The Ilannewtfe. Ti hat has thli woman lien doing, Bo long lnce tbe morning lir-Ran T I dont beHny alio can remember Ont-half of the work the has dono. Preeaiiig the. deer little baby, Combing bin soft nil ken hair, Tutting him back In the cradle To sleep and grow healthy aud fair. Doing the work tn the kitchen, JiikC what It happens to be, Covering book for the school-room, beady for callora at three. Mending and making and chatting, Two or three ohlldren to toach, If not the primer's flint lemon, Methods no others can preach . That's what this woman's been doing, Day after day 'tis the same; Angels, O watch and defend her Mother "for that is her name. The Pert Chirk. Old Clnck was a Cochin China and lived with her brood in a nice ben, coop a little apart from the barn-yard. Cluck was a dear old hen, very kind to her chickens, and very pretty chickens she had. There were Tee-Tee, and Wee Wee, and Tu-Tu, and Twit-See, and Chee-Chee, and Teep-Weep, whom they called Feep for short six in all six well-meaning chickens, although they had their little faults. Peep's f anlt was Eertness. lie was always answering ack to his mother and saying sharp things. He wasu't a bit afraid of his brothers and sinters, and thought it a joke to tell Tee-Tee she was "a fluffy lit tle fool," or call Tu-Tu a young goose." And when Tu-Tu would ruffle his pin feathers and show he waB a game little chicken, and not a goose at all, old Cluck would say Peep was only witty, and liked to talk, but meant no harm, and her chickens must not fight. Peep was always the last to come under Cluck's wing to bed at night. He would play about and say, "I won't go to bed, and even cry out to his mamma, in a saucy way, " Go to bed yourself, Mrs. Cluck." Oh, how naughty, Peep I" Cluck would say; but she never stopped his nimble little tongue. She couldn't bear to soold or punish him, for she loved the bright little fellow. His feathers were getting quite long and glossy now, and he was growing tall. At meal-time Peep had a way of pecking at his brothers and sisters, and while he ate as much as any body else, he called them all "pigs," and laughed at them. At last, when Cluck told him, quite gravely, that a good chick must mind his mother, Peep said, " Oh, go away I mothers don't pay," in a manner that was very naughty; but Cluck found it so bright and clever for such a fledgling. Peep had his own will in his family, lie said and did whatever he liked, and grew quite big and handsome, and thought himself the finest fellow in the world. Well, one day Peep kept' running far away from the coop, and his mother was afraid some of the barn-yard fowls wonld hurt him, so she called him bock. "Don't you fuss," said Peep; "I'm going to take a walk;" and he looked so bright, and spoke np so sharp and funny, that Cluck was quite lost in admiring his ways and his fine tail feathers, proudly waving as he strutted off. "Surely," she thought, "if they see him in the barn-yard, all the hens will envy me such a clever chick." To the barn-yard Peep went, and be fan scratching about for his lunch with the rest of the fowls. Pretty soon an old bird gave a crow that was really a very fine loud noise, and sounded far and wide over the fields. " I can do as well as that, and better too, old chap,." said Peep. Now Peep knew he couldn't, but he had a way of Having pert things. To his wonder, nobody laughed; but big hen the crowers wife said, Can you, indeed, do as well? Let us oar you." She looked quite fierce at him, not a t like fond, good old Cluck, and all fowls gathered around Peep. "Pooh!" said he, "I don't want to, it I can." Still nobody seemed to ad re him, but instead, said the old ister, " You can brag, young fellow; but 1 shall show what sort of a crow you ivo, or ill peck you to death. Peep was very much scared, and tried -4 first crow. It -was such a feeble, hsh noise that all the hens and roost i, and even the turkey-gobblers and " -ks and guinea-hens and pigeons, hed at him and despised him. ::ei'p was not daunted yet, but he utted off among the younger fowls, ; truck right and l6ft with his bill, as id at home; he laughed, and called es, and bragged, and at last a fine l young rooster, as big as himself, I as handsome, said, "Come, Mr. Chicken. I don't like ir airs." " You don t amount to anything, said "P, just as he spoke to his mother. " Don't 1 1" said the young rooster 1 before Peep knew what he was ut the stranger had strewn the fine feathers, poor Cluck's pride, all over ground. 