FOR THE roUIfU FOLKS. Welrce. A ptok of gray wolvei went down to drink And what do yon think t And what do yon think ? The loe wai thin, And the paok fell In I And they all were like to have drowned been. But those yelping wolvei, 10 gannt and grim, Made ont to iwlm I Made ont to iwlm I And they iplashed abont Till they all got ont, When they felt very wet and eold, no donbt, he marling troop, with their dripping fur, Bo hungry were, So hungry were I That they dashed ahead 1 And, ai they aped, They howled in the light that the pale moon shed. On their tireless, ravening way they went, With eager soent, With eager acent; Wolves, hungry and bold, And wet and oold I And if traveler they fonnd, they have never told. Youth' Companion, The Hunter's Story. "I have had many narrow escapes and have seen some strange things. can now recall one, when I was hunting beaver, inat as the ice began to break up, and on one of the farthest, wildest lakes I ever visited. I calculated there could be no human being nearer than one hundred miles. I was pushing my canoe along the loose ice, one oold day, when just round a point that projeoted inco me laae, i ueuru soineming want ing through the ice. It made so much noise and stepped so regularly, that I felt sure it must be a moose. I got my nae ready and held it cooked in one hand, while I pushed the canoe with the other. Slowly and carefully I rounded ine point, wncn, wnai was my asromsn ruenfc to see. not a moose but a man. wading in the water the ice water 1 He had nothing on his head or feet, and his clothes were almost torn off from his limbs. He was walking, gesticulating with with his hands, and talking to him self. He seemed to be wasted to skeleton. With great difficulty I got him in my canoe ; when I landed I made up a fire and got him some hot tea and food. He had a bone of some animal in his boBom, which he gnawed almost to nothing. He was nearly frozen, and quieted down and soon fell asleep. I nursed him like an infant. With great difficulty, and in a round-about way I found out the name of the town from' which he came. Slowly and carefully I got along, around falls and over por tages, keeping a resolute watch on him, lest he should escape from me into the forest. At length, after nearly a week's travel. I reached the village where supposed he lived. I found the whole community under deep excitement, and more than a hundred men were scatter ed in the woods and on the mountains. seeking for my crazy companion, for they had learned that he had wandered into the woods. Jt had been agreed upon, that, if he was found, the bells were to be rung and guns fired. And, as soon as I landed, a shout wrs raised, his friends rushed to Lim, the bells broke out in loud notes, and guns were fired, and the report echoed again and again in the forests and on the moun tains till eoery seeker knew that the 1 ost one was found. "How many times I had to tell the story over I 1 never saw people so crazy with joy, for the man was of the first and best families, and they Hoped his insanity wonld be but temporary, as I afterward learned it was. How they feat ted me, and when I en me away, loaded my canoe with provisions and clothing, and everything for my comfort! It was a time and place of wonderful joy. They seemed to forget everybody else, and think only of the poor man whom I had brought buck." tTlie Prer-loaa Herb. Two little German girls, Brigitte and Walburg, were on their way to the town, and each carried a heavy basket on hr head. Brigitte murmured and sighed con stantly, Walburg only laughed and joked. Brigitte said: What makes yon laugh so 7 Your basket is quite heavy as mine, and yon are no stronger than 1 am. Walburg answered: "1 have a pre cious little herb on my load, which makes me hardly feel it at all. Put tome of it on your load as well." "Oh," cried Biigitte, " it must in deed be a precious little herb I I should like to lighten my load with it; so tell me at once what it is called. Walburg replied : ' The preoious little herb that makes all burdens light is called patience. Prescription for Fits. For a fit of passion Walk out into the open air. You may speak your mind to the winds without hurting any one, or 1 1 . , 1 J 1 . L proclaiming yourseu to uo a tumpieiuu, " Be not hasty in thy spirit to be angry. for anger restetn in the bosom oi tools. For a fit of idleness Count the tick' inga of the clock. Do this for one hour, and you will be glad to pull off your coat the next and work like a man, " Slothfnlness casteth into a deep sleep. and an idle soul shall suffer hunger." For a fit of extravagance and folly go to the workhouse or speak with the ragged and wretched inmates of the jail, and yon will be convinced that " Who makes his bed of briar and thorn Mast be content to lie forlorn." Wherefore do yon spend money for that which is not bread, and your labor far that whioh satisfieth not ?'' For a fit of ambition Go to the church yard and read the gravestones. They will tell you of the end of man at his best estate. " For what is your life f It is even a vapor that appear eth for a little time and then vaniuheth away." " Pride goeth before destruc tion and a haughty spirit before a fall." For a fit of repining Look about for the halt and the blind, and visit the bed rid en, the afflicted and the deranged; ar i thev will make you ashamed of your light pffliotioas. "Wherefore doth a living man oomplain?" For a fit of envy Go and see how many who keep their carriages are af flicted with rheumatism, gout and dropsy; how many walk abroad on orutohes or stay at home wrapped np in flannel; and how many are subject to epilepsy or apoplexy. A sound heart is' the life of the flesh. Envy is the rottenness of the bones." It is a ourious usage in Spain for the exeoationer to solicit a criminal's par don before putting him to death. The ceremony was recently performed in the case of the garroting of Moncaai, who tried to kill King Humbert A bad thing to sharpen Tha water's dgft. THE HAIR. Hem Garieaa Facte la Relatlea te Oar Hlraate Appeadaae-BaJdaeat. It has sometimes been wondered where all the false hair oomes from with whioh the deficiencies of the natu ral supply are eked out. Foreign coun tries furnish the bulk of the material for the Amerioan market, as there are few people here who, whether from in clination or necessity, dispose of their locks tor money, Jjight hair oomes from Germany, while Brittuny and the south of France supply the black J and it is a curious sight to see the yonDg peasant girls being sheared like sheep by men as well as women. The univer sal custom of wearing caps which com pletely conceal their abundant locks, doubtless accounts for the readiness of the French peasant girls to sell for a song the fit est ornament of their sex. Now and then some story gets into print, abont the dangers of wearing false hair, and the aocounts of insects which have been said to inhabit it are by no means attractive reading. But these stories are, as a rule, either inven tions or exaggerations, for in every re pntable hair store there is a guarantee of cleanliness which any eye can be sat isfied of. There are, no doubt, un pleasant associations connected with what is known in the trade as "grave yard hair," that is, the hair which is taken from a person's head after death ; but this kind being brittle and deficient in the qualities necessary for daily use, is probably only found in cheap quar ters. Very ourious, as showing the connection between the emotions and the hair, are those instances in which terror or some great mental distmbance has suddenly blanched it. Marie An toinette's experience in having her had become gray the night preceding her execution is sufficiently familiar. An other example, referred to by Dr, Wyuter as coming under his own obser vation, was that of a soldier who feigned rheumatism, and lingered in a hospital for three months, to escape military ser vice. This anxiety to keep up the de ception caused his hair to turn gray, al though he was quite a young man. These emotional affections of the hair are supposed to be caused by the action of some fluid in the blood upon the pig ments. Patches of white hair are some times, though rarely, found upon new born babes, and it is the absence of pig ment which produces the whiteness so familiar in the Albino. As to the causes of baldness, they are to some extent connected with artificial habits of life. The larger deposit of fat in the female scalp, which allows of a free circulation in the capillaries of the skin, is held by medical authorities to account for the general exemption of women from baldness, as compared with men. The smoothness of a scalp de nuded of its natural covering, shows a denseness of texture in the skin caused by the destruction of the bulk of the hair, and the closure of the follicles in this condition, all remedies are use less. The silk hat so constantly worn by men is probably responsible for muoh of the prevailing baldness, and the fact that this ceases below the place of contact with the head, indicates the mode of operation, the exclusion of air and consequent excessive production of heat. Uoolness of the head is a re quisite for a healthy growth of hair, which is apt to come out in fevers and other morbid states of the system. Noth ing better can be devised for the benefit of the hair than the daily nse of oold water, followed by vigorous rubbing. The use of animal fats is injurious by reason of their heating properties, and a light cleansing and gently stimulating wash is the most which is needed by way of artificial application to promote the health and growth of the hair. The blood, says a medical writer, is the only macassar of the hair, the only oil which can with truth be said to " insinuate its balsamic properties into the pores of the head. The fine network of vessels on which the bulbs of the hair rest is alone capable of maintaing its healthy exist ence. The same writer adds : We do not see why internal preparations should not be tried, and we are not at all certain that gelatine soups and pills mnae of the ashes of bnrnt hair, might not be enectual in baldness, as those in' gredienta would supply to the blood the materials necessary for the production of hirsute growths. Barring the cre mation and restaurant suggestions, which are here unpleasantly connected with hair, it might be worth while for persons who have grown gray in read ing fie Timet, or become bald by not reading it, to test tho soundness oi these bits of wisdom in relation to the subject. Boston Timet, Birds and Hard Winters. The tendency to augnr a hard winter from the arrival of birds which usually winter in countries far north of us, is, we think with the Rev. F. O. Morris, himself a great observer of the habits of birds, generally a mistake. What such arrivals do prove, is not what is going to be so much as what has already happen ed in these northern regions the birds flying before the oold, rather than takiug precautions against it before they feel it. No doubt this may imply a severe winter for us, as well as for these north erly regions, especially if northerly winds prevail, as they are very apt to do when there is unusual cold, and, therfore, an unusually dense atmos phere to the north of us, whioh rushes in on the rarer atmosphere of our more humid climate. But that is only Baying that the birds fly from weather which is not likely to extend itself to us, not that they anticipate severe weather oeiore they feel it. When robins come into onr houses we do not take it as proving that a long frost is coming, but only that a hard frost is already there; and we snsnect that the northerly birds fly south for precisely the same reasons for which the robins enter onr houses when they find the cold insupportable out of doors.- LiOnaon spectator. An Artificial Earthquake. Speaking of an explosion of giant powder, by whioh several persona were killed, a San Francisco paper Bays : It is worthy of note, in a scientific noint of view, that the stroke of a hammer driving a nail in a piece of wood, whioh exploded the giant powder works, also shook a oity. There is no part of San Francisco in which the concussion was not felt, thoogu the works were located five miles from the center of population, It is reported that the shook was noticed at San Jose, fifty miles off. The gener al effects were precisely similar to those produced by an earthquake. The di rection of the motion was not the same in all plaoes. Topographical elevations may account for deflections, but the general movement was north and south. Here we have a foroe external to tho earth produoing phenomena precisely similar to those supposed to emanate from the interior. The coincidence, to say the least, is very remarkable. No one accustomed to earthquakes ex periecoing the shook of Wednesday would have set it down to anything else bat an internal oonvuliionv FOR THE FAIR SEX Pashm Nates. Coiffures tend to compactness, and are worn lower in the back. Braids or short curls down the back are worn with dressy evening ooiffares. Small bouffant draperies or paniers are arranged back of the waistcoat on all dressy Parisian toilets. Oriental silks, Persian and Egyptian silks, satins, velvets, brocades and cor duroys are all nsed for waistcoats. Very small figures, checks and stripes on white grounds, are the features in the new spring calicoes and percales. "Pekin," the name given to velvets, silks, and woolens having alternate dull and lustrous stripes, is all the rage at Paris. A double cape of heavy silk chenille, with tinsel thread twisted in the same, is the latest novelty for the neck in place of a soarf . The long waistooats worn with dressy toilets are separate garments, and may be worn with several different kinds of coats and skirts. White satin dresses of creamy or leaden tint are worn by elderly ladies for fall dress, with full trimmings of creamy old point laces. Birds of paradise, butterflies, and in sects of all sorts in the form of gold figures and Impegan feather ornaments are worn in the hair for full dress. The belted Josephine corsage, the corsot basque, and the corsage with long points back and front are all worn for evening, toilets with low, square necks. For street wear, under all oiroum- stanoes, a very simple dress, although it be a little shabby, it is preieraoie 10 one more elaborately arapea ana trimmed that has lost its freshness. All morning toilets for the street should be short and very dark or black, The materials may be vigogne, cash mere, camel's hair, and all woolen goods, but thw trimmings may be of silk. The fancy of the moment in short costumes in a skirt and jacket of seal- brown cloth, the wrap also of the same in English coat shape, trimmed with a collar, revers, cuffs and pocket straps of fur seal. The newest hats for young girls in their teens are of felt, high crowned, with square tops, trimmed with three rows of inch-wide ribbon in bands placed quite far apart around the crown. The brims roll in Derby shape. Other felt hats have a soarf of brown or navy blue satin with white polka dots. Gravat bows have superseded the cravats that pass around the neck; if the latter are used, they are placed in side the dress, instead of concealing the neat collar of the dress, and only the cravat bow is seen. White muslin cravat bows are preferred for plain suits in the morning and for dressy af ternoon wear. When colored cravats are chosen, they are folded like gen tlemen's scarfs to fit in the revers col lar of a coat, or else they are as narrow as the lawn neck-ties worn in full dress; the latter are made of foulard, and em broidered on each end. News aad Notes Tor Women. Gerster, the opera singer, has $600 a week. Minnie Hank has $200. A New York jeweler exhibits a Ohinese empress' robe, broidered in gold. A New York lady has nineteen cats. collected with reference to their delicate shades and tones of color. Professor Billroth, of Vienna, has fonnded a society for the education of nurses for wounded soldiers. In the retail dry-goods stores of Berlin only yonng girls are employed behind the counters to display and sell goods. After a long and severe examination a Viennese lady has been admitted by the university of Zurich to the degree of doctor of philosophy. Bouquets of dried flowers and grasses are sold in .England for interior decora tion, just as they are in America. The flowers are dried in warm sand. A Florida woman recently chopped off the hoad of a great eagle that had become entangled in a honeysuckle vine while trying to kill her chickens. At an English wedding, which took place not long ago, the bridesmaids wore three bands of silver braid around their heads, with a lily at the side. A key was all the present that a New York bride received from the bride groom's parents, but it opened the door of a splendid house, and the young lady did not complain. Opera scarfs three yards long and more than half a yard wide are now popular in Paris for winding aronnd the hair and throat. The newest opera cloaks, enveloping the whole person, are of thick, soft camel's hair, with a hood. The following extract is from an ac count of the reoent visit of the Marquis of Lome and the Princess Louise to Niagara Falls: The ladies all appeared at dinner in full dress. Her royal high ness wore a black silk dress, with court train, the only trimming being crape. Upon her neck was a necklace of Whitby jet beads, three strands, and diamond cut. Her hair was arranged in plain bands, with jet ornaments, and she looked lovely. The other ladies were also in court costumes, and the gentle men were in full dress. A Memorable Street In Paris. It is pleasant to learn, after the topsy tnrvy game to which Paris has been subjected in the past thirty years, that at least one old street, the Rue de l'Arbre, in the midst of the capital, and in the most magnificently transformed quarter, remains intact, witn its verier able mansions and traditions of the sev enteenth century. On this site during 1,200 years strange and terrible soenes have been enacted. At the point where tne Hue de Ittvoli cuts it, iSrnnenaut, queen of France, was, at the age of eighty, torn asunder by horses in 612, In 1505 a great outbreak took place on the same spot because the cure of St Germain l'Auxerrois refused to perform the funeral servioe of a merchant's wife until be bad ascertained whether she had left any money to the church. At the epoch of the Fronde this street was the soene of frequent outbreaks. It was there that Cardinal De Betz, passing through it one evening in 1648, was threatened by a roaster brandishing long spit. The cardinal had not the wildest idea who his enemy was, but had the gumption to say, Villain, if your poor father oonld only see yon now I" when the fellow, imagining that he was a friend of his family, implored Eardon. In the last house on the right and side, abutting on the Bae de Saint Honore, lived in 1672 Francis liarnom, chief barber to Louis XIV. At No. 62. conspicuous by its ourious looksmithing and sculptured balcony, uvea Trudon. butler to Louis XV. In 1769 there were three famous cafet in the street. frequented by learned men and artists of various kinds, and finally No. 8 is Sointed out as the famous quarters of fousquetairesD'Artagnan k Go., whom Dumas has made familiar to every school-boy. ' JORDAN ASD THE DEAD SEA. The Hat-red and Famaias Waters of Pales tier. The following extract is from " Syrian Sunshine, " by T. G. Appleton: The Nile is a sacred river, and the Tiber is famous, but the most snored and most famous river of the world is the Jordan. From the beginning to the end, it has that mystical character which befits suoh lofty pretensions; its life is the most vivid and complete, and its death the most sudden and mysterious that can be imagined. It is torrential, and it leaves the banks of the Hermon and the many fountains of its tributaries with an eager precipitation, as if it bore a mission. From its greatest height, some hundred feet above the sea level, it leaps downward till it disappears in the Dead sea some thirteen hundred feet below it. It hides itself among oleander.tamarisk and willow, and many an unfamiliar Oriental tree, as if wish ing to keep from profane eyes the secret of its errand. It does not stop long to overflow its banks and fertilize the val ley, for it has a purpose too mystical to waste itself even upon acts of benevo lence. It is only willing to beoome a living barrier between the desert tribes and the favored nation which loved it. No boat lives on its bosom. No fisher men dwell by its margin; but it moves, one headlong column of saored waters from its cradle of snow and cloud, high in the heaven, till it dies in a fatal lake marked by the finger of God, and for ever a subject for man's ouriosity and reverence. It would seem a thing apart and not to be confounded with vulgar waters, which lose their personality in the bosom of the mighty sea, but exhaling to heaven like some holy messenger who perished in the fulfillment of bis duty. Its birth and its death alike separate it from its sister rivers of earth, and only the voiceless mounds of perished and nameless cities, tribes stationary as if bidden to halt by some supreme destiny of the past,or the awed and questioning stranger from the many Christian lands whose baptism drew its authority from the sprinkling of its waters, are seen upon its banks. And then we wandered through many whispering reeds, through a kind of jungle where sterility and the river had fought for mastery, and which showed traces of both; a tangle of bushes as it were, fighting their way up, and great spaces oi barrenness which the Bummer would scorch to lifelessness. And at last the Dead sea. Though we know that it is of volcanic origin. and fed by mines of salt, the imagina tion now, as ever, is content to see in it a thing accursed. There was a fresh breeze; and a reluotant lift and heavy tumble cf its tiny breakers made them unlike other waves, bnt rather like those of Dante's Infernal sea. There was a breath heavy with doom in the air, and we were fortunate it was not more stifling. Was it the breath of those lost or tortured there ? And be neath that saline pheet, did we not see, as in the picture of Delacroix, the ago nizing and twisted figures of the con demned ? we did not bathe in the Dead sea. Others have done so, and report of its buoyancy the same tales that are told of our own Halt lake. There is a whimsi cal coincidence in the geographical re lation of the Dead sea and the home of the earlier prophets, and Mr. Brigham loung s personal continuation of the old dispensation, with a private Dead sea of his own, in his immediate neigh' borhood. The poorest swimmer keeps his head above water; and persons have said to me that their legs seemed to fly up from under them. All speak of its waters as refreshing after the great heat of that tropical valley. Birds are said never to fly over it, which is the merest superstition, for they are really often seen to do bo. This lake certainly has a brand upon it, as of divine ven geance. The waters are heavy with sin. the shores around blessed, and the very site of destroyed cities upon its banks unknown. And here are still seen the apples of Sodom, smooth and pretty to the eye and touch, of a pale yellow, like a small orange, but within, as Josephua says, still retaining the ashes of Sodom in living perpetuity of the divine punishment. They are like lit tle oranges to the eye and touch, but when pressed are like oak apples, and explode like these, a pun of air leaving the shell hollow, with only a slender pouch holding fine filaments like silk, which the Arabs use as matches for their gnns. Patience. Since the days of tbe sorely afflicted Job, patience baa been a virtue well worthy to be practiced by all. It is tbe patient plodder that acquires greatness rather than the giant intellect. The greatest inventors of this or any other age, have only beoome so by patient investigation and trial. The astronomer must nave patience as nis eyes wanaer among the countless multitude of stars that gem the canopy of the heavens. He can not learn the names of even the sen tinels upon the outskirts in a single night. So with the scholar. He can not advanoe through that which has cost others vears of study in a single day, Sir Isaac Newton thougnt long ana well on tbe subiect of gravitation. Franklin studied deeply into the causes that produce the lightning. The finest writers have advanced step by step through the various stages of composi tion until tbey have attained to superi ority, xnen let every one De patient. whether in sickness or in health, ana. our word for it, you will feel better for tne ettort. Ths National UaaiDlnlat. DvsDeDaiA ia the national complaint. Al most every other man or woman yon meet has it. and tbe result it that the number of DBendo remedies for it U ai numerous as Pharaoh's boat. Thar are for tbe most part worthiest. There is, however, a searching eradioant of thia distressing and obdurate malady i one whose genuine merits long since raised it to a foremost place among the staple medicines of Amerioa. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters extir pates dyspepsia with greater eertainty and promptitude than any known remedy, ant is a most genial in vigor ant, appetizer and aid to Koretion. These are not empty assertions, aa thousands of onr oonntrvmen and women who have experienced its effects are aware, bnt are backed up by irrefragable proofs repeatedly lata oerore the puDiio. Tne witters also pro mote a regular habit of body and give healthful stimulus to tne nnnary organs. Lack of ladHiaeut causes f ullv flftv per cent, of all business men to fail, earlier or later. Do not an equal proportion of phyaioians fail to euro i mm tne same cause r At tne urana m- . . 1 1 .1 o . n I -t TI.,1 I H..A.-1- V V T U14 luurusie wuisi, flUUUU. jk Pieroe, through the skill attained by his sev eral specialists, eaoh having devoted years to a special department of medical science, is able to cure a large per cent, of oases hitherto considered inonrable. Many physicians, in view of the superior advantages of this model sanitarium, bring there stubborn, obacure, complicated and furgioal eases for examina tion, operation and treatment Full pariiou lars friven in tha PeoDle'a Common hansa Med ical Adviser aa illustrated work of over 900 pages. Price, postpaid, 1.80. Address tbe author, B, v. Pieree, M, D., Buffalo. N. V. His Coal Stove. . Coming down on the oar the other morning they got to talking about their ooal stoves and one man said : " Well, I don't want to brag, bnt t think I've got the boss stove. Ho far this winter I have burned but three tons of ooal and the stove has kept three rooms warm. " Yon must have a poor stove," re marked the second. " I have burned but two tons of ooal yet, and my stove heats parlor, dining-room, two bed rooms and a hall." " Well, when yon come to stoves," quietly remarked the third, ' I claim to have the best ooal stove iu Detroit. I have burned but a ton and a half of ooal bo far, and we hnto to keep all the dampers shut and a back dcor open all tne time." Some men looked ont of the windows and some down at the straw, and no one seemed to doubt any of the assertions. At length a heavy sigh was heard from the rear end of the car and a man arose and said : " Gentlemen, there goes a fire alarm. It strikes the box in front of my house I have no doubt that my residence is at this moment in flames and the lives of my family in peril. .It is all owing to my coal stove. I set up the stove last November and put in one peck of coal. Every room has been so hot ever since that the base boards have warped off, and finally we had to move down into the basement. This morning the water in all tho pipes in the bouse was boiling, the shingles on the roof hot, and I just hired four men to form a snow bank aronnd the stove. Too late alas, too late I That stove has accomplished its fiendish purpose and I no longer have a home. It may not, however, be too lato to save the baby. Good-bye, gentle men I He opened the door and got off the car, and not a passenger spone again for four blocks. Detroit tree rres. Seuling-wax was firBt made in Europe by the Portuguese, who leal ned the East ern method in their Bengal settlements. Terribly exhausting' are the niabt sweats which acoompanv oonsnmDtlon. But thev. as well as the paroxysms of coughing, are Inva riably broken up by Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for tne Liangs, wnion conquers tbe deadly malady, as well as bronchitis, tmenmnnia. DlenriHv. asthma, diphtheria, and all other affeotions of tbe throat, Inngs and chest. It saves thousands from untimely graves, and is invaluable in ret cning children from tbe croup, whooping oougn ana qainzy. it is soia dj an druggists. Bore throat, eough, oold,and similar troubles, if suffered to progress, result in serious pul monary affections, oftentimes incurable. Brown's Bronchial Troches " reach directly tbe seat of the disease, and give almost In stant relief. For ud wards of thirtv vears Mrs. WINSLOW'h BOUTHINU BUttUr Has been used forohUdren with never failing suocess. It corrects acidity of the stomaoh, relieves wind oolio, regulates tne bowels, cures dysentery ana marrnoea, whether arising from teething or other oauses. an old and well-tried remedy. 25 ots. a bottle. OHEYV The Celebrated "Matohuhs" Wood Tag Plug Tobaooo. Taa PioHsxa Tobaooo Domain, New xork, Boston, and Ohioago Some of the new stvles of Mason & Hamlin Cabinet Organs introduce a style of flnifb witn embossed eold bronze ornamentation. ty a new process ; at once tbe most elegant and cnaste nDlan yet employed on sucn instruments. rnoes are very low tor sucn worumansniD' Oinw Jefhenn'e Rwt Hvfot Nmot Tnhmv, HOMES NEAR IN TUB WEST. A choice from over 1.000.00ft aeres f own Innde.dus went from Chios ao, at frum 6 to taH pel aore, in farm lots, and on easy terms. Low freight and ready mar kets. No wilderness no sane no Indians. Lsnd exploring tiokets from Chicsffo, free tt burera. rr Alans, rampmets sna rail information appir to IltWA HAII.HOAlt I.ANIt I'tllll'ANV. Cedar Ripids, Iowa, or 1)2 Randolph Ktreet. Ohieairo. KIIR TKN IMII.l.tUN I'SKIl wewillin'wrta seven-line adveit'sement one wrek in a liit of 21 weekly newsDsoer. or four lines in a different list of 337 papers, or tf-n lines two we ks in a choice of either of four separate and distinot lists oontaiDins fr m 70 to luu papers eaoh, or four tines one week in all four of the small lists, oi cne line one week in all sil lists oombinetl, being mwe than l,Ou psners. We also hsveli.Dof osDMrs rr ntites throusnout tne uni ted Htates and tlansdo. Send for oar liu-pege pampnlet. Address OKO. f. KUWKLL ft I'O., 1U spruce Bt..N. V. Mason & Hamlin Cabinet Ureans. Btm mnraui br.t bj HUSH KMT HONORNwAT ALL WORLD 8 EXPOSITION 8 FOR TWKLVK YEARS; VII.: at r"AKI, 1W7: VlIHKA, 1878: KiIU(IO, W!b; PHILADFI.PHIA.lUVri : PARIS. 178: and uRlKD hWKDISB Oold Mkdai. 1H7H. Onlv Amerioan Organs ever awarded highest honors at an? such. 8otd for cash or insta i me'ira. iLLDHTBiTEn UATALonuEB sna uiron. isrs with new styles and pnoes, tent free. MASON A nan j. in uiiu&n ihj., tsoston. new ora.or unicaco If von art) sii.fer.riaT from indiarettion or ft vmk tonv ach, ue RidrV Food. It oan ba used with or without milK WUULK1UH A UU. OP V6TJ I8D6I, THE CDRSE OF RUM . Tb moat Btarttinn description of lb tof ble affects of ram ever written. KmbrrtcinK alto tha lua-work and aptieobttaof Francih Mukpht, Dr. Resnolds and their co iaiiorwr-. iaa great bi.uk ana nt:n hihhondh il Eeus at riirat. huu pageti. trice wv.oi1. die ten A (lil run. tl. H. lallllllMI'l'.KII AT. 1 il . New Voriia TKl'TH IH MIKIITYl Pri'laiaul UaiiiBM, Ike a-aat i--ui Fsr ai.4 Witart. will Cut BO (' w.i!, tLi-r e-, aiht, eit.r uf as f i: future h -.there1 arifa, iei ri nana. face laaa a.tr io ar il LHtL ail !la Asia oT n.arr.e.a. oie. Prrf. laAliTiyrZ. P-astea MKF! PA1NLKSS. Only KuooeSbful Raii,aily- ISend lor F.iper cn Opiun Kiting, its uonaequanoaa ana uare, lB. L. MKKKKR. La Pobte. Imd Boi475. CORRUGATED IRON Butlititiifft. Itmifas. MiuttprM. Uoori. iron Mnttiifp,, Hviiainfi, nrnirr, ck 100,000f Men and women oat oi empiny inent oan make fiom 92 to f U ft lr. a.t-.'.a it Strike while the iron ia hot. Kn 4 aone-ofnt at amp inr Darliculara r I A IM I llS higbat honore-Matbuibefc'Bacitle j for aqnaree tlnest npriKQta in tbe America over 12,000 in nt regular) j incorporated V-a. ansa, aaa es H I t 0 1H4IHJ IHOIOTI DriUHtf MrgUo 1'ii.nna eent on trul WPtfe catalogue free. Mendelssohn Piano Co., 21 K. ItVb l.. Nt-w Yorfc. Asents. Read Tms we will pajr Aftcnu a salary oi aiw per montn ana 1 expense, or allow a large commiaaion to aell oar nej ; ana wonaeriui inention. hi mean rat tr ay. Dr. CRAIG'S KIDNEY CURE. failed in any disease of the Kidneys in J he Dust three ' 'n.untij mwaihh ror .11 iv inner ulimm.. ns. never years fend for pamphlet, ami aoaress .art It'll I.. 4rf I'l. mill I -" l r.. r. . "1311.1: Vll It WM rW. A perfect machine X for SI 50. r.t-.aua for mtr p,ii ana no.c . -.r-.w. bend for cl'cuUr. addrefs A. II- ABBOTT, AllrlRn. :ll b. t.n l! wrv r.i. H ftOCC Bond ct.. lor a Heej Horee Book.' tramavLanll diHM aa. b aa 36 enirravinct , and B. J. Kendall. M. I t Hnoahnrgh taila,Ve $19 to S10VJ lnrented m Wail bt. blocks makaa fortonea erery montn. nooi mdi frea MitJiAimnBT ATMrvthinaT. ., riiiT)avr, - wan w., " t MMfjaBBaaaaBnaBBwaB, sure remT 1 Dfrrw I MUUtH d rHO 1 ILLCO-bymalL BtoweUACa. nieni rn Prioea&ots.ao 1U1UO. VOUNG MEN nnnth Mverv eraduala a Learn Telecrapfay and earn BlAOto a I (Ml a guaranteed a paying aiU netioB. Address R. Valentine. Mansgw Jsnesn lie, wis. XtTrt FA ' .With Mtenoil IratnU. Whet easts K I IT ots. sells rapidly for ftO ots. Oatalogua yre AJA V S m- UPKNrtB.I I 8 Waah'nBt.Boston.H... p n rIIPO A All ohronio and sappoaed inourabia Van U6 vui i.w dtseasea rrool 01 is mailea Tree. Address Da. FOOTER iJO Las mg ton Ave.. NawYork .t M a DAT te AgenU oenvaeetng for tea rtrela a. r Vlajtar. Terms ana vtolui. in.. Address ev p. O. VIUHKBY. Aagnsta, Msina QCA A iflONTH-Arat Wanted-at) aeel IdSU as ling artioiea in ins iwonu: un. ui.r( M"W Srlrlriu JAY BRONrlON. Detroit. Miob. PAHTlriW having flloeey tol.paa can secure higll KJraTjrSKl, WaTE wTTton utlBo CiTTTI K- f vu.'rs euveruee RKCi ment ia U.t week's paper. lrAUll'ANU rABiTI. puuBMia nip rtM, DJ in a a wi l J II a ws 1 ill I), K, ttUARAUAA, Alf, aillUH, HO. A. mm a Month and upensea guars S7 7 Outht free. BlUW A Co. .A CUt STS. M.1HI. . wi T XJ PAID. Btampfi roircjlw. Prl. John 8ALAK I son.tta UtayetteAv. BruotUn.M Y. IT. jtnts sample. H euta. i iiatunr, reseea g. OPIUM US thh BEST, m 2 RAPONIFIEIg Is the OU Rellakl (JHitnu4 Lye FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. TH re .linn. iMMuaHu tuk eaa. fee a k tmm W..a est aad Tellel Boep aatcklr. it it full wmiamr akb armmirtr. W ..W-. I. SAAdeJ aril. flM...il.... . IsrwhiehU edulteretad with salt aa4 Mia, aad eWl ma rm no war. amo mwr raw SaponifieR mass by na Vuaajjlyasia Salt Uaaafg Co., TEAS! nana! oost. Best plan evr offered to Ulob Agents snri lre borers. ALL KXPKK88 OUAROKE New terms FRKB. TheGreatAmerican Tea Company, B I and 33 VsHev Street. New York. P. O. Box etfSft. WARNER BRO'S CORSETS rTftMl tlif lMfCiirnt MffUlHt Hi.' n'ffDl PA II IS KXl'OHITION, , Kit nil a i-it-ri. .it , .inti-lltit' Ti 'tr FIjEXIBIjK iiipc orset l 'tl IhiIICsI I t WlktkKTKB liul toliri ajK il.iwn nv-p ti- litp. Prtrt- Th-lr WROVEO. HEALTH CORSET i. ami llxk'W..'','1,,l,, " Kill'. rrKfi'N-.i.'n. vr ..In livTri I ' iiliu ritrf'imf.. AKNKR BIM)S., ?;.I C.tiJy, K. T. CURED FliEE ! An Infallible and unnxctlled ramadr fct n rrn.nl rd ITS Fit. Kpll-iy or FtUMn Mlrttnesii I pa to neci ,, ipwo; ww A rw-ftotce" of n renowned pctno ma ailnahlaa iVaaaitlM Anil any offerer enainn m ! r. W, ana nsprJM uamai Pb. 11. G. ROOT. I 83 Pearl Street .JgewY or h ...Ti-h. KilvlllV l.n lior.sJiiMiu. line-.., Itiirnhllltr it ln-B!ne. l'ne.iinl-d MO ICS K mm-.. I'lW're. fmnnn. Mil.. VIRGINIA FARM FOB SALE. u. ...tuiu ! knautf fin . 4 milna firm ta7.I.l - .ruill narltnt nn Norfolk A PRttirhtiortr K. R . Hi raW. Iroru Pa'.f rsburc. 4(1 Irora Riohmirod ; s ltivated. ArttiDttd to terni-la, (r-M-. Tahncco, Cotton. Peanut. Ao. P-rt bifcbly lrnj-o-d yo m Apple jrtQ&in l-i KWI ii-r.i.. rvin, ilesnaa An Marl tin A Mitnk ahiindaVuL Balance In Oak, Ash Oyitrus and Pin. Well wat- red, h-alti ful ; dwAllinaT con, modioli. nH.rly tew : outhuildinur and tnnnt hrtuuMi, o rn a n woe mi i, rovu wamr i"-w w. Jk hi.ma l!an rtn aitvidatfl. Ai1lriM. vary mporuuii. uni mn Pensioners, zizirtisvsz II ruaninn Minimal hntnf fiT rimtttd Will D rOUnd thousand. OI meritonona o'limaou win twj uruiniw (Ton. tbe roils and great njjft.e done. For fall par tiouiara tend for copy of Tbb Nation At Tbibonk, an iLi.ra tiantr .N,nd tnonthlv. Mod devoted to It) it)tr. ei-ta of soldiers and .ailora, and their heirs. Contain all MKW BOUNTY and PEN HI ON LiWB. BDODIU U ID the ban! of every B' ldier. Terms, AO cents per fear. bpeeiiil inductfiueniB to cmo. oufcimon cut ih-b ' . niiiU'iD U I UUIIM a Itfl Address at once. Washinstnn, D !. CANADIAN GROWN nTTfiTfTF fi. A "RUTIN PRAR VUVIUJJ UCIJ.WXU.1 " J " I All the vMviatiM- trnn to nme Anrl flnreftiUv hand pieke.1. Henri (or W.uijle and frios Lists (wlueb era marked down very low), to HOHEKT EVANH, Heed Slcrolinnt ami Grower, ltiiiilltoii, mil uno. mnntin. N. B All Psaa delivered across the border at ptieas quntert in lis. a. qurtten in lis. a. RELIEF Felt at "toe after l. 111 HT'N KFIIKII1. Rriirhs llmASse. Kidcev. Blad' der md Urinary Uiseasee. Dia- betes. Gravel and Dropsy are I5 cured or mini's urmeny. Pains in the Bsok. Hide or Loins, i Disturbed bleep, loss of Appe t tite, General Debility and all nipaimea of Lh . Kidneys. Blad der and Urinary Orftans are cured by llunl'e Urine, dr. Pbysicinns ru-esorilie llunl'e Kerned. Rend tor namvililet to WM. K. CLARKR, Providence. K. I. HOLIES III THE WEST Excursions to Lincoln. Nebraska, al .n. V wii anil MaiiV Kflarlnntl tlaA Third TueMtleiv III every Month un'il leoembr. Kxoor .ion fHoVJo leav" NEW VOKK, TIJKKIIA V, February 1. '7U. rnr sdbui nmi rr.iii Italra. Past trains and Hrst-olaas aoeommodationa fuaranteed. ror desoriptlve jana uircuiar., iu mui ion about Tickets, etc., send address on Postal Uerd to flilN) itiiHiitE.an nrsn"HT. 'vVsL5i L0.0.F. K. of P. L 0. Qt T. X. ofH. 0(1 (Mil A.O.U.W. U. d Men, ltlrfa, and all other Bocletlee l made to ordi-r bv M.C. I.llley ot Co., CrfuaieM, riAio. s.ud fos Mflre JviMfa. Military ana Firemen's Goods, Banners at TUge UC0ESSFUL FOLKS. Matthew Hale Smith's new book. 1000 Prominent Persona men and women analyzed Mtrrl PortrtUie of At TEW ART. SiTn NRTT. Era. sensation of the season. Now ia the time for rraiTC to seoore territory. Address for HtltH I a igrncr eireulara and terms, iiivuii lii iiTHi.iMii i nii :o.. Ilurtford. I'ob.i "Th4 Ohoiokst kooi in tub WORLD, A. B. V. Crashed White Wheat. B. V. Oatmeal. A. B. V. Barley Peed, A. B. I'. Malar. Obtained four medals for superiority, and diptema for oontinued aupenonty. I ne pureat rooa ior enuuree mv,ji mA,m ail hmh.. eo;lile .od ItnDuntiee removed. Oan be prepared for table in hfreen minutea. ror sal or urooers. an i a. e. w. uwu. . THB CKRKAL8 HANUVAtriUHinu UU., 1 8 Oolleqk Puce, Nrw Yobk. "Fruit r Gods." (DIOSPYKO KAKI) THB JAPAN PKR8IMMON. Ws offer oboioe yatietiea of thia moat retnarkabla Dew frnit. imported direot from Japan Irontlad Ap. Blea, bnarpittt Stedltng Btratvi erry, tjr99 Heepberry. omplete assortment of Fruit, Ornamental Treea and Bhrubs, Roses, Flower and Plant. JVuMlrtsa, Bend for new ealaiof a: BA1RO A TUTl'LH, Atenu, jcoomiKjjion rvuraery, jtoowiiayiow, jii. P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE Urg doubl-oolamn paeti, and u th must oomplot It OODLssinB HTV rlnas hitlAnnAl nimiinM Muu nr pfoimen putM ana biwa icrmi to Ainu, Addr National Fublihuino Uo.. PhilAdelpbi. Pa. NEWSPAPERS and MAGAZINES at club rates. Time, trouble and expense saved by ana. scribing through the Rocky Mouatain Bubeorlscion asenpr, whioh tarnishes any paper (except iooal) poe hahed in the United Htates. Muaieal Instruments, Sew. S flachinea of all kinda, Ohromoa, Framea. rlewina Maohine Needles and Attachments at reduced prioee. I will aiao furnish Books of all kinda at lowest pnoee. Rocky Mountain Stereoscopic Views a specialty. Don't fail to write at onoe tor oar eireulara. inm. meae Dig money. Adaresa JAUiCri TORKH.N8. Eveoe,Oolo. MEN and WOMEN waatadi ivsrywasre fur til. .IU1..I . . A. . . . u . iHl.ilik.. I J U li. . hju. u(mmu wnurly n.w. S.npln s aeaacu. WIUEaAO, OPIUM tin all eV Phltriliaeaee TSMU. anas cur 1, Rrioe.. UO Bnt 1. I townte.'Ur.FJ jt.alarsa.4umcf ,Mlsk. IS ,!.w Slake IS. . tfmm t ek KCMteili, as. Leais. au A1B ILAJ J The Bold Snrieel Operation f Ulhotomf (remova br ths kntf. of arinair Stones from ths Blador)wa uooMifullr porformwl brDr. Kennedy noon Sinwoa P. Tistssl.now erosidmit net Saoewtlos, Ulster Co. H. T. The patlsnt mads a rapid reooreir. U wound Ueidant to ths operation haTtnir olosod on lh 18th day. In this aaaa, as In all othara of hke bariotr. Dr. Ken- nrdra-Ta tho FAVORITE, bmsui of tha dlaaase, and In OTary Initance with permit neosas. FAVUKli naainui " "" Teaetable altaiatlraa in tha form of a S rop. It is pkaaant to the teato, a laptod to both aoaas and all aaaa, and while it Is aimoat a tpaoiBo In Kidney and Bladder eomplaints, it is no leas efaoaoions in pnrltjlna; ths Blood, thoa saline Scrotals and kindred diseaeea- It is vary affeetira in affordins aimoat Immediate relief of all Liver Oompl.lnts and Constipation of the Bowels. well as those diseases and weaknesses peculiar te Femalea, aSoratoa treat protection from attacks that orismata inohaneof life, of seasons and of ellmat. Ask your Dntliit for It. Bat avoid mistakes byre memberlD the name, FAVORITB BBMEDT. an Prloe, which is only One Dollar a Bottle. Gentle Women Who want glony. luxuriant and warv tresses of abundant, beautiful Hair must nse LYON'S KATUAIRON. XMi elegant, cheap article always makes the Hair prow freely and fast, keeps it from falling ont, arrests ana cures gray ness, remotes dandruff and itching, makes the Hair strong, giving it a curling tendency ana keeping 11 id any desired position. Beau tiful, healthy Hair is the sure result of using Kathairon. .87a.MUSIO.870, Mason's Pianoforte Technics ! Br WM. MABOIf and W. 8. B. MATHSWS. Price MS. AO. The moss rilatineutshed aDrjearanco for a aoaaber of veara amona bofke containtnf maiertal for practice. Uontalns Buu Tetnnloal Kxeroteee that oan na expanded to many th uaanda. Alno admirable explana. ttocs and treatises on Automatic Piaviua;. It shoald be understood that is te not a book fur bea-ionero, but one to be nsed after, or in connection with snob excellent tnetrnct. ra aa BltJll A KltKUN'M NKW METIU UU (Vif.XiJ). HIANIirti tv llilAULl'n stn. F.iIMHRM(3 ii.iLortbeNKW MM.I.AIMf i:UMhUtATUUI Olatl'llUU MUSICAL RECORD. Popular Weekly Paper. U.00 a rear. CLARKE'S HARMONIC SCHOOL iariUs ORGAN (03.OO) By WM H. OLAfcfCK. A wonderfol'y orisV .ai and r'oi Methid for lea. nine bdth to PLAT and OuMP(SK Vo nn'er.ee and lr.trl"d. a Alfo is aplaa did sGiai Ins rnotion b 'ok for tHe Ulinrob Organ in au or I'ipe). very pitpuiar nooss ur b-wi..u aiel l.aKKl-.'MNKXV .VlK"Hlll HO It KKKI llllsaNt8 611), tb K IFItw"N ItlETHOII rtllt HKEII OltliA!No toa.OO). t,J KJ K"i Kt HOIll, MMt K4HI.DK OrMWAN !2.RO, and HOOT'S M'llOOI. KOU I'Altl.NKT Oil tiANtStf.oO). OLIVER DITSON & CO., Boston. C. 11. DITKON iV I ., Ill dc 843 Bisadwsy, New Yurta. J. E. UITBON Or t'O., Wl . 'keelnnl t., 1'hHntlrl. NOW IS THE TIME. SUBSCRIBE FOR Franfc Leslie's Pnlcatiois 1879 - Krank Leelie'a lilostrated Newspaper k)4 OO Frank Leslis's Ohunney Corner 4 OO Frank Leslie's lllnstrirte Zeitnnc 4 OO Frank Iieelie's Lady's Jonrnal 4 OO Tha New Tork Illustrated Times 4 (10 Prank laa ia's Boys' A Girls' Weekly yj 6(1 Frank Laine's Lady's Magazine y 50 Frank Leslie's Bandar Masasine., ' 3 OO Frank Lea ie's Popular Monthly 3 (Ml Frank Leslie's Pleasant Houra 50 Frank Leslie's Budsat. 1 50 Frank Leslis's O hatter boi 1 OO Frank Leslie's Illoetrated Almanac X5e Frank Laalie's Oomio Almanae. I Or Remit by Monet Order. Draft an New York, or Reele. tared Latter, at oar risk. Be earefa) to address all communications to Frank Leslie's Publishing House, 63, 65 and 67 Park Place, NEW VOKK. THE SMITH QRG&H CO. First Established I Moat Buucessrult THEIR INSTRUMENTS Lave a etunrWH raiue ia all Uie LEADING MARKETS OP THE WORLD I Everywhere reoosnizeil us Ilia FIN'KST IN TOfiK. OVER 80,000 Made and In nse. New Designs constantly. Beat work and lowest prices. - Bend lor a Catalogue. TI 1MB LIGHT M la tha Beat Itarnln Oil Dlude. IT CANNOT EXPLODE As It ataada at Fire Teat el 150. I H. B. RICCS. BOLE MAHUFAOTURER, 150 Front Street, New York. hkpoth BOSTON D T. ltilla A Go 5i)?jyL'.W' O.rroll A 8oa. o.1.Ai?.,'H-4n,ra" Hao'ey. BALIFiX, H 8.WoodtM BT.OriK.fTbillAC) . ailed by all aetalaaada tare. liVP. BftA Partner In a good p. teem TlTTnlna alaiJLlv.l.",lB f?o.saisBle, Pat-nt A.tlcl. i" aMaiiastara isaiaitavL Jeaa Catnaxt kUslstca.Pa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers