full, sone, Long silk mousquetaire gloves take precedence of all others at the mo- ment. Gold soutache on a few red and tumes, The broader the rep of silk or woolen the more fashionable is the embroidery appears blue all-wool cos- goods fabric. Deep chicorees or ruches around the bottom of skirts are the fancy of the moment, Even hats, adorned with bead, broideries, New and singular shades of color appear from day to day among the new fall goods. The favorite dress of the English woman this fall is of rifle green cloth, tailor made, Black and gloves and shoes are tinsel and silk em- white wool, known as popular fabric for braided costumes, Natury schichte des Schweizer tells of a very unpleasant ex- noe in the early part of the | last century befell a chamois-hunter of the name of Kaspar Stoerl. As Stoeri i two were in hot after chan the Limmer. glacier, he disappeared as denly as if he had been swallowed up an earthquake, He had fallen into hidden His companion ed fearfully the down 1 Stoeri had vanished, and think. all was over with him, com- s soul to God. But when they faintly crying for help, that he was ¢ lingingtoa of the crevasse, they ran to a 's hut hard by him in the 4 ht pe mail Iy find there found only an old coun- to he of any was in fearful his body in freezing gla- id holding on desperately L tothe ley W alls of vd given himself up for and was saying, as he thought, vhich other hunters i chase is On | aap stidd- crevasse, into hole CE VO rotten use, Wir NStoeri his hen his comrades lowered i rope, which they had with their belts and part of He grasped it jovially hands, his i ulled and Stoeri was just about to Heaven for his happy one of the belts gave way, i The second misfor Hl he ea ne down wth him, of his arms he held on with litting their belts le the ext mporized to reach him arm rested on the dared not remove it 1g further into the irowned in the water, Grd raver, w contrived friends escape, HOR and s jine and Was ] SOC As one id as hi 1 fadiil ag revasse was nearly full, ope round his body ‘Which caused This time the was safely landed glacier, As his companions | drew him out of the hole he fell into | dead faint, and it was a long time be- fore he came round and could be re. movid to his home, But not every one who falls into a crevasse is equi ally forty inate. In 1821 M. Mouron, a clergyman from Vevey, while crossing the Lower Grindelwald | placier, went down a rift seven hun- | dred feet deep. When his guide {to whom he ought to have been attached by a rope) reported the accident at Grindelwald, a suspicion arose that the poor had been robbed and mar | dere and his body thrown into the to conceal the crime. In ascertain the truth, another was tied to a rope and lowered othe abyss, After several attempts, though he suffered much wn cold and bad alr, succeeded in fast ning the corpse to his own body, | and so carried it to the surface. M. | Mouron’s watch and purse being found intact in his pockets, the guide was freed from the suspi which rested upon him, and his charm ter for hon- esty, if not for efficiency, redeemed, In the year 18320 three guides were swept into a crevasse at the head of the Grand Plateau at the foot of the final slop Mount Blane, More than forty years after they had been buried in their iey tomb the remains of these unfortunate men yeers found near the end of the Glacier des Bossins, whither they had drifted with the moving ice below the rift in which they belt held, on ANUS. and Stoeri terrible the wi man wd, fevyinsse 10 tide man, susncion of ( miles tl were engulfed, © —————————— Sava the Brooklyn Eagle Mr. R. C. Moore of ¥ essre, Vernam & Co 34 New street, New York, was almost instantly relieved by St Jacobs Oil of severe pain following an attacl of pleurisy., The remedy acted like magic eo ——————————— ‘here are forty-three furnaces, roll ing mills, steel mills, forges and bloom. in emploving 4,095 hands and § 3. 9x1.7 i 176 ¢ apit: al. i ————— A533 The art connoisseur and exhibitor, Prof Cromwell, was cured of rheumatism by St Jacobs Oil «Norfolk Virginian, aries Tennesse 0 Nine out of ten Egyptians have, a writer savs, diseased account of the fine particles of sand driven into them by hot south winds. CVes on ———— A Mumiari Ua i» ona who does his work "quickly and well T h is in what Dr. RK. V. Pierce's “Golden Medi. | Discovery” does as » blood purifier and strongthuner. It arouses the torpid liver, purifies the blood, and is the best remedy for consump tion, which is scrofulous disease of the lungs = Tue suffering for the lack of employment in Germany is very great, and the natural in- on { the population 18 over half a wmil- Hon avery year, ie Neaniiful Women are made pallid and unattractive by fune- tional irregularities, which Dr. Pierce's “Favorite Prescription” will infallibly oure. Thousands of testimonials, By druggists. Frrry vessels, most of them hailing from Key West, are gathering sponges along the lorida const, avagan ia a orime; on) Mad es oannot afford to do without Dr, Pierce's “Favorite Presoription," wh ich, by preserving and restorin ealth, preserves and restores that beauty which de- pe ds 4 on health. TWENTY years ago there were 1,500 boats on the Lehigh canal, and now there are not OH, cop-1iven or, from “selected livers, sho e, by Caswell, Hazard & Co., Y. Absolutely pure and sweet, Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others, Physicinne declare it superior to ail ether oils, Cuarren manny, face, pimples and rough skin eared by using Juniper Tar Soap, made | by Caswell, Haz ard | & Co, New York. Mother Shipton’ gs prophecy is about 400 years old. Every prophecy has been fulfilled except tha end of the world. Buy your Carboline, a deodorized extract of petroleum, the great hal restorer, before the world comes to an end. Tone ou the se rofessional Jute: Cry, oh .p eds le, 1881. H. H. Wanxes & Co.: Sirs—1 have been cured of Bright's Disense by using the reme- dy known as Warner’ Bafe Kidoey and va: Cure. __ Rurus W. Puscock, M. D, Nowra Canora has 178 varieties of min. orals, twenty-five more than any other Btate enn show up, There are 112 varieties of woods, and again it is in the lead, 25 Con wil Bay a Treatise upon fie Horse and his Diseases. Book of 100 pages, Valuable to every owner of horses, Postage stamps taken. Bent wostpaid by New York Newspaper Union, 150 North Street, New York. Cuttark of the Bindder, Srmamo irritation, inflammation and all chupaiba.” §1, Dmggnsts. Bend for pam. phiet to KE. B, Winaa, Jersey City, N. J, aged or old. 125 invaluable prescriptions, ———————————— RESCUED FROM DEATH. Willisms J, Coughlin, of Somerville, Mass,, says: iE Lowes, followed by a severe cough. 1 lost my said 1 had a hol ! At * Yeaveup LIAM gotab feel } { Yoars basi fn my lung as big as a half dollar, hope HALL'S BALSAM tiie, FOR THE LUNGHE 1 when to De : { Beast. For use externally or internally. 3 | I L EN AIN FOOD! At <hrally nod oe aie Korvous Delnlity ve Bad by dm gn Su , y on receipt of 31. LEN, 1 i hy S10 Vips Fa venus, | 25 Cents will Buy un Treatise | Horse snd lis Disssses. Book of 100 pages, | io every owner of horses, Postage stasnps taken. Nept | postpaid by NEW YORK NEWSPAPER UNION, i150 Werth steest, New York. THE MARKETS, HEW YORE. Bees catlie, good to prime, | Ww Calves, com'n 10 prime veals | Bhoep eo | Lambs i Hogs- 10 EB RE! "5 — - - EIEN & Live. Dressed, eity. oar Ex. SL, good to faney 4 West, good to choice 5 0 Rea, 2 Red, . No. 1 White. pair State Two-rowed Blate { ngrrad. West ow Bout 4 w hite ia - y d £4 i Ww heat Hah RNR ER bow we OF wg ot Rye i Barley- 3 | Corn -— ah Oates | Hay~ toch. Ti | Btraw- Ne. 1, Bye Hops—8tate, 1851, choles | | Pork—Mess, new, for export. 21 | Lard City Bleam I Rua fined . 2 9 | Petroler im rude Refined Butter—State Creamery Dairy West. Im. Cre apary, Factory Chesse—State Factory oiins Western Fegs—8State and Penn Polatoes—1. L, bbl BUFFALO, Dteers—Good to Choice - Western - Western. Good fo choice Yorks, Flour—C'y ground n. process, Wh = 1, Hard Dul uth 2” Miyed Ww estern. arie a rowed Btate BGETOXN. Beef — Ex, plate and family Hogs- ~Live City Dressed. Flour—8p Prime, pe ness lan — o> BRIBEELEE BF 17 50 @18 3 «8 @ ie 1 @2 ® (@ 8 7 bbl. 21 . Spring Wh fat E atents 7 —High Mixed Oat Extra White Rye—~Btate Wool-Wsali'd e Be of RIE ER HLE ARAN Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbage, Backache, Sereness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth sguals Sv. Jacoms On a 8 safe, sure, sim sd cheap Extersal Remedy A trial entails but the somparstively Lilfllug outlay of 30 Cents, and every one su with pein can have cheap and positive proof of ite claims, 18 Directions in Kleven lan SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALLES IN MEDICINE. A.VOGELER & CO. Baltimore, Md, » O. “RY NU—38 “An oly Daughter ‘Cured of Consumption. When death was hourly expected, all remedies havi { sud Dr. H. James was SE with t beth of Calentta, he sccidontally made a hich eared his only child of C3 i» now in this country, an He has proved tothe world that Ce can be positively and permanent tor new gives this Hecipe free, only cent stam pe 10 pay expenses, le Derb Als sures 3 the Stomach, and will break w 8 tw four hours, ddress Crad 3 Race Sta eet, Phi TER: naming this paper. OSTER TETTE That terrible soourge its congener, bilious tic air and water, are both ersdicated and of Hestetter's Stom- sch Bitters, a purely and more extensively orders, as wall as for many others, than any madivipe of the age, kietes and Dealers gon. A 2a Fath wrk py hand lo, Av Bo BY CopviN 4 to. 5 and 8 Cords anda Nage Syracuse, N.Y. heearth. Positive hy Atta. 6 Ga. » us’ Pargative Pills make Now nia will completely change the blood in Ry ah tire system in three months, Any person who will take one pill each night from 1 ta 12 weeks may be restored to sound health if al a thi ing be Jossible. | Sold every. where or sent by mail or eight letter stam I. 8. JOHNSON & 0. Boston, Brass. fore merly Bangor, Me. WHY WASTE MONEY! Young man or old. If you wast a Luzuriant moustache, Moning TS: whiskers or a heavy growth of hair on ba beads or to THICKEN, STRENGTHEN Sad GO Le don’t be b i Em bd EE tht ese bas LN ER YET FAILED, ad 0! ONLY SIX CENTS to 2 GUNIA. = Baa 1940, 440, Boston, Maa. | Beware of intaciena. __ 4h Sn HER TN The Seal Hd cheapest. lun T THRE ob Ba Dini free. TILE AULTAMAN & TAYLOR CO. Mansfield. O 7) MAKE A FORTUNE, only 10¢ HOW 7 THU RBER, Box 41, ents buys 3 Tay el Ad. | i. oh Cook Book, Gat Tanto * rut ox ruit Evapo ovidence, Write to Sieiiride & € & i Agents w wanted in every oo county i AND i Rds] so we or Ge woe KIDNEY-WORT HAS BEEN PROVED | DISEASES of the LIVER. | is the SARGLING OTL is the sire, medium 50 EC Sr a i Py Dy CY and desler For Family oa. The Gargling Ofl Linimen WALPPER, for fr = is To put up the skin, botties enly, and does Bot sisin Price 2 oeats. The Gasgling Oil Almumols for 1883 Ask the the Hontest Druggist. your places do not keep My ae $ Uarviing Ol ou tor sale, insist their or where i will corked, and shake it before using. Yellow wrapper for animal and white fur bumas fesh, = Special Notice, The Merchant's G Oil has 1een in use us a liniment for ball a century. All we pd is a fair trial, but be sure a he Gargling O Ofl and Merchant's Worm ale by all drumeists aid Jes] ors in or throughout the w . Manufsetured at {ne To by Her. chants Careling Oil Compan “HAINES” PIANOS THE GREAT. FORLD. WARIMON! LABLACHE! RAVELLI! EST ARTISTS IN THE GERSTER! KELLOGG! GALLASS!H! ABBOTT! EARIE ROZE PEASE! CASTLE! WAREROO 1% KEW Piano Ho LDF CHARGE. MASC INGHAM creed al 2 EV NOR TAs i dr Alls: no Lo Suna sguad o1 4 — « Aa APE Su je 199; BY octaves; wu coma pay and power, wil bast Susy, sacred end secular mask ¥ED o 471 $i = 7 =i ITN rhe n 2 # Te fre A A NEW ILLTSTRATED CATALOGLE § Tis Compsny hive Cou then panaisctore of Craig JURAND Pi Anos, Jo Fading wddiing od 4 beauty Vid Be Faure HIWG Tar ar x STH ATED CIR. ts iis SN ore AN AS er st 4 +178, 140 Wubash Ave Avent “hie Fagen FRAZER LE GREASE mg . warld. dt th genuine. Every - Ane ew zeta. SOLD EYER i marked BS CUOOD NEWS IA IOXINE Get up Clubs for sm CHB Bray ED Ras S54 meets & esutiig PIANO © 0. ub 3 A) n Fre wpsrlalion. OS ot Chea bon ntl a Tea Set gives vony te (Bn party sen ong a Chub ter £32.08 Beware of Ure soqulind Thal are being afverline dur tire Salige eel and detrimental to health alow poisen, Dorion y vith relichie Beovees and with Bret bande I ponsiile, No hroiaws, reat American Tea Co, I mporters, BA VENLY $7, New Yorke horse power with Engine built, pot fitted with an talogoe id," B. W, Pavysx ¥) Sows, Bo Box $6, Co OHRES WRERE ALL ELST FALLS, BE » 4 br druggists. MER = you wail to learn telegrs oy ina MEK... months and be cortsin of a situa READ! KNOW THYSELF. Is a medical treatise on Exhausted its, Hota jan ; is sn indispensable treatise for every iu young, middle-aged or old. THE SCIENCE OF IL Oo SELF. PRESERYVA 10N, Be rison the most extraordinary on Physiology over published. is nothing Ee that the trad or o Sif can either require BHA | re to taut bub what 3s ful explained, — Toronto SCIENG ® VATION. OR, SELF. THE MIE Lode and the in valid how to become well. Contains one hundred twenty-five invaluable prescriptions for all forms o- ronic diseases, for each of which » first would charge from 83 to $10. —Zondon aoute and eh Class ™HE SCIENCE F - Fite VATON, OR. SELF Contains Ia superbly bound ia Py a fu t. Da medical an Kou every uthor, THE NCE OF oO SELF. EN RESERVATION, Boston Herald, THE SCIENCE Lan steel engravi bound, in uo Io of Eig ny . sense than can De toi else where for double the Ee or the money will be refund. Is 80 auch superior to BE on medica PRES TRVA EN, OR. SELF. price, only 81.35 (new edition). Small illustrated samples, Ge. Send now, The suthor can be consulted on all diseases requiring gkill and experience, Address or W. Hi, PARKER, M.D. 4 Bulfinch Street, .. Beston, Mass. a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers