LIFE OF I'ERIL. Thrllllna Ailvrnlnrra efii Vrlprnn Dlver t'orpeee, Hhnrki, nnd Oihrr IXobmnrine llnrrom-A Knb With lenth. Tho assistant superintendent at the police headquarters in Toledo, Ohio, is "Old Jack'' Campbell now nearly aixfy-flvo years of age, and who has been, and still proposes to be, a sub marine diver. To a reporter he has related some of his thrilling adventures. He gave a grnphio description of the ap caiance of the first sunken steamboat into which he ever went. It was about two miles from shore that the vessel had gone down. He went into her for the purpose of recovering her cargo. The bodies were of no consequenoe, he stated. It is a singular fact," snid he in substauce, "that the corpses of women in a sunken vessel always lie face upward, while men are invariably face downward. The cnbin of the vessel presented a horrid appearance. The bloated bodies all laid up next the ceil ing. Some were clasped in each other's armn. One mother had in her arms her baby. A lniBband and wife were clasped in each other's embrace so firmly that they could not pull them apart I dove once in Mobile bay, where I put over three thousand chains under an iron-clad. The greatest annoyance that we had there was sharks. They didn't hardly dare tackle us because with our armor we looked more like soare-crows than anything else. They would come Bailing along and gradually swim np toward us with their great big mouths wide open, but when withiu a few feet of us thoy would stop and lay there flappin' their fins and looking, it seemed to me like the very evil one himself. Finally we devised a way to scare them off that never failed to frighten them so that they would stay away an hour or longer before they dare to come back. The armor that we wear is air-tight, you know. Our jacket sleeves were fastened around our wrists with an elastio, so that the air could not escape. By run ning my finger under the sleeve of my jacket I could let the air out, aud as it rushed into the water it would make a sort of hissing noise and a volume of bubbles shoot up. So, whenever those sharks would come prowling around me I would hold out my arm toward them aud, putting my finger under the elastic of my jacket-sleeve, I would let a lot of air out and send a stream of bubbles into the shark's face, with a hissing noise like steam from a gauge-cock. The way that those sharks would go scooting off was funny to behold. " I have had several narrow escapes from drowning," said Jack, as he re lighted his ancient and much-tanned pipe, "but about the closest call was when I was workiu' in the waterworks crib in Cleveland. You see, much de pends on having a good signal-tender. I can tell when some one else besides the regular signal man steps up and tokes hold of the line. So can any good diver for that matter. There was the diver that worked for the Lake Shore Railroad Company when they were building the abutments of their new bridge here across the Maumee. He, by the way, was paid $40 a day for 100 days. He was working one day, shortly after he had begun on the job, and I went down to see him. The signal-tender asked me if I would take hold of the line. I did so, and gave it three or four little shakes that a good diver always under stands. He immediately answered back, and let me understand that he knew I was there. But I waygoing to toll you nbout that narrow escape. I had a signal-tender who didn't hardly under stand his business. The mouth of the crib had become stopped up with dirt, and I was clearing it out. I had crawled through the entrance, a sort of a door, and was outside of the crib. My life line and hose chafed against the top of the door, and all at once when I went to turn around, I pulled my helmet off. Thero 1 was out in the water, where in a short time I knew I would drown. I pulled twice on the life-line for the signal-tender to pull me up, but he didn't do it. I felt that I was filling up with water fast, and I pulled again. But still he did not understand. Of course all my armor had filled with water, and as there was no air in it, I was held down by tons' weight. Sud denly George, who I was telling you about, and who had just come down to see me, stepped up and took hold of the life-lino, shook it and asked me whnt 1 wanted. I had just strength enough left to give two hard pulls, which meant Pull mo up quick.' George, I after ward heard them tell, yelled to the signal man aud told him : ' Help mo to pull in that life-line, aud pull for all you're worth, for Jack is drowning.' They hauled me up out of there mighty quick, now I tell you, and it took lots of strength to do it, because my armor was full of water. When they got me to the surface I was clear gone, and it was more than an hour before I came to enough to speak. " The deepest water that I was in was 168 feet. When one is down so low it is hard work to get air. I have had the air-pump manned by six men working with all their might, and still I've been obliged to keep pulling on the life-line and calling for more air." Washington's Prediction. In the Maroh number of Harper's jew monthly Magazine a. riuuips rints a paper on " Some Unpublished letters of Washington," and among the letters there for the first time printed is one written by Washington himself, but for and in the name of his wife. In it he playfully speculates upon the time of his own death, and curiously enough guesses within sixteen days of the actual date, although the lettei was written in the year 1797. We copy the passage : " I am now, by desire of the general to add a few words on his behalf ; which he desires may be expressed in the terms following, that is to say, that despairing of hearing what may be said of him, if he really shall go off in an apoplectic, or any other fit, (for he thinks all fits that issue in death are worse than a love fit, a fit of laughter, and many other kinds which he oould name) he is glad to hear beforehand what will be said of him on that occasion ; conceiving that nothing extra : will happen between this and then to make a change in his character for better, or for worse and besides, as he has enter- ed into an engagement with Mr. Morris, and several other gentlemen, not' to quit the theater of this world before the year 1800, it may be relied upon that no breach of contract shall be laid to him on that account, unless dire necessity should bring it about, maugre all his exertions to the contrary. In that case, he shall hope they would do by him as he would by them excuse it. At present there seems to be no danger of Lis giving them the slip, as neither his health, nor spirits, were ever in ' greater flow, notwithstanding, he adds, he is descending, & has almost reached, the bottom of the hill ; or in other words, the shades below." COXDEMSED BI TnEIlt COMRADES. A Reminiscence of Anrirnonrlllr, Tald by a Prisoner. An old survivor of Andersonville in a talk with a representative of the Even ing Post says : There was an episode during my life at Andersonville that standi out in my memory above all oth ers. While Andersonville developed ex amples of as noble heroism and seli sacrillce as the world probably ever witnessed, it served also to bring out upon tho port of some of the inmates many of the most abhorrent and despic able traits of human nature. The great est luxury that could be enjoved by a prisoner was a warm blanket Yet men were found among the prisoners base enough to rob their fellows of these oom forts. A gang of robbers was organized who went around the camp at night and tore blanket nud clothes off from sick and dying men, kicking and beat ing those who made any feeble attempt at resistance. Money was also taken from the prisoners, or anything of value that could be found upon them. In a little while tho robberies became so frequent as to be the worst of our trou bles. A perfect reign of terror existed, and we did not know what to do. Finally, after consultation, we asked permission of Wirtz to investigate and see who were the perpetrators of these outrages, and punish them. Wirtz granted it, and I thank him far it to this day. We picked out six men for trial before a tribunal of our own selec tion. It snt outside of the stookade under a confederate guard. A judge, jury, prosecuting attorney and clerk were appointed, together with a counsel for the defence. Evidence was heard from many of the prisoners, and the accused were all identified as among the parties guilty of the robberies. A ver dict of guilty was found, and they were sentenced to be hung, and tho entire proceedings approved by Wirtz, who ordered the lumber to be furnished us for a scaffold. We built one sufficient for our purpose in a few hours. It con sisted simply of a cross-beam, supported by two uprights. A platform was con structed about three feet from the ground, the first plonk, laid at right angles with the uprights and parallel with the cross beams directly above it, being so adjusted that it could be with drawn from its position at a moment's notice. The six condemned men were escorted to this scaffold by a guard of about three hundred prisoners, armed with sticks and clubs. They were placed on this plank. In lieu of the customary black cap we encased their heads iu flour sacks. Notwithstanding this absence of cer emony the scene was an impressive one. The gollows stood near the top of the hill, and nearly all the thirty-eight thou sand prisoners were gathered to witness the execution. They maintained per fect silence, refraining from any insults to the condemned, but their hollow eyes, pale, pinched faces, their savage expres sion of countenance, were a sufficient indication that not one should escape. The ropes were carefully adjusted, with the knot in each case under the left ear, and, by a signal, the board withdrawn from beneath them. There was a drop of two feet, and the bodies swung about a foot from the ground all but one. The sixth man, a former sailor in the navy, was perceived to have fallen to the ground. The rope had broken. In an instant he wa3 on his feet. He started to run down the hill. The crowd, comprehending his intention to escape, followed with a wild yell in pursuit. It was a flight for life. He had the start by a few seconds and he made the most of it. I never saw a man run as he did. He went down to the morass with nearly thirty-eight thousand men close upon his heels. Not finding him there we looked up and saw him running up the side of the other hill. We followed. He made for one of the huts or sheds, but as soon as he heard us coming got out and again started on the run. Widen ing the distance between us he again sought refuge in a dugout, and a sec ond time had to abandon it as we came up. It was twenty minutes before we had him fast. He begged piteously for his life, but we had no mercy. We had to drag him down the hill through the sand, thence through the swamp, and up the other hill to the scaffold. He was held by three men on the platform while the rope was adjusted the second time, after we had spliced the rope. He trembled in every limb. At the given moment the men pushed him from the scaffold, and he swung clear from the ground two feet. The robberies never occurred again. St.ZouiaEveningPost. Highland Revenge. On the shores of Mull, one of the western islands of Scotland, a crag over hanging the sea is pointed out as the scene of a tradition which would form an excellent subject for either a picture or a poem. Some centuries ago, the chief of the district, Maclean of Lochbuy, had a great hunting excur sion. To grace the festivity, his lady attended, with her only child, an infant then in the nurse's arms. The deer, driven by the hounds and hemmed in by surrounding recks, fled to a narrow pass, the only outlet they could find. Here the chief had placed one of his men to guard the deer from passing, but the animals rushed with such impetuosi ty that the poor forester could not with stand them. In the rage of the moment Maclean threatened the man with in stant death, but this punishment was commuted to a flogging in the face of his clan, which in those feudal times was considered a degrading punishment, fit only for the lowest of menials and the worst of crimes. The clansman burned with anger and a fierce desire for revenge. He rushed forward, lucked the tender infant, the heir of lOchbmy, from the hands of the nurse, and bounding to the rocks, in a moment stood on an almost inaccessible cliff pro truding over the water. The cries of the agonized mother aud the chief at the awful jeopardy in which their only child was placed may be easily conceived. Maclean implored the man to give him back his son, aud expessed his deep contrition for the degradation he had, in a moment of excitement, inflicted on his clansman. The other replied that the only condition on which he would consent to the restitution was, that Maclean himself should bare his back and consent to be flogged as he had been. In despair the chief consented, saying that he would consent to any thing if his child were but restored. To the grief and astonishment of the clan, Maclean bore his insult, and when it was completed, begged that the clans man might return from his perilous position with the young chief. The man regarded him with a smile of de moniac revenge, and, lifting the child above his head, plunged with him into the waters below. The sea closed over them, and neither, it is said, ever emerged from the tempestous whirl pools and basaltic caverns that yawned around them, and which still threaten the inexperienced navigator on the shores of Mull. Painting Under the Dome of the Capitol. A Roman from Rome paints onr cap itol, says a Washington correspondent. Brumidi has recently started, at the age of more than eighty, the bas-relief paint ing on the frieze of the dome. He has to climb down into an architectural cave to get to work. Brnmidi's scaffold is supported on three diagonal props of wood, each forty feet long, resting upon the cornice of the old dome, and extend ing outward, and half way up their length making a shelf upon the broad architrave of the new or superincumbent dome of iron. Ropes from the gallery above the new cornice hold these long stanchions. A couple of ladders desoend from the gallery by twenty-five long steps to the scaffold, which is movable'around the inner circle of the dome. The old man, at the age of eighty, has to climb up the inner gallery which is built in the dome's shell by a ladder, stop on the balustrade, and go down a second ladder nearly one hundred feet from the floor below. Then he stops on a little railed scaffold, turning himself half way round, aud goes down the third long ladder. If he should fall, he would mash down yonder like a basket of eggs. He has nothing upon his scaffold but a wooden chair and a box for a table, and two tall trestles to reach the top of his design. His caps of colors are arranged outside the railings of his scaffold, along the sill of the architrave. As he stands up to paint his head is at the knees of the figures in his desigu. By getting on the shelf across the long trestles, his head is even with their faces. The dome at this height is a little cold in winter. The old man it the age of eighty is thrice lonely there by age, by deser tion and by the solitude of avocation. He is about fifty feet above the rotunda, forty feet below the nearest gallery, and perhaps ninety or one hundred below the eye of the dome, where, ten years ago, he finished a huge composition lying on his back and painting with whitewash brushes. That immense composition has in the centre Washing ton bareheaded, in uniform, sitting with an inverted sword between a trumpet blowing Fame and a Liberty holding the book of law. These figures are females, and from either side of them sweeps round the circle of thirteen Graces dancing on the clouds, the sister States. They are generally fat and matronly, and fly the white pennant of "E Pluribus Unum." Surrounding this centre are six great groups, Com merce, Mines, War, &o. Brumidi's design stands on a painted sill or base, tinted like marble. It is to represent in picture or allegory the pro cession of America from her discovery to the riddle of her future, looking out from the eyes of her sibyls: Liberty nd History. The tints are those of sculp ture, marble forms depending on natural shadow, and backed and divided by whatever naturally arises to the theme, a church column or a palm tree. Col umbus descends from his great barge with uncovered head aud a furled ensign in his left hand, his boat full of armed men. The shore end of the plank, on which ho walks, is beset by Indians, one bending to kiss his feet, others stand ing back with gifts. This scene is about twenty-five feet wide. It glides into a church scene, which appears to be the marriage of John Rolfe to Poca hontas; three cavaliers confronting three Indian maidens. But this is since under stood to be Cortez in the halls af the Montezuma. The'only design or things iu our period is to be the discovery of gold in California. Torture of the Widows. In the interior of New Caledonia, which is east of Vancouver's Island and north of Columbia, among the tribe called " Taw-wa-tins," who are also Ba bines, and also among other tribes in their neighborhood, the .custom pre vails of burning bodies, with circum stances of peculiar barbarity to the widows of the deceased. The dead body of the husband is laid naked upon a large heap of resinous wood his wife is then placed upon the body and covered with a skin ; the pile is then lighted, and the poor woman is compelled to re mained until she is nearly suffocated, when she is allowed to descend as best she can through the smoke and flames. No sooner, however, does she reach the ground, than she is expected to prevent the body from becoming distorted by the action of the fire on the muscle and sinews ; and whenever such an event takes place, she must, with bare harais, restore the burning corpse to its proper posi tion ; her person being the whole time exposed to the scorching effects of the intense heat. Should she fail in the due performance of this indispensable rite, from weakness or the intensity of her pain, she is held up by some one until the body is consumed. A continual singing and beating of drums is kept up throughout the ceremony, which drown her cries. Afterwards she must collect the unconsumed pieoes of bone and ashes, and put them in a bag made for the purpose, which she has to carry on her back for three years ; re maining for the time a slave to her hus band's relations, and being neither al lowed to wash nor comb herself for the whole time, so that she soon beoomes a most disgusting object. At the expira ation of the three years, a feast is given by her tormentors, who invite all the friends and relations of her and them selves. Workers in Deep Mines. Not maay men who see the miners of the Savage lifted out at the top of the shaft at change of shift have the courage to descend into the lower regions of that mine. Very few even of the old resi dents of the Couistock would care to descend into the steaming regions below, and not one eastern man in a thousand could be induced to make the trip after seeing the men popped out at the top of the shaft, steaming as though just lifted out of a cauldron of boiling water. Though they are shirtless naked as at birth from the waist up and wear only cotton overalls, they are dripping as if but a moment out of a pond of water; yet this is from steam and perspiration. In all this great heat men must work. The wonder is that they are able to do anything but gasp and pant. It is a pities better fitted for salamanders than for men. At the head of the main in cline it is as hot as in the hottest vapor baths at Steamboat Springs. One would think that men in such a place would be quite secure against the rheumatism. On making inquiries in this regard of an underground foreman, he said he never knew any of the men working below to have the rheumatism. Home of our sufferers from this disease might try this cure might procure themselves to be lowered into the depths of the mine, there to sit and steam through one shift per day. But for the immense quanti ties of ice water they drink, the men could not endure the great heat in which they are placed or the floods of perspira tion pumped from their pores. They swallow gallons on gallons of it, and it never hurts them in the least Virginia City (Nev.) Enterprise. How the Danube Feeds the lach. The American Architect says: Some time ago a dispute arose between the German government and certain manu facturers on the river Aach, which in volved the determining of the source of the river, which has its immediate sou roe in a spring, one of the largest in Eu rope, as it discharges 1,850 gallons a second. The bed of the Danube is cal careous, and its inclination is the same as that of the ground from the Danube to the source of the Aach, whioh is at a level eight hundred feet below. For a number of years it had been noticed that at a certain plaoe the Danube lost a por tion of its waters through holes and crevices in its bed; this loss was so great that in times of drought it caused great inconvenience to manufacturers on the Danube, who attempted to prevent it by filling up these holes. This caused a great outcry from the manufacturers on the Aach, who maintained that the Aach was fed by the Danube, and that filling up the holes was an interference with their just and natural privileges. Hence investigations an I experiments. First, twenty tons of salt were put into a hole in the bed of the Danube, and the wator at the source of the Aach was analyzed for several days, and did give evidenee of containing salt To obtain more ocrtain proof, advantage was taken of the wonderful coloring power of fluorescine, wldch is the first of a series of superb coloring substances, which vary as there is introduced into its com- fositiou bromine, iodine, or chlorine, ts power may be judged from the fact that one part- of fluorescine to twenty million parts of waier can be detected. In this experiment fifteen gallons of a solution of fluorescine were thrown into the Danube at the suspected point, on October 9, at five o'clock. On October 12, sixty hours after the solution had been thrown into the Danube, the watchers at the source of the Aach noticed the first discoloration of the water; this discoloration increasjd until the evening, and it did not wholly dis- oppear for more than twenty-four hourB. It is said that when the discoloration was mo9t marked, the water gushing from the spring presented a truly mag nificent appearance, varying in color from the most intense green through light green to a brilliant yellow. This test established the fact that the mill owners on the Aach were in the right. California MnneK According to a correspondent, the California coast is full of marvels, Every year brings something new to the surtace. Tilings extraordinary m size, character and mystery are turning up every day. Wheu California was first settled, gold was the great thing. The soil appeared to be a heap of dust It took a long season to fiud out how rich this country was m everything that per tains to agricultural life. A siugle night's raiu will turn these dust hills into a verdant pasture. The grasses are annual. They must be re-sown every year, unless the seed hidden in the earth is sufficient for a new crop. Even in the absence of rain, cattle turned out ou f what seems to be a plain or hillside, dry as ashes, pick up a good living on what is known as the dry crop. The valleys are hot-beds of vegetation. This is true of the San Jose valley, the Napa valley and the Sonoma valley. Fields are laid out by the mile. The wheat fields ore small when they embrace only one hundred acres. They are large when they are thirty miles long. The taste here in for huge farms. The land is worked by machinery. The world don't show suoh inventions to aid in agricul ture as are found here. It is common to see eight horses, four abreast, drawing a gang of plows. Without machinery these immense fields could not be culti vated. One of the machines takes off the heads of wheat and leaves the 6tub ble to be burned or plowed in. Before the machine has done with the crop the grain is threshed and bagged, ready for the market, before it leaves the field. The sheep and cattle are kept in im mense quantities, and one thousand head of each is a small allowance. A Notable Anction Sale. A recently written letter from Wash ington contains this item; A very pecu liar auction sale was commenced in this city to-day of a most extraordinary lot of stereoscopic views. There are in the lot over 111,000 views. It is the collection of a well-known but somewhat eccentric gentleman, who has devoted over twenty years in making the collection. He gathered the views in all sections of the world, and it is believed that he has a copy of every stereoscopio view that has ever Deen placed on sale, it got to be a mama with him, and he spent a good sized fortune npon it Putting the cost of each at twenty-five cents (the ordinary price;, iney cost mm $47,7ou, DUf, aa lt is known some cost him as high as five dollars each, no reliable estimate can be made on their actnal cost Among the lot are over 1,000 giving scenes in vari ous parts of France, but particularly in raris. Many of them are illuminated, Pictures of every singer that ever ap peared on the operatic stage of any note. whose pictures could be obtained, are also among the lot. It is hard for the owner now an old man to consent to dispose of them, but he found that the wants of his family were pressing, and he leit that it would be unjust to them for him to keep them any longer. Under the circumstances, he finally decided to sell them. For two or three days, while the views have been on exhibition in boxes at the Corcoran building, he kas guarded his pets as if they were dia- monds, and refused to show a single one of them nntil the auction began this evening. They will not bring one-tenth of what they cost, being without doubt tue nrst and largest in the world. Long-Sighted Ones. It is an interesting fact that there are very few persons in the world possessing a peculiar keerness of vision enabling them to see certain planets with the un aided eye. People with the ordinary power of sight usually see six of the stars of the Pleiades; Kepler mentions one person, who, with the naked eye, oould see fourteen, and Littrow another who saw sixteen. Dr. Dawes, an English clergyman and astronomer, was remark able for his powers of distinguishing very faint spots of light; and Mr. Q. M. Ward, an amateur astronomer, in the north of Ireland, is known among scien- . : 4i m i ' . - i . . .. uuu luuu iur jiavuig vieweu two oi the four moons of Uranus with so small and simple a belli as a fnnr.innh talAsnnrvn In this country, Mr. S. W. Burnham, of Chicago, is noted for the particularlv acute vision which jeveals tA him double stars. The astronomers of other lands often call upon him to deoide vexed questions relating to these stars. The former private seoretary of Presi dent Polk has been dis&overed. oh and poor, in Santa Fe. He was well acquainted with Andrew Jackson, and relates now ne once saw mm praying at. ilia n.A ' UJ . O tug 1BTCV1 IMS WU8, A Bridegroom Among Sharpers A young German from Cincinnati, freshly manned and exceedingly happy, set out with his pretty bride for a honey moon in Rochester, N. Y. A few hours before the train reached Cleveland, Ohio, a well-dressed man asked him if he would not take a cigar and play a few hands of euchre in the smoking car. The bridegroom assented, promising to return to his little dear very soon. Af ter a few hands, in which be invariably held good cards, one of the travelers suggested that they should put up a penny or two to make the game lively. Wonderful luck the bridegroom had at the outset, and then it turned, and he began to lose first 8250 in his wallet. next his watch and chain, and finally his wife's watch. His partner asked him to call at a hotel in Cleveland, and inquire for Joseph Geisenheimer, and the players separated as the cars trund led into the depot. The bridegroom called repeatedly at the hotel during the evening and asked for Geisenheimer, the aforesaid, but could not find the gentleman. The bridal pair were penni less before the honeymoon wsb a day oiii, Din luckily they had nought tick ets to Rochester, and oould ko on to their journey's end and borrow money of their relatives. Cogent Remnm for a fJrnnd Knrccae. ConfwiciotiH imoDi the hieheat eianmlpH of sncoofB which the present century can rhour is Hontetter's Stomach Bitters. The record of lis triumphs over disease is to be traced in the written aoknowlegmont of thouxanda who have experie' ccd its beneficent effocta, and the evidence of Its popularity ia to be found in the vast and growing demand for the artiole in rtorrn ana noatn America, Mexico, uuatema'a, the West Indie', Australia and Europe. The reasons for its unparalleled suocess are cogent ones. The accumulated evidenoe of nearly thirty years shows that it is a certain remedy for malarial disease as ell aa its surest pre ventive ; that it eradicates dyspepsia, constipa- uuu, uver oompiainc ana nervousness, counter acts a tendency to gout, rheumatism, urinary and uterine disorders, that it imparts vigor to the feeble, and cheers the-mind while it invig orates the body. Bronchitis. From Jolm Flaccr. Enn.. of Bennineton. N. H.s "Three years since I was very much re duced with a dreadful cough, which resulted in Bronchitis affecting me so severely as to ren der it difficult to speak In an andible voice. To this was added severe night sweats, and I was fearful of going into a decline. After recourse to various remedies, to no purpose. I made use of 'Dr. Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry, a few bottles of which fully restored me to health. Since that time I have bad several severe at tacks of oougb, but tbe Balsam has always re. moved them. I always keep it by mo, and should not know how to do without it. 50 cents and Ha bottle. Sold by all drug gists. ThPT don't know It. Some people don't know that they are being swindled every tune tney buy an inferior. suort-weigut, baking powder. It would be far better to buy and ue the old reliable Dooley's Yeast Powder. Every package of the Boofcy l'owdcr is warranted absolutely pure, and strictly full weight. Sold by grocers. Dr. Pieroe's Golden Medical Discovery will cure a cough in one-half the time uececsary to oure it wiin auy otner medicine ; ana it aoes it, not Dy arying it up, out oy reuiuviug lue uhuhh, subduing the irritation, and healing the af fected parts. Sold by druggists. CHEW The Celebrated "Matobxms" Wood Tag Plug Tobacoo. Thc Pioveeii Tobacco Cohfahy, Mew York, Boston, and Chicago. Tho editor of "an agricultural paper savs th re is absolutely no cure for hog cholera, but that Sheridan's Condition Powders, given occasion ally, will certainly prevent it lie sure to get Sheridan's. The other kinds in large packages are trash. CnuMBH of CoMFonT. Earache, toothaohe, headache, neuralgia and deafness can be in stantly relieved and finally cured by Johnson s Auolyne Liniment. Get a bottle and read di rections. Ohi AIt Head Aches t then take a dose of Quirk's Irish Tea. The great bilious remedy, prioe 25 ota. a package. The Greatest Dlncovery of the Ae ia Dr. Tobias1 celebrated Venetian Liniment ! SO eara before the pnblio, and warranted to cure Diarrhea. Dysentery. Oolic. and Spaama, taken internally ; and Oronp. CJhronio Rheumatism, Bore Throats, Outs. Bruises. Old Sores, and Pains in the Limbs, Bsck, and Ohest, externally. It hss never failed. No family will over bo without it after onoo gHrina- it a fair trial. Price. 40 cents. Da. TOBIAS VENETIAN HOK8R LINIMENT, in Pint Bottles, at One Dollar, is warranted superior to any other, or NO PAY, for tbe oure of Oolio, Oats, Bruises, Old Sores, eto. Bold by all Druggist. Depot 10 Park Place, New York. The Markets. IK XOBK. Beef Oattle NatlT i 09 H mi Texas and Cherokee. nixa UeTi MUch Oows 0 01 70 30 Bogs Live. MV 03V Urossea UD.(a uc: Sheen 04k a "'.' Lambs 0S- Ootton Middling lWo 11 Floor Western Good to Oholoe. . . o BU (4 0 Bute Good to Oholoe 00 (4 8 f 0 Buckwheat, per owt 1 SO (4 111 Wheat Red Western IS) A 1 16 No. 2 Milwaukee, 1 58 (4 1 :SH Bye Stole 11 (4 78 68 BJ luneT Htate ., oi (4 Barley Malt.... (4 Buckwheat 8u (4 Oats Mixed Western...,. 81 (4 Corn Mixed Western...... fB (4 30 80 60 Hay, per owt ts 4 Straw, per owt 41 (4 hops -letci tu ....70s is (4 18 Pork Mesa 11 It (411 SO Larl Olty Steam 01)4X4 Ct fith -MackoreL No. 1, new IB 00 (431 00 No. 1, new 10 00 (4" 00 Dtj Ood, per owt S 1 0 (4 I W EerrinR, Scaled, per box 18 (4 17 Pstrolensi Grade ......MX&WX Beflned, "V 31 81 49 44 83 35 41 13 13 ID 18 wool California rieeoe :u 0 Texas " 80 Australia " 44 Bute XX -. 41 Batter State, 88 Wotterv -Oholoe 17 Weatern tiood tc Prime. . M Western Firkins 01 Cheese State Faetory 11 State Skimmed 17 Western'............,.,.., 0 Eggs Bute end Pennsylvania. 18 BUFFALO. Flour Wheat No. 1 Milwaukee. Corn Mixed...,.,...,,. , Oats , Rye Barley Barley Malt fBlLADBLrHIk. Beef Cattle Extra, Sheep. rrim,,, .... HoiiS Dressed 9 95 1 81 41 83 71 S4 70 (4 8 SO (4 1 8BK (4 H MM It 76 lH 06 OA 0(4 05 (4 C (4 Floor Pennsylvania Extra.. 7 5S (4 S 3S Wheat-Bed Westers 1 40K(4 1 48 Bye C6 (4 Corn Yellow 68 (4 Mixed 61 (4 0U Mixed 83 A Pctrolenm Crade ..WX&WX Bfln', Wool -Colorado 8 J (4 Texas 31 (4 California 81 (3 67 S4 63 84 13 34 Hi 4) 08V BOST0. Beef Cattle 08 (4 Bhoop... 06J(4 Boks pa a OS Flour Wisconsin and MlnnesoU.. ( 31 (4 T '6 Corn Mixed... '8 9 61 uats Wool Ohio and Pennsylvania. XX. 68 California Fell 4i (4 6 (4 (6 Q SI auaBToa. mass. Beef Cattle 0e 08 Sheep 06 (4 14 Lambs... 07 4 10 Hog l 011 08 WATUTOWW, MASS Beef Cattle Poor to Choice 6 60 (4 6 60 Sheep f 00 (4 1 76 L tuna T 00 Q 9 no CLOCKS E. INGRAHAM tSc VO.W. Superior to deejgn. Not equaie in quality, or u timek.ee peri. Ask your Jeweler for tbera, Agency-8 OortUodt $t, N. Y, TfMIMM AM Dunliam L Sons, Manufacturers! Warsjroomf, II Ust 14th Street, EaUblUhed 18H.J - RCW YORK. Scudor lllulrattd CirmOar ami trie lit. mHjnUTTDTVr1 na' 'l ('"oh Impediments eerme luflluilln u nently onred. Correspondence soliclt d. PRor Oitttxaw, 83 i Bunt ft Wh St., If. T. Pity Farm For Sale! The milflrfilffnfrl offers ft it nut the farm known at Hie Pr. lnffpraoll Farm, on the Rivor ro 4 adjoining Die village of Mottville, Midti. Haiti farm ontiinti of lHft ncres 40 noma In timber, hilanoe nnoW high itAte of onltivntion, 70 aoree now Iming In whent, looking nice. lnrge well-but t burn, ootnforUble honne, Poaepwion riven April Int. Title perfeat, no inotimbranoe on he pUoe. Price only $Oper acre, Oonvnniwnt to market, bnfnjr three mi let from lAke Shore A Michigan Routhrn Railroad, tit miles from Oonntnntine, Mich , aii mllei from White Pigeon. Pleafe apply in peraon or addreee. T. K. t'LAPP, White Pigeon. Mlrn. BATTLING WITH Til R DEMON. Now read, thii atartUn new tamtMnnon book, by Hon. J. A. Dacca. Progrnfle of 4oeprl Tfmprr aure and the Murphy Movement over the whole land, with biographies, nortraite. addressee and inci dent of the wonderful work of Great Temperanoe Apofltlae, Mnrphr, Reynolds, and others. Teeming with powerful facts, argument and Illustrations of the i'nme of Ntrona Prink. Ihe tattat and bn vofvm. Only 2.00. AUKNT WANTED. OmMcM rryfAtnii. Address, T. BELKNAP, Haktfobp, Coww. P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ICTORIAL TTTanPfYDVmr Tin? WOtJT n llXOJ.UXbX " II UllLlli It eontain. A7tf in, httnrtns1 nnmvinrfl and 1 2(1(1 large double onlumn panes, and ia tbe moflt aompl.te Hl.tori of the Wrld ever published. It aella at smht. 8end for apecimen paa-na and extra forma to Agents, and aee wlij it aella faater tban anr other book. National Pcblwhiwo Oo,, Philadelphia, Pa. LAND CENTRAL- Iowa WP3TFRN 1,200.000 At KB for HrIo at 95 and 96 per Arre. tn farm lota, and on terms to suit all classes. Round trip ticket from Chicago and return free to purchasers. Send Posts, oard tor maps and pamphlet describing olimste, soil and product fn id oninties. Cull on or address, IOVA If. U. rM COMPANY, f2 Kim dnlph Hirri'l, flitrnan. or t'rrlitr Hnplde lown. J. u. iiAjjim un, jjni uommisstonfr. A poult 1 ve remctlv tor J ft ropey and nil dix-atci of the Kidneys, D ladder end Urinary Or gans. Hunt's Kemrdy if purely vegetable and prepared expressly for the shore ducawf. It hai cured thoutands. very bottle warranted. Send to W. E. Clarke, Providence, R.I., for tllurtrsted pamphlet If TouvdruRrirt don't have it, he will order it for yon. WILBOR'S C0HP0UHD OP PURE COD LIVEE OIL AND LIME. ir- o jr Tn One nnri AH. Arc. vnn miClHrln fYntii a Onnxh, Cold, Aftlnuii, Cronchiti. or any of the various pulmonary trouuh-a, that an nltn terminate in (Jon Bumptien ? If Co. ue " TI'i'Mor1. I'ure Cixi Liver Oil ami Lime," n aafe and tticacio3S remodjr. This la no qunck preparation, but is reKularly nrescribpd by the mcdiCKl faculty. Manufactured only by A. U. WlLBOU, CJhemtat. nimmn. noin ny su iimirKiHT. GLOVE-FITTING CORSETS. The Fnenda of this UNRIVALLED CORSET I are now numbered by I MILLIONS. I Prices sre much fMuctdt IyIEDALRECI VED Get rhe Genuine and I beware of imitation. ASKAlSOrOPt THOMSON'S UNIREAKA.61E STUIS.I The beat foods made . I see mat ins name or 4)MirN and thA TrsdeMarKsCROWN are I stamped on every Corsrtisreel.l A FARM AND HOME OF YOUR OWN. NOW is the TIME to SECURE IT ONLY FIVE FOR AN DOLLARS ACRE Of the best land la Amerioa. S.OIKJ.OOO Acres in Gnat ern Nebraska, on the line of the Union Pacific Knllroad now for sale 10 yearn credit given, inttre.l only 6 per cent. These are the only lands fob balk on the line of this Grf.at RAir.nrMn. the World's IIioh wat. Send for Tbk New " Piomeeb," the beat paper for those seekins new homes ever published. Full in formation, with maps, aent Fbf.e. O, F, DA VIM, I. nod Agent. I). V. R. H... Wmsihu. Nb. ' VEGETTNE FOR DROPSY. Cektiui, Faixs. R. 1., Oot 19, 187T. DR It is a oleaaure to a-ivtt rav testimony for tout valuable n. n. dtetini : medicine. I was sick for a long time with Dropsy, under the doctor's care. He said it was Water between the Heart and Liver. I received no benetit until I com menced taking the VRQK'f INK in fact, I was growing worse. I have tried many remedieu; they did not help me, VRORTINK is the medicine for Dropsy. I began to feel better after taking a few bottles. I have taken thirty bottles in all. I am perfectly well never felt better. No one can feel more thankful than 1 do. I am, dear sir, gratefully yours. A. D. WHEELER. VKGETINK. When the blood beoomes lifeless and stagnant, either from change) of weather or of climate, want of exercise, irregular diet, or from any other oanse, the VEQETINE will renew the blood, carry off tho putrid humors, cleanse tho stomach, regulato tho bowels, and impart a tone df vigor to tho whole body. VEGETINE For Kidney Complaint and Nervoui Debility. IsuBORO, Me,, Deo. 28, 1877. Mb. Stkvf-KS: Dear sir I had had a Conch for eighteen Tears, when I oommenoed taking the VK.GKTINK. 1 waa very low, my system waa debilitated by disease. I had the and Lunjrs sore. When I had taken one bottle X found it waa helping me; it has helped my cough, and it strengthens dih. I am now able to do my work. Never have round anything like tho VEGETINE, I know it Is everything it ia recommended to bo. Mb. A. J. PENDLETON. VEGETINE is oour shing and strengthening ; pariflot tho blood; regulates tho bowels; quioU tho Borrow system ; aots directly upon tho secretions, and arooMf tho whole system to action. ViAnav fl.1tnnl.in an v.. f V. V. VEGETINE FOR SICK HEADACHE. EvsMbviluc, Ind., Jan. 1,1878. Mil Rtkvkns Hear .Sir I have need yonr VKGETINB for Wok Keadaohe, and been greatly benefited thereby. I have every reason to believe it to be a good medicine. Yours, very respectfully, Mr. JAMtCS CONNOR, U Third Street. HEa.DA.CUR. VEGETINE oan be said to be a sore remedy for the many kinds of headache, aa It acts direotly upon the various causes of this oom plain t Nervousness, Indigestion, Oostiveness, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Biliousness, eto. Try the VEliETINB. You will never regret it. VEGETINE. DOCTOR'S REPORT. Da. OHARLE3 H. DUODFtNIIAUSEN, Apotheoary, nvausviiie, luu. Th. Doctor writes ; I have a large number of a ood customers who take vibuibi-inifi. rasy all speak well oi it. l snow It la e gooa meaiotne ror toe eompiainie tor wuoa it is reoom. ueauea. Deo. 27, 1877. VEGETINE is a great panaoee for our aged fathers and me there, for it gives them strength, quiets their end gives them Nature's sweet sleep. VEGETINE. DOCTOR'S REPORT. H. R. 8TSTZKS, Esq. ! Dumt Sir We hav. been selling your valuable VBOK TINB for three years, and, we find that it gives perfect eetiafaoUon. We believe it to be th. best Blood Puri ne BUW T wry reapecuully, Da. J. B. BftOWN 0(5.' Druggist., Uniontown, Ky. VBOBTINE bat never failed to effect a euro, giving tone an4 strengtb to the system debilitated br disease. VEGETINE PREPARED BY E H STEYEIS, Boston, ilass- Vegstins it Sold by All Druggists. KM UliV momm safety Inkstend fyre.-Dgut spill, nxrfl.'pfni. oil fingers. Writ American Boot fcichangs. M. T. ittvo KKVOIiTFKr. Price lint rre Aaoreeg GUNS fceatWeeternOnn Work., PUtebnrg, Pg, aama a ft jmr, Arena wanted ewywiir. Ft a J H 1 1 1 Itne-e etTlctlr ipgltlraate.Partioiilan fre JfaIUU Addrew J.WoaTm (Jo., BtJxmU. Ma attftftlt A MonthAgents wanftert. 3 beat eel Vll fng artiolpa In the world. One sample irer WVVV Addreee JAY BKONKON. jmon. PI 1 WS Orff.prloe $340on1r Ufi. Paper fa I JJMUal Dahikl . Beattt, Waantngton. N.J. WANTS flAI.EKSirl for whoI'Ml Liberal Ml.rrl tnteUrur exrmtn BAiH. dilma R. k Co., bet l3BC,CielnpH,OrHo. OOI,D PI,ATKI WATCHK. Ha. in th tnf koowo .inn. pinn.. tt.-h rn. AIT A "1VT Tit T 7 1 1 Men In oh Stat for Ine D' All A I VI 9 taotim B.mo, nnd to iwpcr erim. PT lihrX Inolo stump nd atrp Amrl. ean ind Knrope.n Bnornt SrTic On.. Uineinn.tt. CI. BOSTQI WEEKLY TRAISCRIPT, The best family newspaper published 5 iffht t si columns reamng. o s; jarros t&x per annua) eiuoa 01 ivthi annum, in advance. am $10 to $25 : ne v emit ft made bs Affenta aellinc onr Ohromos, Crayons, Piotnre and CJhro. mo Cards. 15 aamplee worth 85, sent, poet-paid, for 85 Cents. Illostratod Oatalosma ffen. J II. BUFFOKD't FjONB. noMtnn. iitsteniisnen inau.j WORK FOR ALL In their own localities, oenveaatna- for the Fireside leitsr. (enlarted) weeRir ana nmuv. imr.r.. nnprlnihe Vorln.wUh Mammoth enrmnos rree Bis Commissions to Atxente. Terms and Ontnt Jrree) AdT.lrmw P. O. VICKKKV. , AnaTitnCn, fflnlnf. HOSPHO-NUTRITINE, The) best vitalizing Tonic, Relieving Mental and rhjeicM 1 PROSTRATION, KBRVOOSNB8S, BBBIMTT. MMALS WBAKrTESH, . And all Impairments of Brain ana xcervo ejTsieiu. Dnrriiu. Depot. 8 Plett 8t..lT.T, TRAM? MARK. DR. BECKER'S CELEBRATED EYE BALSAM IS A SURE CURB For INFLAMED, WEAK EYEfi, STYES end SORE EYELIDS. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. DEPOT, 8 BOWERY , N. 1. SENT BY MAIL FOR 3J?e KKKl8 SIUJITH. K EKP'8 Patent Partlr maoe Dress Shirts, best qnall- ty. only plain snams to finish, 8 for J7. KKRP'H Custom Shirts to meosnrs, heat quality, Sfol W. delivered free. Guaranteed perfeotlj entisfaotorr. IIKI1 VliANIHKIi iUBKWftn. tTn.1 1. .A I..-. host nil. lit. tl.MI eaCn. White Flannel Unrtervest's, best quahty.Sl .611 each. Canton Flannel Vesta Drawers, ex. neavr, .oo.i Twilled Silk Umprollts, paraxon frames, J eacn. Best Gingham, patent protected ribe.f 1 each. Circulars and rta: amplee mailed free, on application, adfiee. KKKP MANUFACTURING COMPANY, 1115 and IH7 Mercer Street. Wew York. ;birtsonlr, delivered Invalid Pensions Increased. BOUN 1Y. Volunteers re-enliatinir after January L tii. with nine months' prior aervice, can ret unpaid balance of I4I1U. PF.NSION for wounda nnd disease (on slight disability), to aolrliers, failure, widows and chil dren. BOUNTY to soldiers discharged for wounda or injury, snrt aioo to volunteers ennsiea Deiore uniy aa 1H61, for three seirs, regardless of term of service, if not paid.ODlTION AL BOUNTY to throe and two years' viilururfSr and widows, if only $1M has been pnid. New Orleans PRIZK MONEY. KRNKST P. BROOK, Lat," Chief Clerk. U. S. Sanitary Commission Asenoy, Attorney at Lw, No. 1 I 1 Nassau Btreet, New York. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE OK HKl.F-PltfcttKKVATION. Two hundretb (trillion. reviaeA and enlarged, junt puiv Hihed. It is Rtanriard medical work the bat in the Krucliib 1 annua, written by a pbysioian of eat expe rience, to whom was awarded a t'id and jeweled meda, ur the National Medical Asiooiation. It oonta ns hau liful and very expensive steel plate engravings, ihree hundred pages, more that fifty valuable prescriptions for all forms of prevailing diseases, the remit of many years of extensive and suouesafiil practice. B mnd ia French cloth: price only $1 , sent by mail. The London Lancet says; "Wo per m nhouM be without this valu able book. The author ia a noble benefactor,1 An illustrated sample sent to all on receipt of 41 cents for postage. AddrJis Dr. W. H. PARKEK. No. 4 Bulftnch Btreet, Boston. Tbe author may be consalted on diseases requiring skill and experience. EVERETT HOUSE, Fronting Union Square NEW YORK, Finest Location in the City. European Plan-Restaurant Unsurpassed fCERXER VER, Proprietors PROF. BEDFORD'S CETTEFf SHOWINe'SUPERlORrTY 0 THIS ARTICLE OVER ALL 0THERS.F0R SOW MAKING. SENT FREE BY MAIL ON APPLICATION TO HJAJkNTHONY 104- READE ST. NEWYORK. BABBITT'S TOILET SAP, d i tt Ul ssr tno ftvVt Vldtcel,Jv T VVsissaV J OOVl COffimcW eviul dalcUriooa laffrvdl. eau. (torjeartof etcntlfle MperlnMnt the niMutactonr ef B. T. B6bxW. Bett Sap bu ptrbcact) mnri now oflVn in ths lutue The FINEST TOILET iAP I tho World. iMty (A pure rtgrtaUt oil uttd in itt manufaeturt. u For Use In tho Nursery it hao No Equal. Worth ten tiiiirt )U cotl to every inntlicr and family iDCbrMtadoBW Sample box, tvmulnlng 3 rake of ou. aacb, teat tn is SB ad arc! DO receipt of 15 rmli. Addre! B Ti BABBITT, New York City. Vat Sale bv al 1 lrugUl. 1 9 THE GOOD OLD S7KD-BY MEUCAI UOSTilE UHMEUT FOR MAN AND BEAST. EgTABLUHBO 88 TBaaa. Always cure. Alway ready. Always handy. He. never yet failed. rTiirr acCIltofu have utud it. Tbe wUole world approve, tb glorious old Mustangthe cost and Cheapest Llmmsq In existence. 86 cents a notle. The Mustang Liaimea surss when nothing else wilt HOLD BY",; ALL MEDICINE VBWDER8. Cough, Cold, or Sore Throat, Requires immadlnte attention, na neglect oftentimes results In some incurable g.nng dlse.se. BROWN'S BROrV'HIAL TROCHES are a simple remedy. nnU will almost ln variably five immediate) relief. SOLD BY ALL CHEMISTS and dealer tn medlclnea. SANDAL-WOOD A positive remedy for all diseases ef the Kidneys. Ble aider and Drlaary Orans i also good ia Drop, leal Cesaplalata. It never produces siekness, certain and speedy In its action. It ia fast luperaedin ell ether remedies. Slzty cape alas ears In el, or eig days. Mo ether suedlojae eta do this. Beware ( Itnllatleae, lor, owing to its gre ueeeae.Buaf have been ottered ; some are moat dancer OUNDA8 DICK sV CO.'fJ flsl (we etas, soaleeateg Oil of aaadslicesd, cocas. er sereutsr. er ms far Womur Street, jr rits. al all hSwi . mtmv X r I, I