Torktown, One hundred years ago, the eyes of a few States along the Atlantio seaboard , were turned anxiously toward " Little York," a small town situated on the curve of York river just above where its white current mingles with the green waters of Chesapeake bay. There was lx?ing fought the death struggle be tween Great Britain and her revolution ary colonies between the Old and the New. Afl'airs had assumed a gloomy aspec',. The army of the South had been de feated and driven back into Virginia, barely escaping annihilation by forced marches, and by the successful passage of the deep rivers which intersect tbe country through which it retreated; Virginia, the backbone of the Eevolu tion, had been swept by two invasions; and Oornwallis with his victorious army was marching triumphantly through - her borders, trying by every means he could devise to bring hi only opponent, a young French officer, to an engage ment. Had " the boy " proved as reck less as the British commander believed him, the end would have come before De Grasse with his fleet anchored in the Chesapeake. He was no boy in the art . of war, however, and at length Corn , wsllis, weariod of trying to catch him retired to York, and intrenchirg him self, awaited reinforcements from the North. Just at this time, Providence directed the IrencU admiral to the Virginia coast, and the American gen eral, finding himself suddenly possessed of a force such as he had never hoped for in his wildest dreams, and knowing that he could count on the new rein forcements for only a few weeks, deter mined to put his fate to the touch, and win if possible by a croup de main. With this end in view he withdrew from New York, and came down to Jersey as if to get near his ovens, a move which misled the British commander, who knew that a good meal was a sufficient inducement to carry the hungry Ameri can troops farther than that, and did not suspect the ulterior object until he learned that Washington was well on his way to Virginia. In the hist days of September the colonial general ar rived before York and threw the die. Before the end of three weeks the British troops marched out with cased colors, prisoners of war. The details of the surrender included an act of poetic retribution. When General Lincoln had, not long before, surren dered at Charleston to Cornwallis, the British marquis appointed an inferior officer to receive his swoid ; this affront General Washington now properly avenged by appointing General Lincoln to receive Cornwallis' sword. When tbe British prime minister re ceived intelligence of the surrender, he threw up his hands, exclaiming: " My God ! it is all over I" And it was ail over America was free. Scribner. Incidents of the Michigan Forest Fires. The scene was more terrible than anything often known. The wind in creased so as in some places to destroy buildings and actually take peoplo off their feet, and those who saw it describe the rush of the conflagration as a hurri cane of flame, and say that the very air seemed to be on fire. At the village of Bad Ax, where the Huron county build ings were, it began to grow dark in the forenoon from smoke, and in a few hours the pitchy blackness was like that of a close cellar, so that it was impos sible to see a foot. It was known that there were fires three miles south, but there was no thought of danger until suddenly there came a lurid glare, the flame and wind immediately followed, and in thirty minutes fifty-three of the fifty-five buildings in the place were in ashes. The court house was of brick, covered with slate, and there people went for piotection. The building escaped destruction, and those within it were saved, although they suffered badly from heat. There were no lives lost here, but this was exceptional good fortune. Reports from fome places are too horrible to read. Nuni bers of people flying from death were overtaken, and died in the roads, some perished miserably in wells and other places, where they had sought s ifety, and in their flight a few women were taken with the pangs of childbirth. Everywhere it is a sickening story of suffering and of roasting human flesh in every conceivaole way. In some places the heat was almost incredibly intense, and the smoke was everywhere unendurable and caused many deaths by suffocation. The wo"k of destruction was very uneven. Some towns in the district escaped with a loss which seems trifling, while in others apparently no more exposed there aro but a few scat tering buildings left. The same was true of the villages, some strangely es caping, while others were strangely destroyed. In some fields the grass roots and it is said the soil itself are burned so that it is impossible to tell whether the land was plowed or not, while in others near at hand crops of grain are left in the shock untouched. A remarkable thing in the story of the calamity is the presence of mind that was everywhere shown. The people were accustomed to danger from fire, many of them had been through the similar experience of 1872, and there were fewer lives lost than might have been expected. There seems to have been but little panic and few threw their lives away. Nearly all sought to preserve themselves and property intel ligently, to have done about the best that was possible and very much better than could have been expected. Do mestio animals and fowls nearly all per ished, and it is noted that they died in groups each with its kind rarely did cows, horses or chickens die alone, but all sought the companionship of their kind. Great numbers ot birds and in sects took their way to the lake, and, overcome by the smoke no donbt, died and were found floating on the surface. Correspondence Springfield Republican. Spontaneous Forests. A writer in a West Virginia pane combats tbe opinion, held by many ar boriculturists, that an open country is never converted into a lorest through the operation of natural causes, and, as establishing the fact that such change does sometimes occur, brings forward the case of the Shenandoah Valley. When first settled, about 160 Tears ago. it was an open prairie-like region covered with tall grass, on which fed herds of deer, buffalo, elk, etc., and having no timber, except oa ridgy portions of it; but in consequence of its settlement, the annual fires were prevented, and trees sprang np almost as thickly and regularly as H seed nad been planted These forests, having been preserved by the farmers, cover now a large part of nuie surface witn hard wood trees of su perior excellence. These facts would nln fiAAm millet nmt 4nf A tl.A t i ri r tl atkgtreeless character of the prairies of theWest is dne to the annual burning of the grass by the Indians. HOPS. Hop Flrlrtu hi Ontrnl New York-How llopa are timbered. The first crop of hops raised in America was grown by James D. Cool edge in the town of Madison, New York, in 1808, who collected for his hopfield what roots could be spared from single hills in his neighbors' gar dens. With these home-grown hops he supplied local breweries; and in 1816 Mr. Coolodge had progressed so far and so profitably that hv took a crop to New York city for sale, nis neighbor, Solomon Root, in 1817 followed him in the enterprise, and s Id his first crop of two tons for $1,000 per ton. Then every farmer thereabouts that could get a few roots was ambitious to have a hopfield; and from this beginning the surrounding sections in Madison, Oneida and Otsego counties have de veloped the industry, till this section of New York has come to be known as the " Kent of America," because of its flourishing hop gardens. Though hops are now raised in a somewhat fitful manner in other counties of the State, and ia all but three of the States and Territories of the Union, yet the New York counties mentioned have in recent years raised more than all the rest of the United States; and New York may fairly be called the hoivcrowinir State: for in 1870, when tho entire crop of the country was 25,456,000 pounds, sho raised 17,558,081 pounds within her own limits. Hops are used in domestio bread making, by druggists, and by bakers and distillers for yeast; but their chief market is among brewers of beer. Tbe brewers use from one and a quarter to threo pounds of hops to a barrel of beer, according as a " light" or "heavy" beer is sought. En glish brewers "hop" their beor more heavily than American. Every bale of hops will on the average "hop" a hundred barrels of beer. The official records of tho internal revenue department declare that in the year previous to June 1, 1880, 13,347,110 barrels of beer were consumed in the United States. This home consump tion of a beverage requiring annually over 133,000 bales of hops in its manu facture, coupled with the usual demands of the English market, shows that American hop-culture may now be fairly rated among the established industries of the couutry. In late yeais the hop harvest in Con trol New York begins about tho 20th of August, and the problem of harvest ing is one of tho most serious that con fronts the extensive hep-grower. Every available man, woman and child that can pull a cluster of hops from a vine is summoned from the cities and villages surrounding tho hop districts; hence for many of the working classes in the inland cities of New York the annual hop harvest becomes their vacation time, the Saratoga of their recreations, for the aroma rising from the hop is a health-giving tonic to the human sys tem, that for the health-seeker will compare favorably with the tonic waters of our popular American spa. The average price now paid in the section about Waterville, New York, is fifty cents per box of seven bushels, or thirty five cents and board. The National bank of Waterville in 1880 paid out $100,000 to hop-nickers at the end of the hop harvest. One man and wife who picked eleven boxes per day stood at the head in last year's harvest. The average is perhaps three boxes per day for each picker, and' the harvest lasts nearly a month. One diligent old woman of Brookfield, New York, once earned alone $100 in hop harvest, and the name "Old Bundled " still clings to her as a memorial of tho work of her deft Augers. Waterville a village of some two thousand iuhabitants, situated in the extreme southern part of Oneida county is from its position the hop center of Central New York. Thither flock the agents of the great breweries of the country ; here swarm, soon after hop harvest, the hop exporters and commis sion men of the metropolis; and here live a vast number of extensive hop growers farmers whose capital, ac quired in hop-culture, has raised them to a plane in the business where they can both control large farms and act as commission dealers in the commodity. The rush for meals is olways a notable feature of a day ki the hop fields, for hop-hunger is proverbial. What the ozone of the sea air is to the inhabitant of the rural districts, or the bracing at mosphere of the north woods is to the dweller in the metropolis, the appetiz ing hop fields are to many a dyspeptic among the he p-pickers. On the large farms breakfast is often served by candle-light, before the first peep of day. The call to dinner comes at 11 o'clock, and supper at five, and in sumo fields the hungry humanity waits till after dark fcr the evening meal. Bairels of drinking water are constantly kept iu the large fields for the convenience of the pickers. Not only tho catering but the sloep ing arrangements for so many hop pickers are parts of the annual problem of the hop harvest. In one farm vis ited forty-four beds were crowded into tho " women's room," and an equal number in the sleeping-room for the men. The hop sections of Central New Yoik, as the harvest nears its close, look like a limitess Indian encamp ment, as the twenty-foot hop-poles are stacked after picking in a manner closely resembling the frame of an aboriginal wigwam, and it is a singular coincidence that these wigwam-studded hoptields are tbe very grounds which the Oneidas of olden time frequented as they raised their cone-shaped habi tations of those early days. Some hop-growers, instead of using two long poles to every hill of hops, train their hops npon strings, thus needing fewer poles. Fields of hops that have been trained in the " tent method," with strings and the wire strung yards, present a truly beautiful sight when heavily laden with grace fully bowing vines that are luxuriant with fat green cones. String yards are increasing in popularity in the New York hop gardens, and English growers favorably speak of this method as the " American plan." There is in it a con siderable saving of expense in the item of poles, which are imported from (Jan' ada for the Mew xorn growers at an average cost of eleven cents each. From the box to the bale is a critical transition for the hop, and the most sue cessful growers have now learned to pay the best attention to the curing processes. A box-tender, responding to the cry of " Hop sack" from the picker, carefully rolls the green picked hops into sacks, and hop wagons at the close of the day transport them to the curing- houses. The hop sacks, on arrival from the field, are emptied 'into the lattice floored chamber of the hop kiln, and spread to the depth of ten inches. A wood or coal stove in the apartment be low breates a strongly heated current of air, that rises through the hops, drying out the moisture in its passage to the cowl. Fnmes of sulphur are introduced at the some time from below to bleach the hop, that it may better suit the eye of a purchaser, and sulphur d :es not injure the active principle of the hop, except when used in excess. The hop drier cures at night the hops that have been picked during the day. On some farms as many as five kilns are in service contemporaneously during a night. When tho hops have been spread in the drying chambers, the hop-drier lights his fire below, and watches the increasing temperature aid all the ther mometer changes, the draughts below and the escapes above, with the vigilance of an engineor of an express train with hand on the lever, for a "scorch" or a "smudgo" will utterly ruin tho hop sample. In some parts of Germany hops are wholly sun-dried, but such curing Would not do in American hop culture. After being kiln-dried, hops ore spread in the store-rooms, whoro natural currents of air through opposite windows complete the drying process, when the baling begins. A bale of hops is one and a half feet high, two and a half feet broad, and four and a half feet long, weiKhinar from 180 to 200 nnnnda. They aro now commonly pressed into this balo by a lever press, though formerly they were stamped in by two men. The old method necessarily injured somewhat the hops by its clumsy grinding process. Hops may safely bo classed as ono of the most peculiar and interesting of American crops, and withal most tirofit. able, where they can be rained so as to secure large yields, as in Central New lork. 'lheir culture calls for the most intelligent study on the part of Ameri can growers. Hurper'e Weekly. A Wedding In Wjoming', Camping near tho town, we secured our stock aad then went in. Euterinp: the leading store, I introduced myself to Mr. Stiles, ono of the proprietors and tho postmaster. "It is now half-past 2. and at 3 there's to bo a wedding down tho street at Jonas Burton's. Old Jonas is a rough old coon that wo elected justice of the peace about a month ago, and, as this will behis first attempt at marriage. I think we will see some fun. Come and go down with me." Ve went to the old squire s cabin. Wo found him poring over a large vol ume of the statutes of Wyoming, sweat ing like a horse and looking terribly anxious. After greetincr us he said: " Stiles, the galoots thet got up these 'yer laws hadn't gumption enough to last 'em over night. I've run through the blamed book a half a dozen times, an can't find a dod blasted word about metermony, or how tho hitchin' pro cess is proceeded with. I've just got ter put the clamps on this couple, hit or miss.an' ef I don't yoke 'em up legal I can't help it." " Oh, said btiles, "just do the best you can. Any kind of a ceremony will do in this country, for people '11 never question the legality of the thing. I'll post you as well as I can." Stiles then explained to him about how he should proceed, and the old man finally thought he could worry through in tolerable shape. Ere long the couple oppeare.di followed by a crowd of the citizens of the camp. The candidates stood up before the 'squire, who began: " Feller citizens, this yar man an this 'yar woman have appeared before the court to be hitched in tho legal bands of wedlock. If any galoot in the mob knows of anythingthat mout block the game ef tuk to a higher court let him now toot his bazoo or else keep his jaw to himself now and forevermore. All in favor o' me perceedin' as orthor ized by the law, say ' I.' " Everybody said " I. "Contary, 'no.'" Nobody said "no." " Tho motion's carried unan'mously, an the court rules that thar hain t noth in' to pervent the tryin' of the case. Grip yer fins." lhe candidates joined hands. "Amos Peabody, do von solemnly swa'ar that ye'll freeze to 'Mandy fursver an' ever? lhat ye 11 love er an pcrvule fur or an treat 'er squar an' white, accordin' to the rules on' regulations sot down to govern sich cases in the laws of tho United States, so help yer GodV " Yaas, sir ; I do, sir." "That fixes your end o' the bargain. 'Mandy Thomas, do you solemnly swa'ar that ye'll hang on to Amos 'for all comin' time, that you'll nuss him in sickness an' be squar' to him in well ness, that ye'll always be to him a good, true, honest, up an'-up wife under the penalties prescribed by tho laws for the punishment for such offenses ; do you swa'ar this, so help yer God ?" " I swa'ar I will." " Then by the power in me vested as justice o' the peace, in an fur this pre cinct, I pronounce you, Amos Peabody, husband, an you, 'Mandy Thomas, wife, and legalize ye to remain as sich now an' furevermore, an ye'll stand com mitted till the fees an' costs in the case be paid in full, an may God have mercy on your soul an' bless this union with his heftiest blessin's." . Tho fees and costs were adjusted, and, after receiving the congratulations of the assembly, the newly made hus band and wife departed for their cabin up the creek. Oil Cttu Derrick. The Mississippi ami Tributaries. A pamphlet on the Mississippi river and its tributaries gives the following statement of the mileage of the naviga ble portion of each of the following named rivers above its mouth: Mis souri, 3,129; Mississippi, 2,101; Ohio, 1,021; Bed, 986; Arkansas, 884; White, 779; Tennessee, 889; Cumberland, 900; Yellowstone, 474; Ouachita, 383; Wa bash, 365; Allegheny, 325; Osage, 303; Minnesota, 295; Sunflower, 271; Illin ois, 270, Yazco, 220; Black (Ark). 112; Green, 200; St. Francis, 180; Talla hatchie, 175; Wisconsin, 160; Deer Creek, 116; Tensas, 119; Monongahola, 110; Kentucky, 105; Bartholomew, 100; Kanawha, 94; Muskingum, 94; Chippe wa, 90; Iowa, 80; Big Hatchie, 75; St. Croix, 65; Rock, 65; Black (La.), 61; Macon, 60; Bceuf, 63; Big Horn, 50; Clinton, 60; Little Red, 49; Big Cy press and Lake, 44; Big Black, 35; Dauohitte, 33. Total number of rivers, 33; total number of miles of navigation at present, 15,710. Dalrymple, the great Northwestern farmer, is said to be more used to the pen than he is to the plow. His hands are soft as those of a girl. There is none of the "horny-fisted" about him. The Indians of the Tehauntepeo highland ascend the icy summits of the Sierra Madre with a threadbare blan ket as their only covering. The Empress of! Germany at Chnrch A letter from1 Baden Baden to the Springfield (Mass.) ZtubUcan says: Three weeks ago the empress bf Ger many with a retinue of servants came to Baden, and a Week later the emperor with his suite and the whole German court arrived from Berlin. The royal household, the court included, occupy the Hotel Mesmer, which the propri etor retains exclusively for his royal guests during their stay. This hotel is only separated from the Conversation haus and the beautiful grounds where the visitors promenade every afternoon and ovening by a very narrow street. Persons promenading back and forth, listening to the delightful music from the fine band in the kiosk, "or sitting by the restaurant sipping their coffee or drinking tho.it beer, can at almost any hour, if so disposed, get a glimpse oi royalty in fact, a good square loot as it goes and returns from its rides and walks. The empress, whose seven tieth birthday was celebrated this week, carries the weight of so many years gracefully, and without giving evi dence of such an advanced age. To see her out every Horning taking her 'constitution id." and walk ing so briskl v that her maid and footman in livery have to walk sharp to keep pace with her, it is hard to realize that she has seen threoscore anl ten years. ner majesty is a dovotcd church woman. During hr stay at Baden she attends regularly every Sunday the little English church, aid joins in the service like any other stray visitor that might enter the houso of worship. She times her arrival so as to be present just as services are to commence. She rides to church in a closo, handsome, not over- expensive carnage, drawn by two ele gant, coal-black horses with silver mounted harness. The coachman and footman are in livery, and the stout, plain-looking German woman, plainly dressed, who rices with her majesty in side, is, I suppose, ono of tho ladies in waiting, or "mails of honor." At the church door one of the wardens. Mr. (Jakes, of New York, stands ready to recoive her, and escorts her to her seat, which is directlv in front of tho chan cel. Last Sunday I happened to have a seat directly behind her majesty, and, or couise, but could observe all her movements, what she wore, etc. If I had the peculiar talent of some female writers 1 would undertake to describe her dress, but I forbear. It was so very plain and inaxpcsive. and at the same tinio so sensible and appropriate for church-going, that I know the fashionable world, which would expect an empress' dress to be sparkling with diamonds and covered with the richest of laces, would be dis appointed. All of her dress that was visible her strasv hat with a single ostrich illume, her silk and mantle with modest and inexpensive trimmings cost altogether net more than some of the very fashionable and expensive hats worn by somo of the very fashionable ladies in somo of the very fashionable American churches. The moment her majesty got fairly seated she searched in the depths of her pocket and drew out her purse, from which she extracted a ten-mark gold piece 2.50), and care fully placed it on tho railing in front of her. This was to be ready for the con tribution box, and she evidently ad hered to the old motto, " Pay as you go." She then found her place in the prayer book, responded throughout tho service in good English, and joined in singing the hymns, etc. ' And she wore no spectacles, either. A Busy Man. A Milwaukee man while in Chicago recently sent a bouquet of flowers to a relative m a Wisconsin town, and when ho heard from them thev had arrived four days after being shipped, wilted and dead. He was mad, and in talking it over with a railroad man, tho rail roadersaid: ' You must not expect too much of an express npretit. Now that bouquet ha3 to pass Junction, and I know tho express agent there. He Is the depot agent, express agent, keeps a restaurant, is postmaster, acts as switch' man, helps unload freight, checks bag' gage, keeps a store, works a team on the road, drives passengers to adjoining towns, is sexton in a church, bnys coun try produce, keeps the hay scales, runs the caucuses ot both political partus, goes out shooting chickens with bum mers, keeps a pool table, has a mill for grinding sugar cine, and runs a hop yard, besides helping his wife run a millinery store. Now, a man that has as mu'.'h business as that ought to be excused for letting a bouquet remain in the express office a week or ten days." The man who sent tho bouquet said, eonie to think of it, they were mighty lucky to get the flowers at all, and he would apologize f it any words he might have spoken in the heat of debate. What the country wants is s diversity of industries. Peck's Sun. The Oldest of Mummies. Among the roval mummies the oldes is . King Raskenen, one of the latest monau-hs of the seventeenth dynasty According to Marlette, this dynasty ended B. C. 1703. As Raskenen was not the last of this line, we shall not be far out of the way nayinar that his mummy, with its fine linen shroud and its three carved cases fitting together like a nest of boxes.is about 3, 700 years old. Four hundred years before the Israelites crossed tho Red sea this mon arch ruled in Thebes. Nearly all that we know of tho doing3 of humonity npon the earth has taken place tince he was oiled and perrumed and laid away in his painted boxes. Yet we can (ouch his hands to-day and look into his face and read his historv written all over his coffin, j New York Tribune. Art and Oil. The Norfolk Virginian, of January 16 1881, rofers to tho remarkablo cure effeoied by St. Jacobs Oil in the case o'i Professor Cromwell known the conn try over for his magnificent art illustra tions who had suffered excruciating torments from rheumatism, until hq tried the Oil, whoso effects he says were magical. Mrs. Julia Van Estep, of Forrestville Va , is ninety-one years of age, and has an army of descendants.- She is the mother of twelve children, nine sons and three daughters ; the grandmother of eighty-six children, the great-grand mother of 146 children, the great-grreat grandmother of ten children 254 souls in all. ffiural New Yorker.) The best people will vote for the best man every time. And we judge by tha number of the St. Jacobs Oil constit tiency, that it is the best remedy for the rheumatism known. Professor lice, of St. Louis, among others, says so, A rnn in the pasture at night will be oenenciai lor a working team. "i.iwi! m M-t Not so fust, my friend j for if yon would sea tlia strong, healthy, blooming men, women ind children that have been raised from beds of sickness, suffering and almost death, by the use of Hop Bittern, yon wonld say, " Truth, glorious truth." Boo "Truths" In another column. The lily of the Sofipttires, According to the best authority, was the purple iris, the fleur de lis, a plant considered sacred to the Virgin Mary. No Woman Need Buffer When Warnor's Bale Kidney and Liver Cure can bo so easily obtained and bo safely used. Josle Mansfield is said to be keeping a gambling honse in Paris. llHn't ttle In the lioriKSi. ., , Ask DrangistB for "ltotiKhofl Hats" It clear out rats, mice, roachoii, files, bbd-bngg; 15o. The only natural hair renower is CAnnoi.tNK a deodorized extract of petroloum,rirfpared with out dmtillation or roctilieation with ncnls or alka lies, containing no mineral or other poisons, and as cloar and pure as spring wator. nF.UIJEf FUOSt fEAtfli William J. CTORhlin, of Somcrvlllo, Mann., nayfe h the fall of 1870 1 wan taken with blectlinp; of tho lunif, followed by a aOYcro coui?h. I lost my appetite an l flesh, and was confined to my bed. In 1H77 I was ad mitted to tho hospital. The doctors said I had a hollf in my lunp as blR as a half-dollnr. At ono time a re port went around that 1 was dead. I pavo np hope, but a friend told mo of Da. William Hall's Balsam ron thr Lunns. I ot a bottle, when, to iny surprise, I commenced to feel better, and to-riAy I feel bettel than for tjifoo years past. I write this hoping eYcry ono afllictcd with diseased lungs will take tin. W it. liam Hall's Balsam, and bo convinced that cos; sumption can he coitfcD, 1 can pHslliroly 6y It has dono more good than all tho other medicines 1 hato taken since my sickness. WARRANTED FOR. 31 YEARS AXn XEVER FAILED Tn PTTTtTl'. fVniitv Rnnams. Tltftrrbcpa. Tlrsenterv And Hen RirkiiPKS, taken internally, and GUAItANTUKD Iterfretly harmless; also externally, tails, llnnscs, H.-k and rhest. Sneh a remedy is Da. TODIA3' nktian Liniment. , . ,., L BNo one oneo trvine it will ever be Without it! ovcrOiHi physicians uno it. 23 t'rntft ill lluy n TrrntUe upon I lie Horse and bis Diseases. Book of 100 panes. Valuab.o to every owner of horses. TostaRe stamps taken. Sent postpaid by NKW YOltK NKWSPAHSll 1 50 Worth Street, New York. THE MAIIKETS. NEW YOIUt. fSeef Cattlo Mod. Nat.livo wt 0 5 H 4 Calvea Good to Trimo Veala. Shoep Lambs liogs Live, 5 (si 7 Dressed, city Flour Ex. Stato. cood to fancy C CO 05 8 00 Western, goou to cnoico o ou 0i 8 60 Wheat- No. 2 lied 1 51i(D 1 5U No. 1 Whito 1 45$ 1 i')1, 1 05 Oi 1 10 85 00 81) 00 0i 75 72''r,4 73 52' bay, 42 01 ij 90 Oi 1 15 Itye Stato . Barley Two-rownd State Com Ungraded WesternMixcd rlonthern lellow Oats Whito Htnto Mixed Wcatom liny Timothy Straw No. 1, live Go 0i 75 (ij) 23 fa 20 00 ff12 40 Ot.Vi 50 Hons State. 1881 20 'oik Mobs, new, lor export... v.i ia Lard City Steam 12 40 Jtolineil li au retroleum Crude 7 oi ry. lietined ty.ot 7 v.. Butter Stato Creamery 28 Oh 35 28 20 18 13 u 12 Dairy Western Im. Creamery Factory 0i 0i Oi Cheese Stato Factory 0i di 0i Skims Western EtrL'a Stato and Teim 1yt0i 22 Potatoes Early Koao, stato, bid 2 0J 05 a uu OTi C 75 0i 5 05 0i i 50 0i C 75 0i 7 25 Oi 1 55 0i 73 0i 40 6 90 fa is oo BUFFALO. Steers Extra C 25 Lambs WoKteni u "0 Slicep Western 00 Hogs, Liood touiimce Joriters. . i i i Flour C'v Ground, No. 1 Spring 0 75 Wheat No. 1. Hard DuluUi ... . 1 oi Corn J'o. 2 Mixed 73 Oats No 2 Mix. Vet 49 Barley Two-rowed Stato 90 BOSTOX. Beef Extra platoand family. .14 50 Hogs Livo -y, 7ji lio'M Citv Dressed 9 Pork Extra Prime per bbl 10 00 Flour Spring Wheat Patents. . 8 00 Q1G50 0$ 9 00 Oi 77 0i 57 Oi 1 15 Oil 4ti Corn Mixed and Yellow 70 Oats Extra White 51 Uvo State 1 15 Wool Washed Comb k Delaine 41 Unwashed " " 30 Oi 31 WATEllTOWN (MASS.) CATTLE MAKKlrT. Beef Cattle Live weight. 5 (Q Sheep Lambs Hogs, Northern 4 Oi ay,oi 9 OJ) ay. C.'4' rillUDKLPlIIA. Flour renn. Ex. Family, lair. 7 3 'i OTt 7 35 Wheat No. 2 lied 1 Hi0i 1 47 live State i uu Oi i ui) Corn State Yellow 74 0i 40 0i 35 01 fil'.1 IViOi 75 Oats Mixed Butter Creamery Extra Pa.... 47J 30 14 Cheese New York Full Cream. Petroleum (Undo licfmcd Female Weaknesses. No better remedy in the whole materia medlca has yet been compounded for tlio relief and euro of Femalo Complaints, of tlio ordinary kind, than Vegktine. It seems to act in theso cases with un wonted certainty, and never fails to give a new and healthful tono to tho female orcana, to remove re. laxed debility aud unhealthy secretions, and restore a healthful viRor and elasticity. One of the most common of theso complaints is Leueorrhtea or Whites, which are brought on either by the prcseneo of Scrofula iu the system, or by somo affection of tho womb, or even by peneral debility. For all theso complaints, and when danger bejrlnso threaten woman at tho turn of life, veoetine can bo com. mended without qualification. The (treat prevalence of theso disorders, and their euro by Veoetine, has amply shown that the sure alleviating agent remains not yet to bo discovered, but is already known, and is a favorito with American ladies. Too lonu has it been the custom to prescribe nauseatiuR and uncer. tain remedies iu place of what is pleasant, efficacious aud cheap. Try Veoetine, aud do not doubt its power to carry you safely tbrouKU danger and disease. A Splendid Medicine Heart and Kid ney Disease, Female Weakness Gbioobville, 111., July 25, 187x. H. B. Stevens, Button Dear Sir: '1 was afflicted with Heart and Kidney I)ieat, and other Feinttle VetkneKei, aud doctored with several physicians and received no bem-tit until 1 tried your veoktine, and alter taking two bottles I was completely cured, and havebeeu a healthy woman ever since, although 1 am iu my Gtth year. I do heartily recommend it as a splendid medieiuu to all attlicted as 1 havo been, ana 1 bless the day that it fell into mv hands. MltS. M.U'.IA UOliSON. Vegetine. PREPARED BY H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists. 5,000 AkciiIk Uanli'il lor l.ilu l GARFIELD t contain the full history of hi nohle and eventful ll'o ami ilsuitunUy as&usM nation. Millions of people urj waiting lor this book. Tn beat c banco of your lite to iu&ko money. Beware of "catchjK'nny" imi tations. This U tbe only aittbentie ana fully 111 us tinted life of our martyred rrettident Bond lor circulars aud extra terms to aeutH. Add rem NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Philadelphia, Pa. m ra Pnr..nJ Piiruilliv. PIIIm liutktt K.tw ill, Blood, aud will completely change the blood in the entire sutem in three mouths. Auy person who will take one pill each night from 1 to 12 weeks may be restored to sound health, if such a thlup be posaible. bold everywhere or seut by mail for 8 letter stamps. I. . JOHNsiON & CO., Boston, Mum., foiuirrly llungor. Me. Fac-Similes oi U. S. Treasury AND NATIONAL BANK HILLH. Confcieting ot niue exact Imitations of United Rtatg Treasury Notes, and nine of National Bank Bills, 19 in all, of various denominations. As a rare and tn stuntaueoua meanB of detecting counterfeit money thev am invaluable, Price, i a package. L. A, MAY HEW & CO., New York City. P.O. Box 1201. iRfn 911 tier day t home. Sample! worth W freo. J AdiUBiUiol tgu.,'ortlud,Uinfc Vegefine mini UE1HMM I (JrlP-Prfensr, To a criminal neglect o preventive medica tion may be asoribed a majority (It, the ailments which afToot humanity. It is a well-ascertained fact, resting on the experience of over twenty five year, that ft oonrse of Hostetter's Btomaoh Bitters Will put evon a naturally feeble systom in such ft state of defense that It will bo com petent to resist the most prevalent causes of disease, suoh as the malign influence of miasthft, wwhoWflo'tia water, wtcnsslve heat, damp, cold, Sudden. ChattCes of tCmporfttHre, cto. Yet there are thousands Cf "beraofig living In perpetual peril from one or more of thOso causes, who recklessly omit to avail thefn selvcs of tho absolute proteo.ion which this famous vegetable antidote affords. Intermit tent and bilious remittent fevers, rheumatism, general debility, nervous weakness and irregu larities of the stomach, bowels and liver, would bo comparatively unknown, if this palatable spool lie woro in universal use in tuo olatrlctt where lllcy principally prevail, rlotfie nprsons are fievef bttrled In tbongbt because they cannot find soil enongti to cover tuerriselve's with. Steubenville Herald. Not a Ilevernirr. . " Thov are not a beverago, but a medicine, with curat ire properties of the highest degree, containing rid poitonous drug". They do not tear d 'Wn an alreaay utmntaieu system, imi build it up. Ono bottlo contains more hops, that is, moro real hop strength, than ft bar.i-1 of ordinary beer. Every druggist in Rochester Bells ttiom. and the plr sieians proscribe them." Rochester lioctiinj Erpress on Hop JiUtert. Gambling bouses aro lioensed in New Orleans, and tho revenue from the gam blers is Used to sustain ft poorhouse, which tho ftystem helps to fUl. rutin Cod LivEtt Oit mrtclo from selected livers, on the ecushnre, by Caswki.l, Hazabd A Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and eweet. Patients who have oneo taken it prefer it to nil others. Physicians havo decided it gupoiior to any of tho other oils in market. 2.1 frill. Will llnv a Trcatiso npon tho Horse and his Diseases. Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner of horsCsi Pootngo stamps tnken. Sent post paid by New York Newspaper Vnion, 150 Worth Street,' New York. Veoetinr. Tho creat success of tho Veoe- tine as a cleanser and purifier of the blood is shown beyond a doubt by tho great numbers who have taken it, nud received immediato relief, with Biich remarkable cures. UTTPocket Scale, 25c. Howard Mf g Co., N. Y. (TliiB engraving r presents the Lungs in a healthy state ) A STANDARD REMEDY IN MANY HOMES. For f'otifjI'P. f'nlilH. fYntin. Itrnnr-lihWnTid All other tilt'erf ion nt the Thtimt nud M.'MS, it sumus unnvaieu anu utterly ueyouuuu competition, IN CONSUMPTIVE CASES It approaches ho near a siieeifte tlwit. "Xinetv-ftve" per cent, are periiiLini'iit tv cured when ttie direc tions are Htru-tiy complied with. 1 tieni ix no cliemi' cal or other iiiKrodii'iith; lo harm the youus? or old. AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS HO EQUAL I IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM ! J. N. HARRIS & CO., Proprietors, CINCINNATI, O. FOR SALE BYALL DRUGGISTS, n y s u- -10 Payne's Automatic Engines 1 Unliable, Purablo aud Keonotnical, trill furnish Q ('-.,(. pti,ur a ttlt yt fa fttvt uii'l u ttlt'r tfttin tiny of. 'ret Ehtjitut hum, not litled with au Automatic Cut-oil. Heint jur illustrated (.'iitiilouti ".I," lor liilornmtion Prices. 1. W. Pavsk Sons, Box HiiO Cormmr. X.Y. Cyclopedia War. The threat ldlrnry of fill vcr-iil Knowlrriue now completed, laro type edition, nearly 4ii,imhj topjcH in every department ot human knowledge, about 4u percent, larger than Cliamheix' Knc elope dia. 10 per cent, larger than Apph-tonV, 'jo per cent, larger than Jolinnon's, nt a iihto traction of their co.st. Fit teen larue Ortuvo Volumes nearly :i,000 pajjen. complete in cloth binding, 1 -it in halt Itu--mh, S'iOi in lull library sheep, marbled cducH, Hpecial terms to clubs. $10,000 REWARD fM'AWSiw and Anoint. Send quick tor specimen patron and lull particularH to AMKKK'AN BOOK KXCHANGK, John B. Aldkn, Manager, 7(i I Broadway, New York. BOYS AND GIRLS. Fnnuil lit last. llest Alitor r.-ipll Allium everotTered to lhe U. 8. Plllillc. Hound in munition Kcd Hiiksih leather cover, Gilded elites, decorated wilh Scrolls, llirds l''erns, etc., etc., nud Hhcct containing over Jim choice selections ol prose nud poetrj1 biiituble lor line ol' album, onlv :10c. Jrdcr soon. I.. COXKAV. Hoxlmry Station, Conn. SALESMEN .VANTEI to sell Stationery UlAJJ-kJl.IJ.Jil ;,is ,, commission. Send stamp lor terms. I'lllKNIX l'Vli. CO., Warren, l'a. OOXA WPNTH-AGENTS WANTED-00 be.t ff)Z ;c I iiBiinlclesT.i lhe world: lsainplc fret. H 'f Address Juy llrousnn, Detroit. Mich. 7 A ippTTTC CiUloeuofiw. .l.lrou, Sunn.rd AiJOraorUiiii WniehCo .,l"luhureti,r. fw-TtTtYTQ Sovu!vor"' Cn.iojui rreo.4iM.-ra; real ycttOun Worm. I'lit.l.nrch. r. BILL AM 1wkA ell MWsm i I II 220 You Want A smiXG SOAIiR THAT nK PARKER'S POCKET SCALES THESE CUTS ARE FULL rATEWT POSTAL AND POCKET ME JfVtl iSflA Iiu nil YkuBHA..A r.. I un.1 m your sdiimiforaiiiii itkii nrlolnr. Wromcr, Ol.lo. er AlefDT IMflnKS i TROLEUr.1 . mfifioiier, ana ilavdu urc lvlern. Ifjou cannotlindoueinyuurtu - .h ..,. :,VO?!("l"V(!;'',V ""i1 w0 ;iV Ali.ljiiry,. CO., 3111 lli-iiiKlwnv, N-v Vorli. ASTHMA & CATARRH REMEDY 3 '' I " trie' UIit . ".l,.I..f STHM "rCATAI"Hl """'"' " iiicti.ubboni cd, ol Aalhma BSVe? Ll,,fyl'J.?.l.i':"tc".''',0 .ou i-.i-.i ai.d tii..p comro.bly. 4urpruannt.ull.uu7ut 7srd and approved Ij the leading PHYSJ CIAJt'S of EUEOPE and AMERICA. Tha most Valuable Family Remedy known. B0EES. 17 IT 1 I r m m m m . . mm. wkms r t v v VK.immm' ir ink rsr nmW 1 frv" BUS Va&ASER. ULEDM Itm t'ATAKItil. ilUUULHQIDl. Xta. Alo. Ik VOSKIUL liOldl, BOT iUMLUrOllB and Dlrihtlrt& Ma JVTry tka, ti m 10 teat tlxt WttAJVD UKOAV AT TUB FHILABEXBIA EXFOarriON . awiuuitTurtfiinrMnid v TO BE (Of, ATP AUCTION. These fnmlllsr word tfeslltorthe forme and Tethers interested, the "!h"'f .ity of Bmi.lmes getting rid of Plw ; tba is rW rjthetwiss lble on account of blem ishes of imtTftctlon. To Improve upon thU mcUic-Tby -.bowing how to restore your Stock to flrsKlasS condition herewith presented. The SSfJL! the Great OernlRr. Remedy tm1"dBvf reasonably induced tt1 "PT"08110 ' suffering, and ailments Ot the dumb crea tion, beginning with the Horse-. T e?? trti It were more than surprised W BultB,Mtfe( in the speedy and per1 nt cure of their Stovk, nnd they g'8".J nnnoilfl!d their experience tr w,,rd.or mouth and b7 be public pre, ttnt.il to-aoy Fahmeks nnd DKAt.ERfl, STOCK A5B Bukeders, tbe country oveb, nxe using ST. JACons Oil. with delight, BBtlsMetlon find profit. The other w ho rniBtfiko of vjOLose, J 1 tliltllfltigthnttfri 11T Stock br Rttylhing 18 6J( VfckJ miserable cf gwl ciitmgh Vfili! fort nt,?con" for a Uttrte A':IV omy. There Is made by'" ore others ho humanely regnrd the welfare of their falthfUl 'tnnib creatures, arid provide for their comfort rtth good food and shelter, and for their health Mr n. constant supply of nr. Jacobs on., the sfjfosv and speediest fidlnf for Ureases of Horses liivi Stork ever liwovred. Whenever there npfvars any evidence Wlmlsocvcr of diseiute of injury among Aftlrhal.t, they should have the best possible treatment, us It never pays to Oo fer attelitl'm to Stock. Innrinieh,then, as It Is the pn.rt oi ClTOmnn pi ""f" "-'" unrest curative melius In 111.-! tx'srlnnlnK. everv Stable, Fnnn nnd Ktwk-ynrd nhonld EI -y...V..'.i,, nr.iioH with Ht. JACon OIL. which loused nnd reconlHwnaca ry the bei-t Hornemen In the country nmn ar ticle which will relievo more promptlv and wfMHW tho nlliiietiW of nnd Injuries w Stock than any other remedy known. 1' or Spavin, Jilntfhine Vlnd-Oall, llesli- of all kind, t'oll KtU. Siiliiit, flwpll- . (.rM. 'f'ntnfir. J-'Istll- 1, Lameness.StiniiPRK. V'rnmps oi nir cle, Aeto and Chronic Founder, Manicc. Corns, niil'iows. Uroken klif", Cut. Colir, Sore Tliriif, lllstemper, nnd many other IHseases, espe."l'il!y Foot -Hot hi Sheer.. ST JACons In. ultirds instnnt relief and n sure cure, nnd costs but K.fty I'knt. Pninnhlets containim; full dilutions for hot"!" treatment of disuses of doiuestio animalu, upon application, by A. V03ELEH .& CO., Baltimore, Mi MANUFACTORY And Wholesale Depot, 465 FULTON ST., BROOKLYN. i Important to the Invalids of America, 'Hiey "me KVKIiY FORM OT? PISEASE known to man. without medicine cIishrcs rSHty,Ja!in?" linn. vnu.OUO l'HtSONS, once JihhVhl.HH IM -A-HDfl, are not rejoicing in tho blessings ol 1th STU11EI) HEALTH. ,vtt nfivi All checks and iinstofflrn orders for 7JJ,,vNJ suits must bo made tuiMiblo to WM. WILSON, 405 FUI.TON ST.,Illtt)OKI,VN. . ,, , Send lor circulars, price list ana other memoranda rcuTirdini; the "WIf.KtlXIA." ....fror.xTit We Rive from the list ol thonsnnds of" W IJ.WNIV I'alieutM the fnilov. iuLr UIH'Kl'.SKN'lTiTlVE HEFEHENCER: Hon. Horatio Seymour, tUIra, N. Y.; Hon. rctof Cooper. Hon. Thlll-low Weed. Cnminoderc r. K. (lar rison, lleueral S. (Iraliam, Judiio l,cil pantos, of N. Y. Citv, .J. 11. Hovt (merchant), spruce hi. !.., 11. V. Kairweathcr. (merchant). Spruce St., V . K. Ii. Stlmson (merchant), Sprtico St., N. Y.: Ti : Hall, IK Clinton Ave., Urookbiis Colonel ll.i rd Clark, fit K. I'.Uh Ht.,N.Y.: Hon. .lohn Mitchell III . urer), Urooklyu: Mrs. Ii. Hobb,:i'.ir.Wyck(rnHt.,l)'k, , '' "it. ifi; ' if vni nrr a of ltusin.'s. eak- r yon n are n mfin tiwtti of h,i- ened by the Ktrnlii of your duties avoid tfrntoilitiirtivprniw nitrM vink. ta tv-ti-iie itnitn iifi vp at id Fliniuiiini " " u Hop Bitters. waMt', ue Hop & Hi.ITcrinif from any In tkm j if "U nrr nnr- vimi'i' sililiM'tlllf f I Hill IT vou are younsr end discretion or dissipa ri..,l ot Kfnitle eld or poor health or laci.o'Mi ues.i, rely on Hop hv; on ft bed of kk- Bitters. Whoever yen are. nutiiiV t rn in oi i io forpiot Kidney that yen, ssstein li ., la ..l...iHe'fn-. tun. ' llur or itinniintirii,- wtthout intoxn'-ilUKJ, hovi- inen prcvt-nu'i tnl:e HOD ?f op Bitters nnreyourfw- A&t plant, ms!U!H' of iho at'Huach, ft.tfiVf.-t, futiou, liver or nerves I You will he curedirym use Hop Bitters Tfvmi drci'nv plv "we ft It nnd liwspiriti'il,try it l It may anveyour life. It has a saved nun d reel s HHEAPEST I " MilCHUlilt 'bills- I HEAPEST TIOOKS IN THE 1 MucHUlm'bllls- II TiiiiK-'a History f Iiory ol Knjjluiul. a fint,. LUcrnturo I IVu rrc 12nm vtH. I B ivmn v.il. iMii'ibOim ly cloth :onl fi.i.oJ- bound, for unly i vt. IAN HAMAS HOOK CO . 10 W. 14th St., N.Y. P.O. Boi 4U YAKIMA VALLEY, IMMIGRATION CO. A choice Farm and freo faro to Washington Torri tore, as premium to Clas D. Subscription Oim Dollar, lteiuit immediately, or send two Bro'JI stann s for " Our ltesonrccs" to 11 t . Abll-bS. Manat-'cr. Yakima Citv. Washington Territory. .MiENTsJ WANTED to sell the lite of It A K H PRKSIDENT U ii 11 . Full nnd accurate account to date. Steel portrait. Well illustrated. Term lilirrnt. Ontlit . ()(. Address :. It. IU. u li nil Jfc 'o.. 2 Orcat Jones St., N. Y. TDIITU 'S MIOIIIV. TI on. n.t nd Win oll, I'rof. MAlirtNtX ih.Ore.t fp.Ki'li Serf ol Wn.r.1 w II for 30 nU will. r, h.if la. coin, of ..tn, tlx! lock ,f h.lr, ..ml ft cu.otT ru'TUH. of j.iur future hii.Latid or if., icloin;icall; pwlictrd, villi oftrac. time anl ptl.e of mret.Di, an4 dti. of marriMC. Mon.. returned to all not amti.nod. Addrou fief. L klaninci, lu Uonl'j PI. Dotton, Hua. S 7 7 7 ; A YEAH AND EXPENSES Tl AtJr.M s. uuttii tree. Aiiurcs ( VIcUery. Auinisla. iiie. 070 A WEEK. 112 a dav at home, easily made. Cmtf vie omiit tree. Add's TnuK .V Co.. Auitusta.Maine. UI A X'l'EU. -Every one to have lots of fun with ons ot those nnstilyiiu; Chinese l'uzzlos. Sent to any addronN lor :lc. stamp. Excelsior lliue linds iavor iu everi housi hold. Add's II. F. 1'oor, llcnnini-'ton, Vt. YOUNG MEN 11' vou would learn Telecriiohv in lour ittotil le. uii.l li ori.in Af u situation, ad.lreis Valentine Uros., Jancsyillo, Wis. VI.I.KN'S Bl'iiin I'nnil-ciircs Nervous Debility & Wouknessot ( ienerativeOruiins, SU l-alldniKtrists. Send tore itvuhir. Allen's l'liannacy.:il:ll'iititav.. N.Y. A I.KM'S W A TI!I) lor the Best anil I'astest- 3:j eret. National 1'iiblishiui? d J neiiniLF I'icional ItoolisanillllU l'rices reducefl .. riiiiitdcipiiia, i'a. Jfif? a week in your own town. Terms and !i outfit uu Imi-. Add's II. HALi.K'i-r.v('i)..l'ortaud, Maine. I-'III I II a day add's W. E, Ilowilileli. lloston, Mass. nu oAmuiiD 11IK rociiBT 8IZE REPEESENTATIOnTo a t FREE Of CHARGE. 8'iouid 1 or dru(lil u., lop tl. rrinedy, IE reluu.l.l. ? 'ttX u 7 ''i..-." ' i ","' last,'.!.!, l'ro- JELLY ThtYollH Axtlcleftlrom cut. Ymillni inch u Fomada Yuitltna TmUm Cold Cream, ueuna vampuor If. Tanliu Toilet Boapa. ara Mfriar ia amy almlur aB TASELLM CONFECTIONS An atrreeabla form oft&a l&S Taaelin l&temaT. M CENTS A BOt mm. cttttst iw f til m gA ' EQ38ESHS S3 r;inus-- Da im dm iS t I :,4 nil nhsohif-A E iJ nrrn Isi:?,,; S3 III llUi. R. drunkenness, H :Lotnc co . or P3 I 1 nrwrn W'1'- ''emltor g 4: NEVER I.L-nvuur. s I 'i' ri II l' hop liiTrna Eg t : FA L . 1 fk 1 mm mm TmJT waa mm mm iw r 90i i El iY !l 9 .4