The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, August 24, 1882, Image 4

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    FACT8 AND COMMENTS.
The nnmber of eohools in FrAnoe
where the system of upavinps bank had
been adopted wai 10 4!U at the cloRe of
last year, against 14,372 at the begin
ning. The average nnmber of deposi
tor was twenty one per school, against
seventeen the year before. The depart
ment of pnblio instruction considers
t'oat the resnlts in seven years have
fulfilled the hopes of the inventor
of the system, M. de Malasse, the
sohool bank showing that it occnpies a
unique position in the world as a me
dium of education in thrift.
At first glanoa it wonld appear that
the canal business in Egypt has been a
little overdone. There are 870 canals
in that country, measuring in the segre
gate 8,400 miles. Of these 113 are
used for navigation purposes as wsll p.b
, for irrigation, and the other 657 for
irrigation alone. Of tue fifty navigable
canals below Ciiro the most important
is the one extending from the Nile near
Cairo to Zigazig. This is fiftv-flve
miles in length, and is navigable for
vessels of 400 tons burden. The fresh
water canal from Z tazig to Ismailia is
fed mainly by this canal.
Statistics show that over 1,500,000
operatives are employed in the manu
faoture of cotton goods in the principal
countries of tho world. Of these,
480,000 are employed in Great Britain.
France follows with 210,000, and the
other countries in orcli-r of precedence
are the United States, Russia, Germany
and India. With regard, however, to
the annual value of cotton goods pro
duoed the United S'ntes comes second,
with about balf tlio value of Great
Britain, and Germany find Russia fol
low, the joint product tot being quite
equal to that of the United States.
Rabbits aro playing hob with New
Zealand. They commence breeding at
the age of three months, and produce
twelve large families a year. This
prolific increase has overrun the coun
try with the pests introduced by pa
triotic Englishmen and Scotchmen, and
millions of dollars' worth of property
are being destroyed itnnnally. Crops
are feasted upon, streams are obstructed,
and in some places tho devastation bus
been so great that farmers have been
driven from theirjfarms. From 00,000,
000 to 00,000,000 of tho frisky inno
cents are killed eveiy year, but with
their reproductive capacity the living
rabbits do not mind a little thing like
that, which only amounts to a deoima
tion, When an individual starves to death
in a civilized city his fate is probably al
ways due to ignoranco of his condition
and not to inhumanity. This certainly
must have beou the case with William
Ellis, a sculptor, who lately died in
Sheffield, Englaud, Some years ago
he was engaged with Stevens in model
ing the Wellington monument. On
his return to Sheffield he engaged in local
art trade, and executed busts in marble
of John Arthur Rotbnck and several
local celebrities Of Into years he has
been in very destitute ciicumstanccs,
and frequently needed and received as
sistance from his frieuds. It was fehown
at the inquest that death had resulted
from "exhaustion brought on by insuffi
ciency of food."
The Mormons aro displaying the
craft which has alweys characterized
the Church of Lvter Day Spin's in
their efforts to savj their "peonliar in
stitution" from tha fivhh assault made
upon it in the passage by Congress of
the Edmunds act for the suppression of
polygamy. Tboir first move is to try
the policy of evasion. All officials who
were polygamists have been ordered to
resign, and their places have been filled
by monogamists who ai e equally strong
in the faith, so tbat there wiil be no
chance to apply the section which for
bids a man with more than one wife to
hold office. Moreover, from President
Taylor, in Salt Like, to the elders in
the most extreme parts of their domain,
the polygamists have ostentatiously
separated from all but one of their
wives, and aro living openly with her
only, so that it will be difficult to find
grounds for instituting proceedings
againut tbein. Some of the most emi
nent lawyers in the country have been
employed to fight the question of tho
constitutionality of the law, and the
issue will be carried up fiom court to
court until it reachee the supreme tri
bunal. A report comes from Utiih that
if the supreme omn should finally de
cide againbt them, the Mormons are ra
solved not to submit at nnv cost : bnt it
may well be doubted whe ther the r ober
second thought will snstnin even a band
of fanatics in fighting the whole power
vi ioe government ne present out
loos, uowever, is tJif, in any event, it
must be a good while before material
progress is made toward the extirpation
of the "twin relio of barbarism."
A Ride ou the Back of a Cutflsli.
In the early days of Rome, about
forty years ago, a poor jeidow, a Mrs.
Parks, occupied a rude habitation about
sixteen feet square, constructed of
rougti poles, on the site where Dr
Gregory's residence now stands. Thie
poor woman had two children, the
ewer a stout, robust gnl about eighteen
years of age, Martha by name ; the
other was a boy of seven. One day
Martha, who took in washing to help
support we lamuy, went to the spring
near the house, on the banks of the
Etowah river, to do some washing ; her
mother was with her. On arriving at
the spring, which is only a few feet
from the river, she noticed an enormous
catfish lying in the cool branch of the
spring in water nearly deep enough to
float the fish. Abatteau was fastened
to a tree near by, and, stepping into
the boat, she seized a paddle, and
Snick as thought dealt the monster
sh a blow on the head, which
stunned it, and the little boy, Scruggs
Parks, jumped into the stream and
seized the fish, but in his exoitement
and attempts to secure the prize he
thrust both hands into the gill of the
fish. The gills closed on them with a
ioe-like-grip, and the fish, in flounder
ing about with the boy, at length struck
water deep enough to support him, and
with head to the river with a mighty
effort shot into the stream with thn
speed of an arrow, the boy on his baok
A moment of terrible anguish and sus
pense to the poor sister, who was a
helpless observer of all thut was pass
ing, and the cat nib, landed high and
dry on an island some sixty or seventy
feet distant from the shore, with the
boy in a fainting, frightened and half
drowned condition. The cries of tht,
sister aoon brought men npon the
scene, who took the boat and in a few
minutes landed fish and boy on the
shore of the river. The ,fib weighed
sixty-five pound.
N1QWH.
Eastern and Middle State,
A oiRottLAB hns beou prtimril ljr Ilia IVnn
Bi-Ceiitonnlnl amoelatlon, of riilllniMpliK
and will be forwarded to tlie exYoriiir of tt
different States, lnvitintf trooj. to vlult tha
Quaker city and take part In tli military din.
play on October 27, the bl-eenteiuilnl mini
verenry of the landing of William Twin,
Captatm Wmn, the EiikIIhIi clinmlon
swimmer, defeated twonty-two Competitor
in a five-mile swimming match off Mnntnuket
Beach, Mass.
Two boarding houses, a bnra and outbuild
lngs at Hye Beach, N. H., the well-known
summer resort, were destroyed by fire.
m r r .
i yermom ureenoacKers were repre
sented by aw delegntes at their State con
venuon in Mnteruury. The convention
nominated for governor, O. O. Martin; for
lieutenant-governor, John Jenner; for treas
urer, Fletcher Tarbell. The following Con.
gressionnl nominations were made: First
district, Dr. Kidder; Second district, H. D.
Dunbar.
Thb sole of Canonchet, ex-Governor Wil
liam Spragne s famous house in Rhode
Island, was attended with considerable ex
citement. Ex-Governor Spragne and son,
armed with rifle and pistol, guarded the
house and grounds and prevented the imme
diate approach of spectators. The property
was bought by Francis D. Monlton for
$02,250. Next year, probably, a grand hotel
and club-house will be built on the property
by JJelmouico, of New York, and others.
Thb American bankers' convention held
their annual meeting in Saratoga, N. T., re
elected President George S. Ooe, of New
York, and listened to the reading of various
papers on financial topics. Delegates from
all parts of the Union were in attendance,
Whtlb Alexander and John Gilchrist and
their unmarried sister Margaret were in the
sitting-room of their residence I in West
Charlton, N. Y., at 9 p. r., the front door
suddenly opened and five masked men pushed
into the room with drawn revolvers. Two
attacked Alexander, two John, and one
Margaret. A terrific struggle ensued, in
which Alexander grabbed a three-tined steel
fork and need it so effectively that one tine
broke off in the body of one of the burglars
The burglars then knocked Alexander down
with the butts of their revolvers, handcuffed
bound and gagged him. John suffered
similar fate, and Margaret was handcuffed
and gagged. After securing the family the
robbers took the gag from Alexander's mouth,
and with a pistol at his head asked him to
disclose the hiding place of the key to the
safe. Alexander refused to tell, whereupon
he was again gagged, and, with John, was
taken to the cellar and tied to a poet
Margaret was left upstairs. The robbers
then began to search for the key, which they
found between two feather beds. The safe
was soou rifled. It contained $800 in money
and $li0,000 in bonds and mortgages. The
robbers left with the booty, and Margaret
soon afterword slipped the handcuffs over
her wrists and liberated her brothers, who
broke the handcuffs from their wrists with an
ax and hammer.
At the Massachusetts Greenback State con.
vention 325 delegates, representing seventy.
nine towns, were present, and a full ticket
headed by General Benjamin F. Butler for
governor was nominated. A platform was
auopteu, in wnicn the many concessions
made to the principles of the Greenbackers
are referred to with satisfaction. A check
npon the power of wealth audits unjnst accu
mulation is demanded. The payment
of the national debt as rapidly
as the revenues will allow, and
the abolition of the National banks as banks
of issue, are demanded. The resolutions af
firm that eight hours should constitute a legal
day's work. A board of arbitration, to be
composed of an equal number of working
men and employers, for the settlement of
lubor troubles, is demanded. The system of
contract convict labor is opposed. The ar
bitrary imprisonment of American citizens in
British bostilcs, and the misrepresentation at
the court of St. James by a minister who
sanctions the illegal conduct of the British
government are deplored.
South and West
A cuown of men attacked the Campbell
Doys, desperadoes, in a house in Caldwell
county, Ky. The Campbells killed one of
the crowd. The house was then set on fire.
and as the Campbells were driven out they
were shot dead.
A fire at Huntsville, Ma, destroyed the
court-house of Randolph county and many of
tne county records.
ai.exa.vdeb icbeb, a saloon keeper of
Jivansville, Ind., his wife and seven-year-old
son, were butchered in their home by persons
who had entered it for the purpose of rob
bery. Two men were arrested on suspicion.
Two men entered the First National bank
in Kewanee, Dl., locked the cashier and
lady assistant in the vault and carried off
$20,000.
Ex-United States Sekatob Geoeqr R,
Dennis died at his home in Kingston, Md.,
aged sixty years.
In Chambers county, Ala., "Bole" Brooks
and Charlie Griffin, convicted of the murder
of one McCann a year ago, were lynched by a
crowd. They had been granted a new trial.
The Iowa Democrats have nominated a
full State tickot with T. O. Walker at the
head for secretary of stale.
Afteb long and at times great suffering
from cancer of the tongue United States Sen
ator Benjamin Harvey Hill died at Atlanta,
Gn., aged fifty-nine years. His death had
been expected, and npon its announcement
the Atlanta church bells, fire bells and loco
motive engine bells in the various railroad
yurds began to toll, and continued tolling all
day. Every business house, publio office and
the depots were draped in heavy mourning.
Nearly every residenceon Feachtree Btreet,
the street upon which Mr. Hill resided, was
hung in black. Manybasinoss houses were
closed during the day, and the Atlanta city
council, board of trade and the Atlanta bar
passed appropriate resolutions of sorrow.
The record of Mr. Hill's life briefly told is as
follows: Born in Jasper county, Ga., on
September 14, 1823 he was graduated from the
University of Georgia in 1844, with high
honors. In 1845 he was admitted to the bar
and began practicing law in LaGrange, Ga,
His entry into pnblio life began as a member
of the Georgia house of representatives in
1851, and he was elected to the State senate
in 1859 and 18G0. In 1855 he was the unsuc
cessful " American" candidate for Congress,
and as the candidate for the same party was
defeated for governor in 1857. He was a
presidential elector on the Fillmore ticket in
1856, and on the Bell-Everett ticket in 1860.
At the State convention of 1861 he advocated
remaining in the Union until he found that
secession was inevitable. He was a Georgia
delegate to the Confederate provisional con
gress, and a Senator in the regular Congress.
In 1865 he was arrested by the Federal au
thorities and imprisoned in Fort Lafayette.
At the close of the war he was elected to the
forty-fourth Congress and was re-elected,
bnt resigned bis seat before the expiration of
his second term to take a seat in the United
States Senate, to which he was elected in
1877. His term would have expired next
March.
Tuns men were killed and about thirty
Injured In a railroad collision near Cairo, Di.
Two young nien nnd two yonng ladies,
while talumlng homo In a buggy from a
Inure near Anoke, Minn., were struck by a
I'MnInu train and instantly killed.
Hmunm It ill's funeral at Atlanta was Hu
morously attended, the United States Senate
and 1 louse of Iti'priKcnluUvot being well
roiniwenled nnd W.tXKI people assembling on
the sli-wl to ltw the proreRslon.
Tim I'tiih cuiigremiioiinl commissioners ar
rived nt Halt Iiiike City. The Mormon chnrch
litis etignuod four law firms to defend the
county ofllclnls who nre nbont to lose their
positions under the provisions of tie Ed.
muuds bill.
A telkobak from Governor Roberts, of
Texas, was received at the treasury depart
ment stating the sufforing condition of those
sick with yellow fever, and of 2,000 persons
in Brownsville, Tex., ont of employment on
acconnt of t he quarantine, nnd requiring aid.
Acting Secretary French replied that the de
partment wonld take chargo of hospitals and
quarantine at suitable stations if the gover
nor desired it, but that the State of Texas
must support all persons not in hospital.
From Washington
Mb. Iioko, the American consul nt Alex
andria, was attacked by about forty natives;
but seizing a club he defended himself vig
orously until some soldiers arrived, dispersed
the crowd and arrested the ringleaders. It
appears that the natives had attempted to
stop Mr. Long as he was driving. Hebe
came annoyed and urged on his horse, in
flicting injuries on some of the party.
Foreign News.
Thb Catholic bishop of Three Rivers, Can
ada, has issued a pastoral fobidding the
women of his diocese to wear bangs or
frizzes.
A tabmeb has been shot dead at Orusheen,
county Clare, Ireland.
A kumbkb of persons have been sentenced
in Dublin to long terms of imprisonment for
assaults growing out of the land troubles.
Drama the trial of a man who was brought
to Dublin under the coercion act on a charge
of murder the Dublin Freeman's Journal
published a letter declaring that the jury in
the case were permitted to wander nbout the
hotel in which they were lodged and to drink
to excess. Tho foreman of the jury denied
these charges and asked for the protection
of the court. Thereupon Mr. E. Dwyer Gray,
proprietor of the Freeman's Journal, who is
also a member of parliament nnd high sheriff
of Dublin, and was at one time lord mayor
of that city, was brought to court; his request
for time to prove the truth of the statements
contained in the letter was refused and he
was sentenced to three months' imprison
ment, to pay a fine of 500 and at the expir
ation of his sentence to find sureties for his
good behavior in the sum of 9,000. The af
fair occi a'oned considerable excitement.
Speeches expressing indignation at the sen
tence were made around the new statue of
O'Connell, and the mayor of Dublin, together
with Messrs. Fnrnell, Dillon and Davitt, was
obliged to issue a proclamation requesting
the people to remain calm.
it niLE .rather Chupelliere, a missionary
priest, with four Indians, was rotnrning from
a fishing excursion from Lake Maskegs, in
Canada, their boat upset and all five were
drowned.
Am insurrection has broken ont in Corea,
and the king and queen of that country are
reported to have been assassinated. The
Japanese legation was attacked by natives
belonging to the anti-foreign party. Japan
ese men of war have been dispatched to
Seoul river. Corea is a kingdom of Eastern
Asia, the greater part of which occupies a
peninsula which stretches south from the
northern part of the Chinese empire. Its
area is about 80,000 square miles. The king.
dom is divided into eight provinces. The
king, though nominally a vassal of the
Chinese empire, at least until the recent
treaty with the United States by Commodore
Shnf eldt modified this dependence, is absolute
within his own dominions, and is the subject
of almost divine honors, it being a sacrilege
to touch his person. The most striking fact
in relation to Corea is the extraordinary ex.
clusiveness which it had maintained toward
all other countries until Commodore Shufeldt
last spring concluded the treaty with the
United States by which a number of ports are
opened to citizens of this country, general
friendship is declared between the two
nations, and citizens of each are entitled to
respect and protection in the other. It is
probable that the antipathy on the port of
Corenns to foreigners is the cause of the
revolution.
Both houses of the Britih parliament
have adjournod until October 24.
A man named Joyce and his entire family
were murdered in their own house, near
Congin, county Galway, Ireland. The fam
ily consisted of Joyce, his wife, mother and
daughter. They were tired at and killed by
party or men. iwo boys also were
wounded. It is believed in the locality that
the Joyces gave information relative to the
murder of the bailiffs of Lord Ardiloun,
whose bodies were found bound together
in Lake Cong.
a j-ABUBKu wniie wonting on Donrd a
. i i ,
steamship at Liverpool that had arrived from
New York found five Colorado beetles. The
privy council ordered that they be killed and
sent to London.
The village of Lindeburden, West Prussia,
has been burned, and 200 persons have been
rendered homeless.
In a fight with the Apache's in the Saliun-
hupa district, Mexico, the Mexicans lost
forty-five men and the Indians left thirty
eight dead on the field. Eighteen women
and twelve children were killed on the road
between Sahnahupa and the Trinidad mine.
Tim steamer Hope, commanded by Sir
Allen Young, C. B., wluch left England in
Jane last in search of the crew of the Arctic
exploring steamer Eira, commanded by
Leigh Smith, has arrived at Feterhead with
the entire crew of that vessel. The Hope
picked them np in Matotshkin Btraits, Nova
Zambia, on August 3, they having lost their
ship off Franz Josef Land, and journeyed in
boats to the straits through the ice.
The Trouble in Egypt.
of the British forces in Egypt, arrived at
Alexandria on the transport Calabria, with
the Hrniaahnlri njtvnlr nn hrtsvrl nnrl immo
diately took charge of operations.
A dispatch from Alexandria states that the
sultan of Turkey peremptorily ordered Arabi
tiBiu ui lay uuwu ins ttrma.
' ll t i V"i f rr in Wiifr TV. it an vAnnnJ. . U I
Arabi Fasha called a meeting of the Ulema
(doctors of law) and obtained from them a
fWws. HonrMincr tVl inttun an1 n a i r. . I.
sheriff of Mecca as caliph. Arabi, they say,
is also organizing the Bedouins, and has ap.
pointed commanders for those at Charkies
and at Garbieh in Upper Egypt.
Two decrees of the khedive have been pro
mulgated. One authorizes the British ad-
rm i rti I anil 4Ka HAmmonrla. t .La . . .
" U"U ..w yuM.U.uuuv. V. MIO UUU1B Uj
occupy such points on the Isthmus of Sues
as they consider useful for military opera
tions against ths rebels, and invites the
Egyptian authorities to acquaint the inhab
itants. Darticnlarlv tha rnnul amrlmu. ;.u
the decree. The other authorizes tha Britixh
authorities to prevent the importation of
coal and monitions of war along the coast,
- u-u v. uwu, nuu 1U
the event of contravention of the order to
seiM the prohibited arUoles.
General Sir Garnet Wolseley, the English
commander, with nihnritv of tlm kh-
dive, hns issued a proclamation to the people
of Egypt, representing the sole object of the
British to be to restore the authority of the
khedive. It gays that all peaceful inhabit
ants will be kindly treated, the mosqnes will
be respected and all supplies paid for. Gen
eral Wolseley held a conference with Ad
miral Soymonr nnd all the generals. The
London Daily Telegraph hns the following
dispatch from Alexandria: " Major General
Alison neia a consultation to-aoy with Gen
eral Sir Gnrnet Wolseleyi the result of which
is that the former will retain local command
of the British troops pending the present do.
liberations of the conference. General
Wolseley to-day inspected the military posi-
miiiB ki jviunien and snrveyea mo country
around from the tower of the wnter-works.
A heavy mirage obscured the view beyond
Arabi Pasha's first line of intrenchments."
An encounter between a British mounted
patrol and a pony of 500 Bedouins ocmrrod
near Knmlch. Five of the latter were killed.
A belief in the hopelessness of the sIi-uukIo
is said to be spreading among the Egypliuns.
The Suez canal was occupied by the Hritisli
troops. A dispatch from Fort Saul, the en
trance to the canal, says: " Sailors landed
and have disarmed the natives, who offered
no resistance. Several transports nnd men
of war nre nnchored here, nnd n fleet num
bering seven is coming in. The cunbouU;
Dee and Don have entered the canal.
Rear Admiral Hoskins, commanding nt
Port Said, reports ns follows: " We mnde all
our arrangements yesterday for the advance,
Commander Edwards, with the boats of the
squadron, during the night occupied
the canal, taking possession of the
dredges, barges, etc., nnd nlso occupied
Knntara Before daylight Captain Fair
fax occupied Port Said, and Captain Fitzroy,
of the Invincible, held Ismnilin. All went
well and there was no difficulty. Cnptain
Fitzroy shelled the enemy out of Nefich.
Commander Kane wns slightly wounded.
Telegraphic communication with Kautarn
and Ismailia has been restored. Three hun
dred and forty marines are on board the
gunboat Dee, ready to tie sent to reinforce
Captain Fitzroy. One ship is ashore in the
canal, but other vessels can pass. The ships
with Admiral Seymour and General Sir Gar
net Wolseley on hoard are in sight."
A later telegram from Port Suid says that
the troopship Sernpis and some of the gun
boats entered the canal with troops. The
occupying force numbers COO. Two hun.
area ana mty-two gyptmn soldiers were
disarmed without resistance. Ihe govern
ment of the khedive has been reinstated.
The commanders of tho Egyptian troops are
prisoners in the offices of the canal com
pnny, and the telegraph ollice is occupied by
me Di uisii.
Barbarities of Modern War.
The history of bombarding towns
anords an instance of aotunl dcteriora
tion in the ueaerea cf modern warf.im.
Regular or simple bombardment, that
is, of a town indiscriminately and not
merely oi its fortresses, has now become
the established practice. Yet what did
Vattol say in the middle of the last
century? "At present we generally
content ourselves with battering the
ramparts and defenses of a place. To
destroy a town with bombs and ied
hot balls is an extremity to which we
do not proceed without cogent reasons."
What said Vanbaa still earlier ? The
fire must be directed simply at tho de
fenses and batteries of a placo
and not against the houses." Then let
us remember the Eaglish bombardment
oi Copenhagen in 1807, when the
cathedral and three hundred houses
were destroyed ; the German bombard
ment of Btrasburg in 1870, where
riflod mortars were used, for the iirf-t
timo, and tho famous libiary nnd
picture gallery destroyed; and the Ger
man bombardment of Paris, about which,
straugely enough, even the military
conscience of the Germans was struck,
so that in the highest circles doubt"
about the propriety of such a proceed
ing at one time prevailed from a inoia!
rioint of view. With respect again to
saorea or pnblio bmldmgs, warfare
tends to become increasingly destruct
ive. It was the rule in Greek warfare
to spare sacred buildings ; and the
Romans frequently spared eacred and
other buildings, as ttiaroellus, for in
stance, at Syracuse. Yet when the
French ravaged the Palatinate in 1G89
they not only set fire to the cathedrals,
but sacked the tombs of the ancient
emperors at 8pie:s. Frederick II.
destroyed tho finest buildings at Dres
ien and Prague. In 1814 the English
forces destroyed the capitol at Wash
ington, the President's house, and
other pnblio buildings ; end in 1815
the Prussian general, Blucher, was with
difficulty restrained from blowing np
the bridge of Jena at Paris and the
pillar of Austerlitz. There is alwavB
'he excuse of reprisals or accident. Yet
Vattel had said (in language but which
repoated the language of Polvbins and
(Jicero) : "We ought to spare those
edifices which do honor to human
society, and do not contribute to the
enemy s strength, such as temples.
tombs, pubho buildings and all works
of remarkable beauty." Qantleman's
Magazine.
The Dally Swelling- of Plants.
With delicate means of measurement
Herr Kraus Lai recently proved the ex
istence of a phenomenon in all plant
organs, wbiuh is connected with their
variable water content, and consists in a
periodical swelling and contraction in
the twenty-fonr hours. Loaves, etc.,
decrease in thickness from tho early
morning till the afternoon, when they
begin to swell again, attaining a greater
size by night than by day (this is well
seen in agave, aloo and the like); tied
larly with buds, flowers, green cones,
fruits, eto , and with Btemsand branches.
Heir Kaiser has before prove 1 such a
poriod in trunks of trees, and Herr
Kraus shows that both wood and baik
share in it, independently or unitedly.
Tho various experiments of Herr
Kraus removal of foliage, watering,
shutting out light, otc leal to expla
nation of the phenomena by the vary
ing reciprocal action of those factors
which bring water into the plant and
those which oarry it asray. By night
only the water absorbing activity of the
parts below ground operates, by day
the water consuming activity of the
ports above ground beside. The water
consuming activity depends mainly on
mo toiiage ana on light (removal of
leaves or of light stops contraction! and
consists essentitllv in transpiration.
Herr Kraus states that when a plant is
wa'ered these things occur: In a short
time, less than an Hour, the stem be
gins to swell; both wood and bark take
part in this, the wood alwavs first. The
spelling progresses at a pretty quick
rate, upward of several meters per seo
oud. After some time, perhaps an hour,
contraction gradually recurs. The con
traction bngan at an upper part of an
acacia after ten minutes, whereas the
swelling at the lower part continued
ntty minutes. This shows that the con
traction is due to the acti?itv of the
foliage, and is gradually extending
downward.
Sir Francis Lyoett. of London, left bv
his will $1,000,000 to built Wesleyan
chapels in Great Britain, and the will
being contested bv a nephew it was. a
few weeks ago, sustained.
A trade journal gives directions for
"preserving harness." Preserved har
ness may be considered very palatable
by those who like tbat sort of thing,
bat we don't want a bit in our mouth.
Through the tfnci Canal.
After coaling at Malta wo steamed
down the Mediterranean, over the
smoothest soa and bonea h the linnet
sky it ever was mv happy pm Hon to
seo. It was about 6 (I'nloer- onn morn
ing when we first saw the llghthon.o at
Port Bald, and about 8 wo entered be
tween the two piers which guard Dm
entrance to tho canal and stretch far
ont into tho Mediterranean. I'nsslng a
Turkish frigate and a French ram we
slowly steamed cilosn to tlm left lmnl
shorn nnd mndn fast to a buoy. No
soonor were wo font tlmti tlm Arabs
swarmed on hoard, and soon onal was
coming over tho sldn and into tho
bunkers nt a rnld rale from bargn
tlongsido. On tlio left hnn-l for a long
distance stretched coal sheds, for this
is tho great coaling port of nt-trinr
tiotind eastward, thorn luting o; til in a
difference in the prion hotn and nt the
other end of tho cnnnl. On tho rih'
as tho town of Port Hild, whilo'ii,
front, lost far in thn desert, sppoareil
tho canal, the grandnst enginooring feat
of the ago. Just fancy tho amount
of labor, when it Was necessary to
oarry tho sand a mile off into the
deseit, and at tho same time prevent
the surrounding sand from drifting and
rolling into its place. Just take a
landful of sand out from a pile and
see how quickly the hollow is filled np
and you can then form some idea of the
under aking. I was told out there thut
the English abandoned tho wort
through inability to obtain laborers a
my price, and that the French only
succeeded by convict labor ; that the
soldiers stood guard and a refusal to
work was instantly followed by a f hot,
nd that every foot of the c.nal is a
monument to some poor devil, sent in
short order to the Arabian paradise
However this was, the canal was fin
ished and is to-day the only route for
steamers to the East. About 1 o'clock
the pilot came on board and in a few
ininutes we left our moorings and
steamed into the canal. The channel
has about twenty-six feet of water in
it asd which is only kept at that depth
by constant work at the dredges and b,
strengthening the sides by sinking rock
and walling up the sides where they are
the most threatening. On both sides
the embankments rise np to a height of
ten or fifteen feet and are composed of
'he dull brown sands which stretch
away on both sides as far as the eye can
see, the horizon shrouded in the blind
ing glare of the heated air rising from
the burning sands till the eyes
scbe and tho heart sickens at the
dismal scene. With what relief we tar.i
to the canal stretching like a blue
sparkling ribbon and feast our eyes at
the sight of a station looming up a hnlf
mile ahead with its iittle cottage, its
shrubbery and trees planted right in the
midst of a desert and drawing life from
a soil which has been brought a hun
dred miles to make life endurable to the
station master, banished away out here,
hundreds of miles from his own fair
Franco, for who else but a Frenchman
would ever think of bringing his pardeii
with him, with its flowers and trees,
out here in this wilderness of sands?
We tied np for a few seconds to let one
of the large P. aud O. bteamerspass ns ;
for every vessel must give way to the
' Royal Mail," except men-of-war, which
have the right of way everywhere. The
" canal '' is not wide enough for vesFels
to pass each other, so every quarter cl
t mile or so thero is a wider place fur
tying up, and the vessel reaching there
first makes fast to the bank and all own
the other one to pass, except in the case
of a Vessel carrying the mail or a man-of-war,
both of which go right on
through without stopping, except
during the night.
On the right-hand side runs a track,
td I was startled by the familiar sound
of the engine whistle, and tho next
minute a train swept on by at the rate
of forty miles an hour, while overhead,
"Like strings of ghosts
The telegraph posts
dime quickly trooping by."
I noticed on the other b.nk a verit
able caravan, such as one re ids abont
uud sees so much in pictures of the
great desert horses nnd camels and
tho old man all wrapped np in his
white clothes, with the seme long rifle,
with its crooked stock, ' which I have
ten duplicated on canvai till I felt on
inclination to extend in band and sa:
'How are you, old boy?" for old
acquaintance sake. And then I thought,
a hat a difference between the two
banks. Here the railroad, the tele,
graph and there the old Arab travel,
ing as his father end his grandfath
and his great-grandfather did a hun
dred years ago ; a century separated by
this narrow stream.
At dusk we tied up, having made
about thirty miles, as we were only
allowed to go "slow" through the canal
for fear of injuring the banks. The
next morning found us on our way, and
soon we were threading the crooked
channel through the lake with the town
of Ismailia broad off the port beam.
After two hours' steaming at full speed
we again slowed down and entered the
other part of the canal and again
passed through bet ween the same brown
banks with disgust and only enlivened
by the stations, with their few feet of
surrounding verdure, and occasional
steamers bound to the westward, too
few and far between, which we passed
or which passed ns, nntil we finally
steamed into the Gulf of Baez about 5
in the afternoon.
Off on our leit gleamed the houses of
Suez, and here we left our French pilot
and took np a native Red Sea pilot,
bluck as coal, and mute as one of tlm
Sphjnxes which adorn his native des
erts. Bt. Louis Republican.
The story of an Umbrella.
Daring the shower yesterday a citizen
carrying a very wet umbrella entered a
notei to pay a call to some one upstairs.
After placing his umbrella where it
might drain he wrote npon a piece of
paper and pinned to it the sentence:
"N. is. This umbrella belongs to a
man who strikes a 250 pound blow
back in fifteen minutes,"
He went his way upstairs, and after
an absence of fifteen minutes returned
to find his nmbrelU gone, and in its
place a note reading:
"P. 8. Umbrella taken by a man
who walks ten miles an hourwon't be
back at all I" Detroit Fret Press.
Great lmDrOTemenU hT recantlT hui mad
ia Csrboline, s deodorized extract cf petrole
am, the (treat natural hair renewer. perfect as
an exquisi'ely pi-rl'umed hair drussiuK aud re
storer, gold by all druggists.
M-nsmak's Peptonized beet tonio, the only
preparation of beef containing its tstdire nulri.
tious properties. Ii contains blooJ-makiuR, force
generating and life-eustaiuing properties ; in
valuable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous
prostration, and all forms of general debilltv:
also, in all enfeebled oonditious, whether the
result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over
work or acute disease, particularly If resulting
from Dulniouarv complaints. Caswell Hasaid
& Co., proprietors, New York. Bold by druggists.
Ths Science of Life, or Belf-Preaer-atton. a
medical work for every man young, middle
aged or eld. liS irala-ble reedttMM.
(IrMlsri Dlewavwrr'alaM '
For mniKlm. eul'la, frit throat, bronchitis,
laryngitis, end enrrannptlon tn Ita natly stairMi.
midline; eqnele Dr. Mime's "Onhlmi Mmllral
llswf." It la lo a great blooil-pnrlfler
mil trntigth-retorr or tonln, en4 fur llrer
iKitriplalnt ari'l oostlre eomlltion of the bowel
It has no Tl,;jyj''T Imgglata.
Twrtrf thn largtmt Irrigation ftanals In the
UrilM Htat.n ran m found at I Akin, Kearney
nonnty, Kan. The cost waa tlllj.tlOO.
ntal'ia4 Is J !.
Wiflilni'riiii tccmomlsa by employing
(If. I'inrna's MwlkliiMi. Ill" "I1"-ent I'urge
tlfe I'nilnta" ami "flnlilen Mfxllral Ilisoovery"
rU.nno thn Howl ami ayntem, thna tirevfttitlng
ferais and fiUmr STlwixllwawa. awf enring all
flriifiilniis and other humor. Hold by drug
K'ale. f'Mrr have bwn rahutd from HfO'ls fotind
llh nolns nt thn Krnperor Hadrian In an an
rlTit burrow In T'liglaiid.
Yming, ml'Mln sgMl or M mim snfTnrlng
from nntvima rtilitlity er klmlrml affeollonn
h ml'l a-lflrnsa with two n'ampn, lor lar;f
trnall'S, Wotu.o's limrnxsABT Medical Asso
riATioK, llnffiilo, N. Y.
f ,o?.ooi has more than a thonsand clmrltablo
iiisti'iitlonn. Tho aggregate income oi these is
over 111.0,000,000.
Kiiif., I'a.. inly IS, 1881.
11. If. WAnura A Co.: Sim Your Bafe Kid
ny and Liver Cure has en'ircly enred me ot
malanal fovcr of two years' etan'ling for whioi
I could nevi r flml any relief. Mis Katk Kiwo.
TnEsiriENT Anmcn's son, although but sev-
titi cn years old, Is six feet and four inchei in
height.
The Fra7.fr Axle Grease
Is the beat in the market It is the most
economical and cheapest, one box lasting as
Inim as two of any other. One greasing will
ast two weeks. It received-Hi si premium m
(he Centennial and l'aris Expositions. aUo
medals st wr.n. m-l.Mr. Tmrno other.
"Roueh an Ratn."
Clears out rats, mice, r. aolios, flies, ant,
bsdliugs, skunks, chipmunks, gophers. 15a.
Driiggisis.
.1 Cents Will Bay
a Treatise npon the Horse and his Diseases.
Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner
of horses. Postage stamps taken. Bent post
paid by New York Newspaper Union, 150 Worth
Street, New York.
23 Cents will Bur a Treatise upon the
Horse and Ilia Dtseaws. Book of 100 kos. Valuable
to every owner ol horse. PostaK staniim taken.
Sent postpaid by SEW YORK EWSPAl'liU UNION,
1 SO Wortli Street. Kew York.
THE 31 A KELTS.
3
new Tons.
Beef Cn ttlo -Good to Prune, 1. w 10
Cs.lviis C'om'n to Pii .,o Voals. 0 ujt
Sheep 4.V
Lambs C (($
Hogs Live. S
Dressed, citv
Flour Ex. State, good to fancy 4 75 Qjt 7
Western, good to choice 5 30 8
Wheat No. 2 lteil 1 15V($ 1
No. 1 White 1 15 y 1
Rye State 75
liarloy Two-rowed State 107 di 1
12v
0
8V.
75
85
1U;
2U
70
12',
8s2;
92
If'
95
05
Corn Ungraded WostornMixod 87
Yellow Southern V3' (sj
Oats White Htato 71 Qi
Mixed Western 65 dj
Hay Prime Timothy 70 kt
Straw No. 1, live CO rij
Hops State, 1J1, clioico 50 y
Pork Mens, new, for export. ..21 25 0421
Lard City Steam 12 50 12
lleliiied 13 00 foli)
Petroleum Criulo C'jiJ)
IteSned T,(tj
Butter- Stato Creamery Vi fj
Dairy 10
Western Im. Creamery 11) 0
Factory 15 64
Cheese -State Factory 0
Skims 2
Western 7
Eggs State and Pcnn 23 ftj
Potatocs-L. L., blil 1 75 2
BUFFALO.
Brocrs Liuht to fuir 4 85 5
Lambs W. stern 6 25 0
Sheep We tern 6 00 6
Hogs, Good to Choice Yorkers.. 7 50 8
Flour C'v Ground N. Piocess. 8 25 9
WLeat-ho.l.HardDulutn.... 1 47 a 1
52
25
50
10
7;-,
20
20
23
ll.1.
10',
21
25
40
00
25
25
00
47
85
Ci
90
00
Corn No. 2 Mixed 85 fi
Oats No. 2 Mix. cst Ct fij
Barley Two-rowed State 80
BOSTOH.
Beef Extra plate aud family. .18 00 20
Hogs Live 8:lij
Hogs City Dressed 10y,&
Pork Extra Prime pel W.1....19 5U Qp'O
Flour Spring Wheat Patents. , 7 50 8
Coru Hiii!. Mixed 93 fej
Oats Extra White 72
Hve State 85
Wool Washed Comb 4 Delaine 48
Unwashed " " 28
WATEUTOW.1 (MASS.) CATTLE MAXKET.
Beef Extra quality 7 7a Q 8
Sheep Live weight 4''a
Lauios 0 0i
Hogs, Northern, d. w 10)a
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour renn. Ex. Family, goud 0 50 5
Wheat No. 2 ltod 1 14 ((j 1
Itye State 97
Corn State Yellow C'JU'iJ
Oats--Mixed 6J
Butter Creamery Extra Ta. .. 2i Q
Cheese New York Full Cream. 9y,1i
Petroleum Cmdo 6 &
Ileuned 7 a
10,.
00
75
04
73
0
48
30
75
1h
104
50
14
97
G9tf
09
26
10
7
7
aV tPBa. . Hostetter-s Sto
Hostetter-a Stomach
extirpates
lis with
certainty
and promptitude
than any known
remedy, and Is a
nine! Kenial Invlgor
ant. appetizer and
aid to secretion.
Tliens aro not empty
asuerlionn. as tlious-
s ands of our country-
5 111 e n and womou
- who h a v 1 experi
' enced Its effects are
awura, but a r
bai-ki-d up by lrrt-f.
rnabte proofs. Ths
Hitters aUn clvo a
healthful stimulus
to tho urinary or
(rnns. For sale by
ail DmcRivts aud
Dealers Keuentlly.
GOOD NEWS
TO
Get ud Clubi for mr CCI.E
BKATDilt, sod eWCQ! bMUtUu
"Uoit S9.9 or Odd Bud Tea Stt."
(44 plecea,; our own 1uiporUUti. Oo
Of ths)-s la.ut(ful T.i kWla .!.- . -
to )i ty ft. twins; Club for I2S.M. fUwftr of lb o-cUed
CBKAl TfcAft" tint r trtlng advert lied tiny r tUnfrrous
nd tlrlnif duI to hUb low polK'H. DmI only wltti nlUbl
. ,i-c sum wun on 1 u.nai 11 polil. No fcutubilff.
The Ore at American Tea Co.. Importer.
f. q Bo U H A W VLSfcY fcT., yw York.
MAKE HENS LAY:
An KntliKl) Veterinary burgeon and Clieinlat, now
travsliui: in this country, sat a that most of ths Horns
and Catilo Powders suld hers are worthleas trash. He
says that Sheridan's Condition Powders are absolute
ly pure and immensely valuable. Nothing on earth
will muke hens lay Uks Hheridan's Condition Pow
ders. l)oso. one teuspoonful to one nintof food. Bold
svervnhere, orssut by mail for 8 letteratamps. 1. 8.
, Boston, MaaM., formerly BaiiKor.Me.
THRESHERS
n it tk
.rauedprioell.i
h-os. THHAUI.TMAVTAVl
.OF? CO M.p.fUM o
YOUNG MEN
situation, aililiem
ir you waut to learn Telegraphy in
a few months, and be certain of a
Valentine Bros.. JauesvUla. Wia.
OLD Coins Wanted.-Hend SSe. In stamps for cats,
loyueof imres. 8. M. Tllllrlier. E. Worresler.N.V.
la, STOMACH 0
25 CENTS, Postpaid;
A. TREATISE OIV THE
Eil H IBS. mn
AND HIS
ilpu and much other
100-PAGE BOOKtaTWaagj 25 CENTS,
Er9PB8 W I TWENTY COPIES M
im COPItS 1 70 1 0N HUNDHED t!OpiE8""!""!!IIlO 00
Ons, Two and Three-Cant Blimps reosivsd. Address
HORSE BOOK COMPANY,
104 WORTH STREET NEW YORK.
March ni
l LlNliV.ENTJ5
for Tinman, fowl net animal flesh, waa
first prepared and Introduced by Irt.
Oeo. v. Merchant, In Lockport, N. T.,
I'. 8. A., 1S88, since which tlm It baa
steadily grown In public favor, and la
now acknowledged and admitted by the
trade to be the standard liniment of tba
country. When we make thisannonnca
niem we do so without feat of contra
diction, notwithstanding we are aware
llinro nre many who are more or lea
prejudiced against proprietary remedies
"poclally on account of the many tnm
'ings on tho market; however, we are
nlessed to stats that snch nrelndlce doea
not exist SKuiimt OAKiil.INQ OIL. We ao not
elslm wonders or miracles for our liniment, bnt wa
do claim it in without an erpial. It Is put ud In bot
tie of three sizes, and all wa
yv , swAfVft ask Is that yon give I a fair
iVl Jt fft T trial, remembering thai ihe OU
lnku"ivPni nP wn,ta wrapper
mrS-?T r Mr- ji (umall) la for human and fowl
sj5'Vjrsr flenh, and that with yellow
rl,ai - ' wrapper (three sixes; for anl
mnl flesh. '1 ry a bi.ttle.
As thcpecurs Imllcnte, the Oil I nsed success
fully for all diseases of tho Auman,otri and animal
JUth. Shake well before uilng.
Cannot be Disputed.
une or the principal reason of
the wonderful success of Mer
chant's Onnrllng oil Is thst It la
tnsnufactnred strictly on honor.
Its proprietors do not, as Is the
cane with too many, after making
for their medicine a name, ditnln
tab iii CMimive properties by nfing Inferior com
pounds, but use tne very best goods to tie bought in
llic IliarKci, icjtiium,ui vuBk cor
hnlf a century Merchant Garg
ling Oil has been a synonym for
honesty, and will continue to be
so, long as time endures. For
M'e hv ell respectable dealers
throughout the United States and other conntrles.
Uur testimonials nnte trom is:u
to Ihe present. Try Merchant's
Oargling Oil Liniment for Internal
end external use. nnd tell your
jitig ij neighbor what good it bas done.
Hon 1 mil to follow direction. Keep tho bottle
well corked.
PIIRFQ Hums and
uunco senilis.
Chilblains, Frost llitss,
8crati'h"s or Urease,
Chained Hands,
External Poisons,
Sand Crark, Poll Evil,
Oallaof all kinds.
Swelling, Tumors,
Flesh Wounds, Hitfast,
Ringlione, Konl Hirers,
Oarg-t in Cows, Farcy,
Crncked Teats,
Callous, Lameness,
Horn Distemper.
Omwnsrab, vulttrr,
Abscess of the Udder.
Sprains and Bruises,
Klriiii'lmlt, Windfalls,
Knot Hot ill Khrup,
Foundered Feet,
ltoup in Poultry.
More Nipples, Curb,
(tracked Heels, Old Sores,
Kpizoolle, Lame Ilrk,
lleutnorlioids or Piles,
Toothache. Hheumatism,
Spavins, Sweenoy,
Corns, Whitlows,
Weakness of the Joints,
Contraction of Muscles,
Cramps, Swelled Logs,
Fistula. Mango, Thrush.
Caked Breasts, Boils. Ac.
9I.OOO Ht-rtVAIltt for proof of the exist-
J a ence of a bettci liniment than
"Merchants Garu'llna Oil," or a
hetter worm medicine than
I "Merchant's Worm '1 ablets." Man
ufactured by M. U. O. Co., Lock-
port, i. V., S. A.
JOHN HODCE, Sec'y.
PIANOS
ARE USED AND IVDOIWED BY TnE GREATEST
ARTIBT9 LN THE WOULD.
PATT1!
VALLERIA!
CAMPANirill
3:.IGN0LI1
OLE BULL!
GERSTER I
KELLOGG I
GALLASSI1
ABBOTT 1
PEASE 1
MAR1M0N !
LABLACHE!
I1AVELLI 1
MARIE R0ZE.
CASTLE 1
WAEKROOMSl
37 FIFTH AVEXl E, XEW YOTtK.
For Sale bv all leading Piano nouses. CATA
LOGUES HAILED FlthE OF CHARGE.
a 11 in!
Pn-noni Purttiif lvr Pill nmko New Rich
Jlood, awl will completely cliiiugn the blond iu thn
ntlre Bntem tn tlire montlii. Any peraon who
tll take one pill earh nfirht from 1 tn l'Jwpeks may be
entored to fonad health, if sitfh a t him; lie pnfsible.
Hold everywhere or vjt iv nriil f'-r S letter Pt.impf.
I. rS. JOHNSON Ac CO.. tluaiou, iHuin.,
fm jnei'ly Jtnngui't Hie.
In RhnmUnc M Million pounde
(ioport4-U lafit year. Prlcca lower
timn ever. Amenta wanre'l. Don't
,.,u. f.n,, i,,.n.l r.rfirviilur
tO Ihl Good Etnck or mixed, for $ij
111 I l)Ma lilt? imvu. v . - , - " - XT
lO lbatcit.of.ee PJackorraixefl, lor 3.
enl for round nmplo. 17 ctn.totv for pcwta&a.
l lien Bet up a clwh. Choicest Tea in the world.
Larvfert variety .-I'.ea every body. -O dfirt Tea
House In Amcrlca.-No thromo.-No Uuiubug.
ttratght bnsiucna. ValUQ fur uioiiuy.
OBvf r:,..S.4tti- ye. Tot 107.
C( AflrentM VuiiimI :iuO active, vber ajrents to
JWU travel and sell terriior1.' fr my Automatic
Wapon Brake. An opportunity forB or 10 enernt'tia
ien in earh Slate to obluin lm-r.vtive employment.
:aoh aneut will be furuiti-l a I. rake and outfit at a
euponahle price. A pood mm ly bond required. For
urtlicr iniormation add re, with incloxed Mamp,
tl. E. Jm k-un, High tthoaln, Waltun Co., Ga.
I tbOrat rivMlsh H-itr. Aitralacar
ud Fayto1ofll, will, for -0 ;, nib a(a, hciui,
iorori m,4 ek af hair, nnd i, CUBKa-tT flC-i
U&B af -tpitr fuliira buhftitd )r flifa, arUka tuna, liui
i pUe of BMKiDf, Md data of nrri .(. pjclmle
r,,,r"4 Mii) raliirxM ta all nt rt'iafl-j.
Ptifinngriiphy or Phouetlo Hiiatihnnd
"ataloirne of workF, with Phonographic alpliabet
tuil il.ntrations, for heitiU'TM, aeut on applica
ion. AddreHB, lionn PHinaii. I'inrinnati, O.
AND NOT
WEAK oi:t.
IOT Tl ,,v au-hinaVors. j!y mall, 'i.'icts. ClrcuKus
iUljV fBKK. J. 8. UlliCU ti CO.. Dcy St., N. V.
OHfMILLIOS COPIES SOLD.
EYEBTBODT WANTS ITI
ETEBYBODI KF.EDS ITt
KNOW THYSELF,
TBS
BClKHrB OF I.TFEt OB,
6KLF
PRKMltRVATlON,
Is a nadleal trsatlsa on Ezhansted Vitality, Ksrrans
aad --eal DsbUtty, Prematura DselUi ta Han;
Is aa tadiaiMasabls trsatls for stsit man. whether
jaaac ailddls aad or old.
TBI BC1ENCR OV MFEi OS, SELF.
PBKJaEMVATION,
Is beyond all osmpartson ths most extraordinary
work on Phrsioloa-y eror published. There is nutting
whstorsr ta ths marrisd or slnffls can sither r
quir or wish to know but what la fully sxplainod.
Tormlo (J lob.
TUB BCIBltrB OF f.TFKi OK, 8ELF.
PHEMKRVATION,
lostraeta theas In health how to remain so, and ths
iBTalld how to beooms well. Contains ons htiudrnl
snd twenty-live invaluable prescriptions for all fonua
of aeuts and ehronio diseases, for sach of whleh a
Antlass physician would chant from W to :u.
Loiulon LancH.
TUB fcCIENCB OF I.IFF, OB, SELF.
PKKSEKVATIOPf,
Contains 800 pases, fins stsel sorts rlnrs, Is snpsrbly
bound in Frsnoh muailn. smboased, full gilt, it Is a
marvel of art and beamy, warranted to be a better
medical book in every sense than can be obtained
slsswhors for donbls tbs price, or the money will b
rsroudsd In every instance. Author.
THE SCIENCE OP I.IKE1 OR, SELF.
PBKMEttVATlON,
Is so mneh tnpsrlor to all other treatises on medical
subjects that comparison is abaolutsly impossible.
Oattm Bar aid.
TUB bOlENOB OF I.lFEi OK, SELF.
Pit ENERVATION,
Is ssnt by maO. securely sealed, postpaid, on receipt
of prtea, only 1.'J8 (new adilion). Small illustrated
samples. So. Bead now.
Ths author can bs consulted on all disease ra
qtrlrinc skill and ezpsrienos. Address
PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE,
r W. H. PARKER, M. D.,
a Hainaca Ptrost, Bo,ton. Mass.
DISEASES.
raluable lnfonuatioa.
n r n u xt
"HAINES"