1'eep was struggling in i ; the young rooster pecked and ked till the blood came. One of p's eyes was gone, one leg was use h, and not until he lay quite still and :rly beaten did the enemy hold off. Over Peep's body the fowls all said it served mm right lor his impu re." f ter a while PeeD hoDed home verv A A J. . " .!y on one leg, and lay down quite My under old Cluck s wing. Where has my poor Peep been ? I Cluck, with the tears running i her bill. l',aen out in the world, mother, i Peep. ' And didn't the world admire you ?' ' Not a bit. Oh, my little brothers 1 sisters," said poor Peep, "chicks l.st not be pert and rude and unkind at auuie among their menus, lor wnen uie 1 airy the habit out into tue worm wi tin they meet their match and come grief ;" and Peep kicked once with me leg, rolled up his one eye, and this happened in the land of China. Of course there are no ' i-u8 in our country. vein Working a eilvcr TIMELY TOriCS. It appears by n recent report Mint 88,000 children are employed in factories in Oormauy. The English amntnr athletes are much heavier than those of the last gen eration, n difference which is supposed to be eaused by the increased consump tion of meat. The building of the Bartholdi statue for New York harbor is going on steadily in Paris. Nearly all the money required is in the treasurer's hands.and the figure will be completed long before 1881. A boy in the Ohio house of refuge, cut short at dinner by the guard's com mand, "Attention," hastily tossed a chunk of beef into his mouth, and tried to swallow it; but it was too big to go down, and he choked to death. A Naples paper has the following par agraph: "Nicolo Corridi, of Corfu, fur nishes in twenty-four hours a complete comedy ; in forty-eight hours, a tragedy or the libretto of an opera; in seventy-two hours, an entire poem, in stansas of six verses, witii tlie exclusion of any par ticular letter or letters of the alpha bet" Wl 'istant objects appear to benn ar rain may be looked for, aen the air has nearly reached nsnaL becaub saturation there is a cessation of those vapor movements by which the air is rendered in some degree obscure. Sir Isaac Newton observed that the stars seemed nearer and better adapted for observation in the clear intervals of rain, or between Bhowers, than at any other time. "Last year," says the Iron, "the out put of coal in Great Britain and Ireland was 132,000,000 tons. A cubio mile is equal to 147,198,000,000 cubio feet, and allowing 29 cubio feet of coal in the solid to weigh a ton, we have 6,000,000, 000 tons of coal in a cubio mile, and this is a greater weight than has yet been raised in the British Islands. Accord ing to the mortt trustworthy statistics, the end o 1878 will just oomplete the first cubio mile of coal, exclusive of waste in mining. Mr. Darwin has carried out a series of successful experiments to test the ques tion whether carnivorous plants really benefit by the insects they capture and kill. About two hundred plants of Droserm. rotundifolia were cultivated in plates during most of last summer. One half of them were regularly fed with roast meat, and the other were left to core for themselves. At the end of the season it was found that the plants which had been supplied with meat weighed 21.5 per cent, more than the others, and that their flower-stems, seeds and capsules were 21 times heavier, and the seeds weighed times more than the unfed ones. This seems conclusive that the plants do assimilate the insects that they capture, and that this variety of vegetables can be regu larly fattened for the market. How a Turk's House Is Divided A Turkish house is divided into two parts the selanilik for the men, the haremlik for the women; and the latter has as many separate suites of apart ments as there are ladies. A Turk who has but one wife may require a large haremlik if his mother and sisters live with him, for each of these ladies must have her private Bet of rooms and ser vants for her separate use. There must be no crowding and no mixing of domes tics in a well-ordered establishment; so that if there be four wives they need never see one another unless they please. The first wife is cailed the hanun, and takoB precedence over the others all her life. Sue has a right to the best rooms and to a fixed share of her husband's in come, which he must not reduce to minister to the caprice of his younger spouses. As these points have generally been settled through the ulemas or priests before the wedding, a hanun'a jointure is as safe as that of a French woman who has had a contract drawn up by a notary. During the last twenty years monogamy has become more and more the rule among Turks of the high est class, and even among those who have two or three wives, the hanun has gradually come to be regarded as having the same rank as the wife in an Euglish or American house. She visits and en tertains the hanun s of other gentlemen, but keeps aloof from wives of the se cond and other degrees. These aie not equals in her sight, being generally ladies of a lower social status, who have not brought any dowry to their husband, Time was when a pasha would take four wives of an equal degree, all being daughters of the other pashas or of- the Sultan and all richly portioned, but manners have altered in this respect at all events, in the European part of Tur key. It must not be supposed, however, that a hanun cherishes any such jealous hatred of her fellow-wives as is felt by a wife who sees her husband flirt with strange women. She is content with the largest share of her husband's re spect, without demanding his exclusive devotion. America's Arable Soli. it is not generally known, even in cultivated circles, that the amount of arable soil in America is greater than in Europe, Asia and Africa put together, and therefore can sustain more lives, This is no rash conclusion. Our conti nent is narrow, and therefore the winds of the ocean water it well. The moun tain chains' on the east side of the Amer ican continent, are low; on the east side of the Old World, are high. From this it results that the trade winds, laden with the wetness of the sea, are attracted to our land. The breadth of the Old World and its high eastern ranges cause the rainless interiors of Asia and Africa, Again, America is the land of fertile plains; the Old World of scorched plains. Our plains run north and south and so attract and receive the rains. America is high under the equator, the Old World is wide; hence, with us small surface is exposed to the scorch ing sun. The result is that the pro ductive soil in the Old World is ten million square miles and in the New i World, eleven million. TALLEST PAIR IN THE WOULD. Captain and Mra, Tlntrn-Ilow They Live, nad Other Inlerr-ntlngj l'nritrnlara. In the St. rani (Minn.) Pre is fouud an interview with the two largest peo ple in the world, which, for the pecul iarity of the details and the vividness with which they are given, is quite in teresting : Captain Martin Tan Buren Bates was born in Whitesburg, Letcher county, Ky., November 9, 1846. He ia seven feet eleven and one-half inches in height and weighs 478 pounds, nis father was about six feet tall and his mother was a lady of ordinary stature. He was the yonugest of twelve children, seven bovs and five girls, and the tallest of his family, except himself, was n brother who was killed at Vicksburg during the war, and who was six feet and two inches in height. No cases of extraordinary size have ever been known in any of his ancestors, and his extraor dinary development must be viewed simply as a freak of nature, as It cannot be accounted for on any scientific grounds. Nature, as usual, did not propose to do things by halves, and in 1849 Miss Anna H. Swan was born in Colchester county, Nova Scotia, and, as the sequel shows, she was intended as companion for the big boy. Her parents were rather small-sized people, her father being but five feet Hud four inches in height and weighing 145 pounds, while the mother was five feet and two inches and weighed 110 pounds when in robust health. She had three brothers and five sisters, all of ordinary size, and do other case of remarkable growth has ever been known among her progeni tors. Mrs. Bates was as tall as her mother when six years of age, but she continued to shoot upward until to-day she is exactly the same height as her husband, seven feet and eleven and one half inches, her weight being 413 pounds. Both the lady and gentleman are per fectly proportioned, every member cor responding and aiding to produce a sym metrical but colossal figure. When the reporter called Mrs. Bates, who is an ex ceedingly fine-looking lady, was dressed m a liaudeome blue silk, cut in the most fashionable style, with bands of delicate white lace at the throat and wrists, one wore a quantity of very elegant jewelry and her hair was dressed high, thus making her appear taller than her state ly lord. Captain Bates is a perfect Apollo in figure and quite a Chesterfield in man ners. He has a frank, pleasant face, giving clear indication of the massive heart within him. His garments are all of the latest style and fit perfectly. He affects only a neatly waxed mus tache, his broad cheeks giving evidence of a close intimacy with a keen razor. Captain and Mrs. Bates are people of more than ordinary intelligence, and show that they have improved the op portunities tbey have had for acquiring information of people aud places during their extended travels. .','Do you thiDk you have stopped growivg, captain ?" asked the reporter. Captain Well, I hope I have. I have reached the height of my ambition and have got things pretty well fixed to en jov life as I am now. Reporter Were you brought up to any business ? Captain I am a thorough granger.. I was brought up on a farm and now I own one myself at Seville, Medina coun ty, Ohio. I have 161 acres in fine shape and take great pride in it. Reporter lou have a giants castle on it? Captain Yes, we have a pretty good house; the lower story is twelve and one-half feet in height and the upper one twelve feet: our doorwavs are eicht and one-half feet high, while ordinarily they are seldom over six and one-half. Reporter Of course your furniture compares with the building ? Captain In every room we have chairs for my wife and myself, but of course we h ave ord'nary furniture for our friends and servants. Our own furniture was made expressly for us by Herndon, of Cleveland. The bedstead is eight feet and four inches long and five feet six inches in width. The chairs, bureau, washstands, and in fact everything, cor responds. We experienced a good deal of inconvenience when traveling on ac count of the diminutive size of the ordi nary furniture. I took a fancy to a 1 3 T 1 1 . t TT 1 spring ueu, anu uau one maue at nait ford.It is a big thing. Reporter Where you have been since you left the form ? Captain I served in the Fifth Ken tucky infantry during the war. Confed erate, you know; but I was in one of the bravest brigades the world 'ever saw. Since the a I have been amusing myself mostly by traveling about looking at little men and women. Reporter The ready-made goods stores are of but little use to you, cap tain. Captain Not a bit. There is not a single garment or article I use but what has to be made especially for me. My boots are about No. 17, and are made for me by a man in Seville. My hats are nearly a nine, my collars twenty-five incnes, and 1 guess if my gloves were gauged they would run up to at least fourteen. I have the most trouble with my clothes - my trousers, in f uct. You see the cloth is mode narrow, and while it is all right for men of ordinary size, a pair of pants for me consumes an lm mense auantitv unless the nuD runs both ways. My wife says it takes just about three times as much cloth for my clothes as for men f the usual size. Reporter Captain, does your strength correspond with your size ( Captain I think it would if. I devel oped it. I have raised 1,412 pounds, square lift, which looks small beside the 2,800 pounds lift of VVinship, but you know he did that in harness. 1 have al ways feared f training myself, and hence have never mode anv (treat efforts. In my present course of life. of course I de velop no muscle. Reporter Did you ever hear of any person so larsre as yourBeu i Captain No. sir. I am satisfied that I am the biggest man in the world, and probably as large as ever was born. have devoted much time to studying the subject, and 1 am satisned that there never existed a race of giants, as ie claimed. There ia actually nothing to corroborate the theory. They claim that men of gigantic stature are vouched for by the Biblo. I claim that wo know nsthing of their base of measurement, and that the standaid has increased since those times, so that a cubit miqht have been a very small measure of length. Reporter Mrs. Bates, I prosumo that your large family enjoys good health ? Mrs. Batos Excellent; we are never sick, except perhaps, with slight colds, like the one 1 now have. Your spring seems cold to me, but I understand that this is exceptional weather, and I am de termined to visit Minnesota some time in the summer and see all the beauties of the great country. Reporter I presume that you aro the tallest lady in the world. Mrs. Bates While we were abroad the most eminent physicians and scien tists assured me that there was never Defore a lady within eighteen inches of my height. Reporter Excuse my inquisitiveness, but how many yards of silk are there in the dress you wear ? Mrs. Bates Well, this is rather scant there are only sixty-five yards in it. My full evening reception dresses require eighty yards of material. The reporter did not become too in inquisitive, but he saw the tiny tip of a dress boot peepin. from under her skirt, and mentally decided it was about a narrow " twelve." Of their wedding and presentation to the queen, the gentleman and lady gave a very interesting account. The wed ding took place on June 17 at St. Mar tin's Church, Trafalgar square, London. As a bridal tour they visited the Star and Garter Hotel, a few miles from the oity, and passed two days in that fash ionable and expensive retreat. "It ia a fine place," said the captain. "Our bill was over 17 and was as long as my arm, every incidental being put dowa. I have it framed at home." On retaining to London they fonnd an order from the queen awaiting them, reqoi-ing them to present themselves at Buckingham Palace at one o'clock on the 21st. They had previously appeared before the Prinoe of Wales and the members of the Masonio Lodge, of which he is a member, and it is proba ble that he had aroused bis mother's co' Iosity by h'S description of them. At the appointed time they were g'ac'oosly received, there being present the Princesses Louise and Beatrioe and Piioces "Arthur and Leopold, besides lords and ladies. The queen was somo wliet reserved, but asked them how they l'ked the country and government com pered to those of America. Sbe made tuetn both bridal gifts, tbe captain re ceiving a massive gold striking watch, tbe case weighing nine ounces and the entire watch oyer a pound, while, with the immense neck chain, the whole weight is over three pounds. The bride was presented with a splendid diamond clutter ring, containing seven J.rge white jewels. Reportor How did you enjoy the interview, captain ? Cantain I was thinkinor all of the t '.me now I was to get out, as I had been told that I must back out bowing. But we were much relieved when the queen arose and passed out of a side door with a gracious nod. We were invited twice afterward, when the queen evidently desired to exhibit us to some of her re lations, and she was then very cordial, The reporter suggested that every thing would have to move on a grander scale in the world if there was to bo a race of giants such as they. "Yes,' responded the captain, "if I But-" Words of Wisdom. Deeds are fruit words are but leaves. The example of the good is visible philosophy, Kindness is the high tide of the soul s nobility. Practice economy and industry and success is yours. Temper is so good a thing that we should never lose it and always com mand it. It is better to bow a good heart with kindness than a field with corn, for th heart s haryest is perpetual. Men should not think too much of themselves, and yet a man should be careful not to forget himself. When you strike oil stop boring. Many a man has bored clean through and let the oil run out at the bottom. Next in point of meanness to doing an injury is to do a man a favor and every now and then remind him of it. Prefer sense to wit; never study to be diverting without being useful; let no jest intrude upon good manners, nor say anything that may offend modesty. Kindness does not always produce what we expeot ; from a hand which we hate they are regarded as offenoes ; the more we lavish upon one who may hate us, the more arms we give him who wishes to destroy us. Humility does not depend upon the way in whioh a man carries his body ; it depends upon what his life is ; upon what he means to do with it ; upon where he puts it, and where he keeps it, and what service it renders. lij relying on our own resources we acquire mental strength; Dut when we lean on others for support, we are like an invalid, who, having accustomed himself to a crutch, finds it difficult to walk without one. A man says: "i nave thrown away forty years; I have wasted my whole life" or, as the more common expres sion is coming to be: "My life has been a failure" because the thing at which he aimed has been lost. As if man's life consisted in the abundance of exterior things which he possessed. As if a man's life were not hidden in his own self, The city of Texarkana is built at the junction of Texas, Arkansas and Louiei ana. It received its name in 1819, when an enthusiastic surveyor, while running the lines, blazed the three fragments of the names of the new btates on a tree and predicted that a great city would be built there. Three years ago, when the town was founded, the name, still to be seen on the old tree, was adopted, and the prediction seems in a fair way to be verihed. as the town now has d.OOO in habitants, and is an important railroad crossing. The Social lVpitrcr, The social weaving-bird of the Orange river region of southern Africa is too re markable n member of this family to be pasped unnoticed, though its extraordi nary structure has ofttn been described bj African travelers. It not only builds u companies, as do most of the family. butalways associates in colonies of many individuals, who construct their nests under n common roof o( their own build- ng. When one of these structures is first begun in the selected place, the community immediately procoed to con struct together the general covering which is to shelter them all. This thatch is mode of a coarse strong fiber of BnBh- man s grass. This being completed. each pair begin to form their own separ ate nest, of the same material as the roof. The nests are placed close to gether, side by side against the under Bnrfoce of the general covering, and when all are completed, the lower sur face exhibits an even horizontal ceiliner. perforated with small circular openings. With each breeding season, fresh nests are formed upon the lower surface of those of the preceding year. In this manner, year after year they add to the mass, until at last its excessive weight causes the destruction of the whole, and new sito has to be chosen. Tbe roof is usually firmly interwoven with the branches of a large tree, and often the prinoipal limbs are inoluded within its substance. Soribncr. Dead-Let! cr Office Facts. There are 4,000,000 dead letters re ceived annually at the dead letter office. Three hundred thousand without stamps. Fifty thousand partially addressed. Six thousand, no address. One and a-half million of money orders and drafts of money value. x orty-nve thousand packages contain ing property. Fifteen thousand photogrophs. One-quarter of a million European letters are returned unopened. One-tenth of all letters received oon- tain property. Ten thousand applications for letters reported lost ; the great proportion found and delivered. Dr. Euglo, the noted German statist! cian, states that there are in llussia 1,023,591 factories and industrial estab lishments working with five and less men. and 43,513 employing from five to fifty hands? In these 1,667,104 establ ishments together there are employed 3,625,918 men and 378,959 women at wages ranging from 250 to 3,200 marks a year. Mother! Mother!! mothers!!! Dea't faal to procure Mrs. Winslow'i Boothlng Byrnp for an diseases incident to the period or tootn lug in children. It relieves the child from pain. cures wind colic, regulates the bowels, and, by giving relief and health to tbe child, gives rest to ine mottier. n M an old and weu-tned remedy, Buckeye Mower and Kenpers, The Buckeye Mowers and Reapers, built by Adrianoe, Piatt & Co., Poughkeepsio, and 165 Greenwich street, New York, have for 21 years held the highest position. While many useful Improvements have been made in other depart ments of agricultural machinery, all attempts to produce a machino that would equal the Buckeye in the simplicity and correctness of its principles of construction have failed while tbe excellence of the mechanical work done by Adrianoe, Piatt t Co., bai given them a world-wide fame. The New Model Buckeye Mower oontaini all the original Buckeye features, and is construct ed entirely of iron and steel. It ia truly a model of beauty, symmetry, lightness, strength, efficiency aud durability. Tbe Adriance Reaper built by the same firm is the nearest approach to perfection yet at' tained in a light, simple, single-drive wheel iron reaper, combining every desiraUo foatur to enable it to do the best of work under al circumstances. Its platform is very easily fold ed, rendering .-it as portable as tbe Buckeye Mower, and enabling it to pass through the narrowest bars or lanes. Imperial Kndomement. Owing to the perfect purity of Dooley's Yeast Powder, and its superior excellence in everv reHDect over all other DreDarationi. it has beeu adopted and used in the lloyal households or tbe following countries, vis.: Uermany, Knir land, Spain, Russia, Denmark, Sweden, Italy and Brazil. It was long ago adopted and is to day used by tnousands or royal American households scattered all over the western world and the high esteem in wbich it ia held in this country fully Justifies its Introduction and use as above stated . Great age carries with It a certain resnocti bility whether it attaches to a person or thing, mis is seen particularly in ine case or jonn son s Anodyne Liniment, which ia the most marvelous internal and external remedy ever discovered. It ought to be kept in every bouse, If farmers and others continue to buy dust and ashes put up in big packs and sold for oon dition powders it won't be our fault. We have exposed the swindle time and again. Slieri dan's Powders are the only kind we know of worm carrying nome. CHEW The CelebiAted if VTOHLIsa " Wood Tag PJuj 1 OBAOOO. Tn ProtfKER Tobacco Ooitfaky, Ne-a York, liontoa, and Chicago. The Orenteal Ulaeovery of the Ace la Dr, Tobias' oalabratad Vaoetiao liniment I W roan baton the pablio. and warranted to core Diarrhea. Draentery, Oolio, and Spaama. taken internal If ; and Oronp, Ohronle Rheumatiam, Bora Throete, Oata, Bruiees, Old Bores, and Paina in the Llmba, Back, and Cheat, externally It has neTer failed. No family wUl eTer be withoat it after onoe siring it a fair trial. Prioe, 40 eente. Da, TOBIAS VKNKTIAN HOKSB LINIMENT, in Pint Bottlea. at One Dollar, is warranted superior to any other, or NO PAY, for tbe oore of Oolio, Onto, Brniaea, Old Sorea, eto. Bold by all Dross lata. Depot lO Park Plaoa, Now York. ' lAKTI()UI.AKSo( Sinithoxraphy. Agfa1 Directory L copy Agfa' Hgralil. Ao.,lrp. hiia HMiTa,rttiia.,ra, Upham's DEPILATORY POWDER KtiiuoTei npernaoua nair id nwm minures wunoiii injury to ttia Bkia. Bunt by mail fur 1 . 2 , b J tt. O, V rii am, boutn Hi bull, bfcreei, rnuaavipma. Uirculun free. S5 to SI O null v Dfoflt. with 82ft t'nnltal. Are-it iav ie m tA. iiiii In n lie-1 fniiiiile to sHtll ft (!! evrticL ia dVmand ia very family, ia paclt.&M eunwaivnt for handling ami unohjuetioDauie id every rnppeoi. jirca lur mulled to any address. Sample ?o enU each, by mail. Addraa O. B. HOWltlX, Kal Wir Mills, luiluy (Street, Brooklyn, W. . HOLIES IH THE WEST Excursions to Lincoln, Nebraska, ! Nfw Vork and New Knelmid th Third 1'iirnilay in evrrv Month umil Herein ber. Kiourmun No. 12 will leaie TUESDAY IINR Isili. Karr about hall" reaulai Halve. Kaat traina and nrL.claa aucon motlauona, guaranteed. Fur deeorilive liud Circulare, lulunua iiod ahoul Tickule, U,, aeud eiidreaa ou PokUtl Card Lo fiJN Y lUOOUUi 317 UraaawHTiAawtark, wb's HiiowrmTAt Tnrwmna, for eona-ha and enlrta. PIIRKSS M.OHW) Kt.ArK, Pres., for pecialtorme at LJlaVrrack(N.Y.)Unllft. All appointments the heat , ftTTWl RKTOl.TKKM. Price 1,1st free. Addra "Ul'U Urniit Weilxrn (Inn Wnrka, I'lltjihnrs.ra. $44 g scg; a wik at home. Outfit, wnrtMff rr. 11, 11. rike A Uo., Aiikiikia, Me. ORGANS ratall prion )"-JS(rnl f(. PIANOS r(ail prioa wM?nli nit M I ft. raa nartfa n. BRATTY, Waalilnulon, N. J. dfpn A itlnnih. Aannta wanle1. :((( bttat aell S 1 1 1 In artiolpa in tna world. One aample frt tjlUWU A.Llreaa JAY BHONMON, Detroit, Mieh $7 A DAY to AnU cniin for the Ktreftlde Vlallor. 'I'erma and Oittltt Knte. Addroaa P. I). VIOKKRY, Aininta, Maine, ELECTRIC BELTS. A twrfftot cr for nrmnr debility. Rand for olr- Ur. In. I,. KAltH, NiV llroadway, Nbw York. AGENTS, READ THIS I W will p.ij Air-ntt a NnlnrT of I OO per Month and Kiinnna tn anil nnr Ni w ana WnnnVrful InTfta- l. Actdrena B II KKMA n DO., Marahall, Miou. CLOCKS K. lNI-llAHAM At CO.'. HuiMirtor in ilMiirn. Not ftqualnt In quality, or a timttkeepfira. Ak your Jnwuler for thimi Agwnoy ft Uortlandt. Hi., N. $10. $20. $50. $100. Inraaled Jiidloiontf In Stocks (Options or PriTtloa-ea). a a aura ruad to rni'iil fortune. Full dot.!1 and Olttnial N(o.!k Kichanite Hnrl free. Addree 'f. I'OT'l KK ymilT a OU., Hanaora, a.t wall ntreev, new lore. S 1 0 g $25 aaVurnVArl N0Velt.CS Outfit Free application on to , H. BUKKORIVS HONS, Mannfactmina Pnhliahera, 14 1 to 47 Kranklin Mtreet, Boaton, Maaa. WEtnhliabwd nwwrly fl fly year. Ilt. II KAf JOI'T.of I':tirnitn. liaa Ilie nnt rameriv in the world that rri-' cure Con aiimpiinn. t!narrh, Axlhmu. and r'' Aronchlnl AHi'rllnne. lie guarantee to cure n1 cmrnin wn will put themaelTra nn(1r hia oare. Aoomnircx'iv.imia for palianta at hia rnirie.toe, Vi'i W. M ill' Ktreet, Naw York. Tanna, including board and medical atland anea, at I j& par wt-ak and npwanle. OnnauHation free. TRADR MAHK. DR. DECKER'S OKLKBRATED EYE BALSAM 18 A SURE (JURK For IN KLA M KD. WEAK KYI"", BTYKS and SORH i:Yi:i.IDS, j by all imiKiuisrs, rroT. n iiowkiiv.n. . NT BY MAIIj loit axi 1759 LIARS As trarallng aganU are lying about our Five-Ton Wagon Beale, on whioh we prepay the freight, aell on trial for 85U, and aak no money till teated and fonnd aatiafao tory. For Lithograph and Prloe Mat (free) eddreee JONRS OF B1NOI1 AMTON Binghamton. N. Y, otitis m Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Sick Headache. Consnption Can Be Corel PITI.MONA f ft rtrlnin r-m.ft for tha cura ?OiMlh.llTION and all ritmfa of tl o Kunn ftnds'rhrout. it inriKoratHfl tn brain, tone up tha Uitj, makna tha wiak strong:, nnd In pi nan ant to Ink, Plica One Dollar pnr bottle at Dru,fiftla or Mint by tbe valuable advice to 4'miMiiHilrt lven. manv ovrtittualM nf ACTUAL oithrs, and full directions for iminjr acenm nanica tach bottle, or will be t f'rmU any addreea ONCAU (1. MOKRH, IS OonlamU'Ktreet, New Yrk. EVERETT HOUSE. Fronting Union Sqnnro- NEW YORK. Finest Location in the City European Flu-Eestent Unsurpassed. BURNETT'S COCOAINE Kills DnndraffV Allnya Irritation nnd Pro. mate, tbe IJrow lli of the Hair. Ottawa, III., April 8, 1878. Meters. Joseph Burnett A do.: ffmKcBMa For orer two years I have suffered terribly with " loald head " in ita worst form. A few week, ago I tried a bottle of your Ooooaine. Tbe lirat application are me relief, and now the diaeaae ia effectually cured. I cheerfully reoommend BUBNETT'S OouOAIME to any one Buffering with the above complaint. Yours respectfully, ' N. O. STEVENS, Depatr Sheriff. The GREAT REMEDY for OORPULENOEJ. ALLAN'S ANTI-FAT It purely -regctable and perfectly harmless. It arts upon the food In the stomach, prcvt-niiiiK Ita ln'tiiK converted into fat. Taken In a- or-lume, with t I reetloua. It will reduce a ft pereea from two to Ave aeenda pee week. "t orpulence la not only a diaeaae Itself, but tha harliiiiKer of otliert," So wrote lllppocrulea two thousand yeart ago, and what was Urdu then la noue the leba so to-day. hold by druggist, or tent, by express, upon ro aaipt of 41.40. Quarter-doien ttuu, Addrcbu, BOTANIC MEDICINE CO., Profirletor; Buffalo, X. T A Safe and lUhab.e bubatitute fur lululuo The only 15 cent AGUE REMEDY - 1 1ST Til 13 WOnijD irni Sola ky all Dratcttu. UIW4 FREE aa rc.l,, f Dri ' Writ U nCNOAS DICK A CO., U uarma hruri timw tau Mir FREE" rpitMiiua. ""is r NY'U X3 fvT mm r -' SI.Si lliallvi i AMTi-IFATr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers