THE First-Barn. The first-born !■ Fairy child, A wondered* eofnatfon! A tam<-li<**4Faa|ur frmd and wtM— A moving oniltaUrm! Beside the gtarjh. RM the tir, Its fcotstephuigh* with lightness: And orsdlcd, all it* latsra fair Are With mystic brightness First pledge of their betrothed lore— O, hapj ytlWFVbat claim it i First gth direct from Heavii above - O, happy they that name it I It tunes the household with its voice. And, with quick laughter ringing. M koe the inanimate room rvjiaee, A hidden rapture bringing. Its beanty all the bcauteou* tiling* By kindred light reasmblss; Bat, evermotv with fluttrring winga, t)n fairy confine* tremble*. So much of those that gave it birth. Of Father and of Mother; So ranch of thi* world built on arth; And so much of another I Farm, Garden and Household. WEEDS.—Weeds will grow in spite of the heat and dryness, and a constant warfare must lie waged against them. When weeds are hoed up and allowed to wilt under the (scorching July sun, there is fury little danger of their growing again, unless tliore is plenty of yellow docks. Never allow a weed to ruu to seed if it can 1* helped, as the garden can be kept free of weeds, to a oertatu extent, if they are carefully pulled tip when small. To PRESERVE TOMATOES.—Take good ripe scald and skin Uieiu, take out the seeds carefully, so a not to break your tainatoca. Now boil them in ginger water until they are soft, take theiu out, drain them, and weigh them ; and to every pound of fruit add one pound of white pulverised sugar and half a i ut of the ginger water thev in ; add some stripe of frraii ginger ; boil carefully over a slow fire until clear, take them off, cool, and put sway in jars for use. To HARDEN PICKLES. —AIum will hard en cucumber*. To a gallon of vinegar, add one ounce of powdered alum. If the vinegar is put into bottle* tightlv corked, and act in A kettle of cold water, with hay or straw between them to keep the bot tle® from knocking together, and allowed to remain over the fire until the water boils, theft removed, and kept in the ket tle until cool, the vinegar will keep per fectly clear when used for pickles; hut it nbotud' be added to them cold. Shred* of horse radish root will prevent all pickles from moulding. STRONG Dunes.— A Colorado saloon keeper said of a rough crowd:" I couldn't get their whisky strung enough for them, so after trying every way, I at last made a mixture of poison oak and butternut I hat fetched them. I called it the sheep herder's delight, and it was a popular drink. The Ural Pike I tried it on yelled with ilelitfbt; tie next OM took two drinks and turned a double somerset in the road befrav the bouse. A peddler came ak>ng. and he took several drinks of my sheep herder's delight; he went off and stole his own pack and hid it in the woods." ROOTS FOR FORAOR— The Pnicbcxtl > rmrr says;—" l u the short hay crop, it will be well for those farm ers who have jmt in plentifully of sown cvrn and a tood supply of sugar beets. Fifteen to twenty tons of the former, and thirty to forty tons of roots per acre, will go far to make np the loss of the hay. If wither of these have been put in, the only remedy now is a crop of rnta bags or common white turnips. The middle at the present mouth will yet do for the" former, and two or three weeks later IbQfce latter. These latter should be sown, besides other places, oa the headlands of cornfields, previ ously well ml deeply stirred with the cultivator, ada fertilized with superphos phates. Jg Rata bafri? from American grown seed are ptvfeiabio to foreign, as thev run much less to what is called neck, and make better-shaped and more regu lar tillers. .This crop requires drill culture. POSITION or FAR* BntLDnros.—There is far too much attention given to the P 0 *?!? 0 ' **9 Compass in olacing the buildings. If the roads run north and aout h every building- on the place ia very likcjjr to bo phcoj factiisj aue 631 st or west without regard to the formation of the lanutter packed in this style of packages will always sell at the highest prevailing rates for the quality of butter, for how ever duU .the market may be for pail or export, .still a certain amount is needed under all circumstances by the trade, and this package is the most handy for their use. —American Grocer. MOTHER. —Around the idea of one's mother the mind of man clings with fond affection. It is the first dear thought stamped upon our infant hearts, when yet soft and capable of receiving the most profound impressions ; and all the after feelings are more or less in sompanson. Our passions and our will- ■ fulness mey lead ns far from the object 1 of our filial love; we may become wild, < headstrong, and angry at her counsels ( or opposition ; but when death has still- j j ed her monitory voice, and nothing but 4 calm memory remains to recapitulate her ] virtue and her deeds, affections, like a j flower beaten to the ground by a rude , storm, raises up her head and smiles , amid her tears. Round that idea, as we , have said, the mind clings with fond ( affectiqn ; and even when the earliest j period**! our lias forces memory to be j silent, fancy takes the place of remem- j France, and twine* the image of our de- ( parted parent with a garland of graces ' and beauties amfvirtues, which we doubt j pot that she possessed. j ( Jiew Summary. GfummorrKßM are destroying the crops in Western Minnesota. BBC. Fran htw withdrawn hi* resign u tion and trill remain in the cabinet. SntTT soldisrt wwntly deserted from Fort Hiyre*. Kansas, only eight of whoiu have boon Mfitnnd. FORT* persons aero killed ami many wounded by a powder explosion on u Greek man-of-war. A CONTRACT ha* been made in San Francisco to send 600 Chin o*o laborers to the public work* of Peru. Is 1852 there were 4,500,000 sheep in the province of Bumoa Ayres ; la*t year they had multiplied to 100,000,000. THE **r trxt*x|W evacuating France trill at once return to their home* in Germany. A WOMAN was burned at the stake in a puldic square in Pent, for being a witch. Two new National ; Banks have been organised in Chicago, making nineteen now in that city. THK tirat lade of new cotton was re ceived at Galveston by express front Co lumbus, Texas. GOOD FARM HASP* in the dairy dis trict* of New York command front 82.'* to SOO per month, and board. GSOROS FRANCIS TRAIN i* lecturing senaattonally iu Ireland, drawing im mense audience*. SIXTEEN hundred and eighty-three poreou* were arte* ted by the Police of New York last week. IT is announced in Ixutdon that Mr. GUdtoue will abolish the Army pur chase system by royal warrant. BERLIN unnounees the receipt of 400,- 600,000 francs from Versailles on account of the war iudeuiuity. Rtcv. Mr. Philip a Unitarian clergy man, of Kingston, Mass . cut his throat. Mental depression was the cause. Miss. Laura Fair has published an ad dreos to the public. She asks the news papers to cease gossiping about her. TH* horse disease in New York city has become very serious, and the car companies are great sufferers by it A VRKY destructive fire occurred at Lisbon. Several people perished iu the dames. THE engine Vulcan, on the Lehigh Valley Kailroad. blew up at Coalport, killing the engineer, fireman, and four | trainmen. THOHAH A. SIXJTT, is said to be Presi dent of two railroad companies, Vice- President of eleven, and director in thir ty-four. E. L. BVRLXMOAME, son of the Minister to and Embassador from China, was married in Sou Fraucisoo, to Miss Ella F. Badger. GENERAL SHARER teports that the num ber of men under his command that were ordered on duty in New York during the riot, was 5,332, including 416 officers. IMMIGRANTS with animals and Iraggage for Winuepeg will hereafter be allowed to go through the Uuited State* on giv ing their personal bonds. OEX. CROOK, ha* tvkeu the field agaiust the Apaches, with five cvmpauies of cavalry, fifty picked Mexicans and a number of native scout*. SEVERAL important engagements have lately been fought iu the interior of Cuba, and in all the patriots have been singularly successful A HORRIBLE den of filth, a tenement house in Cherry street. New York, Iteiug condemned by the Sauitary Inspector*, the police drove out of it eighty-four families. THE horse disease, in New York is now declining. The sick horses iu various public stables are doing well and show signs of improvement. Few new cases are reported. THE United States Treasurer holds as securities for circulating note* and depos its of public moners $37(3,917,550; na tional hank circulation at this date,s3lß,- 761, 729. GEM. Palanca telegraphs that engage ments had occurred in Cuba, in which 100 insurgents were killed and the rest dispersed. Nine Spaniards were killed, and ten wounded. • Aeoorwrs received at the War Depart ment from military officers acting as Indian agents report a most unhappy condition of things among the Indian's of Northern California and Nevada. A GERMAN and his sister-in-law in Brooklyn committed suicide Itecause the husband of the hitter and brother of the former accused them of impro]>er inter course. THE mortality among rhildren in New York city is again very distressing this year. 3+4 persons died of diarrbcßol af fections last week, of whom 310 were children under two years old. SENATOR Thnrman, of Ohio, bid in the Pennsylvania property ef the Atlantic and Great Western Railway, which was sold at Philadelphia. The aggregate price was 8(320, OOU ; cash, S7O,QUO. THE reason that Kirk, the Nevada City desperado, was hung was because he threatened vengeance upon the vigilance ommittee which watches over the municipal affairs of that town. THE Communists convicted at Mar seilles have been sentenced to imprison ment for various terms. It is thought that all sentences to death will be com muted. THE French elections have ended in a victory for the administration. Of 117 vacancies scattered all over France 91 have been filled by men who declare themselves moderate republicans, and ready for the support of M. Thiers. THE Horseshoers' IVotective Union, of Chicago have refused to allow members to work in shops where machine-made horseshoes are used, and there has been an extensive stoppage of work in conse quence. THE Sheffield Express train going South on the North Midland Railway ran into a freight train near Chesterfield station. Two passengers were killed outright and thirty reported injured, some of whom will die. IT has just become known that the New York Cuban Junta has been in Montreal recruiting for an expedition, and that it has met with considerable success, having enlisted a number of volunteer officers and about 900 men. In accordance with the treaty, France having paid a part of the indemnity, the German troops have l>egun to evac uate the cities of Rouen and Amiens, and the Department* of the Somme, Lower Seine, and Eute. ROBERT BUFFTO, who murdered Mr. Severns at Newburgb, N. Y., last win ter, committed suicide on Thursday in his cell at the State Asylum for Insane Criminals in Auburn, N. Y., by cutting his throat DAVIS Creek bridge, on the line of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, fell. Thirteen workmen fell with the bridge, two of whom were killed, one was prob ably fatally injured, and six were more or leas injured. AT Cottonwood, Kansas, William Cliem, cattle dealer, was shot dead by a Mexican herder in bis employ. The Mexican then mounted a fleet horse and started for Texas. He was pursued by two "cow-boys," who overtook him 250 miles south of Abeline and shot him dead. ROBBER*. —The daring of Broadway ; robbers far surpasses the boldness with i which the highwaymen of Hounalow Health used to stop the mail coaches with their cry of " Mtand and deliver !" The very crowd of Broadway is a partial cover for these bold freebooters, for in that crowd it is everybody's bnsineas to interfere in nobody else's business. One afternoon, at the crowded corner of Broadway and Warren street, two men tripped apparently and fell One re covered himself first and walked away without stopping to apologize or to look out for his companion. Not one in the crowd paid any attention to the matter further than to laugh quietly at the mis hap. And vet in the few seconds of that fall one of the men was robbed by the other of thirty-five thousand dollars. The tripping and the fall were parts of a bold plan of robbery thus successfully carried out.—AT. F. Paper. Fashion Note*. /fimiPNNimw are no longer fashionable. Lace is universally worn this summer Blue groa grain ia used for croquet pa vilions. It ia prophesied Unit ilk-, and all I kinds of dress materials will bo very I much higher in the Fall. We really do I not see why. Kqueatriauism is fltnltuga* mtieh favor | with American girls now, as it has loug ; had wiUi English lieatitiea. Very handsome locket* are made of | ion-dollar gold pieces, which are split in the centre and made to slide open, and . the apace is large enough to hold a like j tie**. Very pretty Kacquo*, for Summer wear, are of white applique law, auude ouitoshort, with wide border and ooat j Jeeves. They are very pretty and stylish, : worn over a black silk ureas. | The nwHou why so many lneti are bald l at an early age is la-cause they so eon j -•lantly wear their hats iu their office* j during the day, and when it is unueces j Mirv. It heats the head and rots the ■ hair, and causes it to fall out as it dis s IU oases of fever. | The French style of arranging chil dren's hair ha* liecit adopted here that ! uto cut the hair short off iu a fringe l over the forehead, aud leave it long at the back. Tina prevcuta it* getting in the eyes, and savea the child and nurse both much worry and bad temper. Hon an Adiertisenirat Berk*. There i* a good deal of truth in the | follow iug description of the effect* of an advertisement. "Constant dropping wears away atone," and constant adver tising compels sueeeas. The first time a man looks at an ad j vertiseiueut he does not see it. Second time he does not notice it. Thirvl time, he is dimlv conscious of lit. Fourth time, he fainUv retaeuiliere ha* iug seen something of the kind | before. Fifth time, he half read* it Sixth time, he turns up his nose at it j Seventh time, he reads it all through, and says, " Pshaw !" Eight time, he ejaculates, " Here's 1 that confounded thing agaiu F Ninth time, he thinks it might pomi blv suit some one else's ease. Eleventh time, lie thinks he will ask ■ hi* neighbor if he ho* tried it or knows j auvtliiug about it twelfth time, he wonder* how the ud j vertiser can make it nay. I Thirteenth time, he rather thinks it ! mast be a good thing. Fourteenth time, he happona to think it is just w hat he has wanted for a long time. 1 Ffteeuth time, he resolves to try it a* soon as he con afford it. Sixteenth time, he examines the ad dress carefully and make* a memoran dum of it. Seventeenth time, he feels tantalized to tliirk he is hardly able to afford it. Eighteenth time, he is painfully re mined how much he ueeds that particu lar! v excellent article. Nineteenth tunc, he count* his money to see how much he would have left if lie 1 anight it. Twentieth time, he frantically rushes out in a fit of desperation and buys. Bill-Posting. There are in the United States about 275 professional bill-posters, employing from two totwenty men each and probably MX) persons, iu whole or in part, earn '.heir living by this industry. There are some funny experiences that come to the notice of a bill-poster. Not long ago, when the practica of mystic advertising was in vogue, a prominent merchant is sued 44 dodgers, ' and bad them thor oughly posted over the city, with the somewhat unique inquiry, 4 • Who stole tuv dog ? " He intended to follow this with a business announcement calculated to draw custom to his store ; but a pirat ical fellow was too sharp for him. and the next day had posted side by aide with the iuquirv, 44 Your dog may be found at Candy "Fred's, where the best quality of molasses candy is always kept an hand." Another merchant posted the town with the question, 44 What is it V a ueighl >oring shopkeeper answered it by appending : 44 It is the cheapest place to bay goods in the city," affixing Lis own uame ami uundier. To 44 lull s town," as the work is called, is an ex pensive undertaking. The printing of the bills, in the first place, is a large item. Poster* cost, when one engraving is done, and they are printed in but one color, from 815 to S2O per thousand ; colored posters, from $22 to $35 per thousand; theatrical or concert pro grammes, from {Mi to $9 per thousand ; small hand-bills about the same,-while the printing of large and elaborate pos ters, engraved on blocks, including the price of engraving, costs from sl*2o to 8150 jKir thousand. It costs a regular theatre from 850 to 8100 a week for posting the ordinary bills, while extras, such as the streamers and display-bills of stars, are put up ai their charge. A transient show will have to jy to the bill-poster, for billing the city, from 8100 to 8200, while it costs a circus from 8200 to $)00 according to the time the boards are occupied.—American jVrirn paptr Rrportrr. A Rattlesnake Story. A Lynchburg, Va., paper, tells the fol lowing story : A party of young men in the same neighborhood, only a few year* ago, had a very interesting adventure with rattlesnakes, which may be briefly stated. Earlv in the Fall "of the vear, and before ttio snakes had ' housed up' for the Winter, this party went out one night on a racoon hunt. About mid night the dogs ' treed' a family of coons in one of the largest tree* in the neigh- Itorhood. It was decided to wait until daylight to capture them, with the hope that the cutting down of the tree could be dispensed with. The young men laid down upon the ground, and were amus nig themselves with telling stories, when one of the party, who was thoroughly acquainted with the habits and peculiari ties of the rattlesnake, suddenly called out, ' Lie still, boys ; don't move for unvthing. There's rattlesnakes hero ; I heard one's rattles hit a rock.' He had scarely spoken when an enormous rattle snake came crawling over his foot, and following his leg to the body, crossed over his breast, striking his next neigh bor's face, and crawling over his mouth. The third party was not touched by the snake, except that his rattha tapped lightly agaiust his caje rim as he passsd. Iho fourth huntsman heard the rattle, sprung to his feet and ascended a tree with remarkable agility. This snake was immediately followed by another, not quite so large, and then by four very small ones, all of which traveled precisely the same path. When daylight came the racoons were shot, and then the search for the snakes commenced. They were found in a hollow stumjw, but a few steps off, and were all killed. The Plague In Persia. Advice* from Persia convey the infor , mation of the alarming and rapid spread ]of the plague in that country. The ut most efforts of the Shall and his gov i eminent to enforce sanitary measures have proved unavailing, and the plague is extending with rapid strides over both Eastern and Western Persia. The in habitant*, reduced to the lust extremity of weaknes* and debility by the pro tractcd famine, fall easy victims. The scenes presented in some of the more populous cities are reported to be fear ful The Turkish government, appre hensive of the advance of the cholera across the frontier of Asiatic Turkey, has established a rigid sanitary cordon along the whole line. WOUTID NOT ACCEPT.— It is said that an American firm has offered to take as many of the Paris insurgents as the Government of Franse lilies lo make over to them, intending to conduct them—men, women, and children—to some large tract of land in Oregon, where each would receive a certain num ber of acres and be employed in clear ing the forests, but Thetfs has declined the offer. The Cannibal* or the kherassau. Iu Utc last year but one of the Uiir hTntli century Persia wna devnated by a famine and plague which has hail no rivid to hiHtorical notice iu that region until the pnaaoit year ; but if Mr. Ab bott, the highly intelligent British Con sul at Tabreea, has uot fallen for once in to cxtraxagant cxaggcraUou, the plague winch runs riot in 1871 will even surjiaas in deviistatmii (lint of HA Confirmation of this horrible nqsirt comes from many sources. It comas officially to the British government from their agent at Tabreea— than whom no one has better i>p|s>rtuuity of knowing Persian affairs. The Turkish govern ment have also obtained such informs Hon a* to justify the establishment by them of a ittrthn tomikiir* along their frontier, and we may ex|i'ot to hear lv way of Ht. Petersburg in a few days further confirmatory despatches fruiu Tifiix While this ia the second great famine iii.ee the middle agtw which Ims ilesolst ed the land of C'vrus aud Darius, it would Im diffioult to |K*iut out a |s ritsl when famine, social atiareliy, religious turmoil, or foreign invasion hail nut rendered Persia well nigh uninhabitable. From Uie day of ttbe S-ijukian Turks and taeughis Khau to th<*o of Nailir Shall, Kl-Bab, and Naaar-lal-Diu, Persia has IHH'U in a state id permanent desola latioii. No nation Unit was once great is at present iu such a state of ilecadeuce. A very impartial writer says : "The |ip ulaliou of Persia is Wltcved to be sti-ad ily dec'lining iu uumU-rs owing to the ravages of the plague, the geueral üb sence id sanitary laws, the results of |K*lvguiuv, and various other uot well a eertaiueti causes." The present plague and famiue appear to have broken out iu the " Land of the Sun," Khorassan, celebrated iu Moore's famous poem "Tbi< doUgktfu) ptcviniw id lbs son. The tirst o i IVniaa Uuils bo sbuies npuu." It is just as likely that it was iu a uiore distant region the plague broke out, al though first reported from this idaee. Khorassan is in some respects to the in habitants of Paris or Loudou, what Duluth or the Fond du Lae region insto Sew Yorkers or Brooklyn!to*. It ia at the most distant |Hint of Uie Caspiau Sea. It i* just south of Khiva and north east of Afghanistan. It is to the east of 1 Teheran, and is furthest removed from : Tabrvez of all the Persian provinces. Its southern port is a windy desert, and j theie are also there salt steppes. The other portiou* of the proviuee include hills and tolerably fertile valleys. Doubt less Imt for the nomadic chaiseter of the j people the region could suiqairt all its inhabitant*. A* i* well known the pure Persian race, consisting of about 1,0t*),- 1000 peoj'le, fmpumt the town, while Uie other inhabitant* of Persia, consist ing of about three aud one half millious, are tribe* of Turks, Aral*#, la4o interments. On the 16th the pestilence began visibly to decline ; but it will require years to re pair the ravages of the epidemic. G<>NK TO PLATO —Tho French Nation is responsible for a report which, if founded on troth, requires either expla nation from the Government or the so vers judgment of the world, by the proas or otherwise. It reports that 1,000 wo men—Conirnuneuses, of coarse—have been sent hi Cayenne by the Nereide, and 2,600 have also leen shipped from Toulon by the Ores and the Amazone. This report seems circumstantial. The writer seems to have seen a portion at least of the shipment, and dcscrilica in vivid pictures the despair of the women in thus being sent to a living deutli ; and to heighten the picture, the fact may lie added that none Inc. e been legally tried. The above statement has naturally created an indignant sensation. ESLAIWUSO BTKAKKKS.— In Scotland they adopt the following method of lengthening screw steamers The vessels are placed on the patent slip in the usual way, and in the course of a day or two are cut in two and drawn apart to the requisite length. The sjawe Is tween them is then built np, and in a few weeks the vessel is again ready for sea. The steamship Garrison, the last vessel lengthened in this manner, which is now atmut to sail from Ornnton to Constanti nople, was made 31 feet longer. This has increased her carrying power from 250 to 1,280 tons without diminishing her spo-d, or rendering a larger crew necessary. A FATAL DUEL. —A duel with sabers has just taken place near Amicus be tween a young man of that town, aged 20, and a Prussian officer. The latter, in walking through the streets, had puff ed the smoke of his cigar in the face of the other, who replied to this insult by slapping the Oermun ip the face. Tlio officer did not demand the intervention of the armed forces, but a meeting took place the next morning, when the Frenchman, who had la-en a corporal of hussars in I-'aidherlie's array, killed his adversary. THE ASIATIC CHOLERA.—Simultaneous ly with the announcement of the disap pearance of the yellow fever at Bnenos Ayres comes that of the breaking out of Asiatic cholera in Poland and Persia. It is six years since that last fearful scourge made much havoc in Europe or Asia. In 1865, the cholera wns very severe in Alexandria, Constantinople, and several Mediterranean ports. THERE are four million Koriian Catho lics in Ireland. The Episcopalians and Presbyterians hare a million and a quarter adherents. Trying to lorn" a ('onft-s*lon. I A mavia. Accord uigly, one week ago, the eoiutuitlee cap tured Davis, tiroourwd a atont rojie, en i-ireled the culprit's mvk in a uooa>' at one | end of it, ami threw the other end over the limit of a tree. Ihi via was then given ,iu opportunity to make hia farewell n|ieeeh, or eoiifitaa hia wrong-doing and agree to quit the ueighlxirhood. He |h>aitiv< lv refuaed U> criminate himaelf; the word w aa given, aud up went hiaeor |Mtrcak; hut, with areckloMi ueaa thut waa reuiarkuhle, or, JxTliajia, actuated by the liellcf that it waa oulv : inU uil' d to frighten him, he waa atill defiant, aud utterly declined to accede to any terma. He waa treated to another elevaliou. but without any effect; ami dually, the Juatiee of the Peace, who waa preaent, ami who feared Unit in a moment of excitement fatal results might en a tie, interfered for law and order aud the priaouer'a releaae, and through hia ' influence Davie waa net free, not cou (luered, but with a lesson from Uie vigi lance men that will jiowiihly put a check ! on open bail behavior.— Erthttugr. Hcriena Explosion. An exploaion occurred in the amatl magazine at Qic Waaluugtou Annual, which waa nacd far the pre|>arHtiou of pyrotechnics for the aignal wniiv, de stroying Uie building and a storehouse adjoining. Oulv four barrela of |>owtlt-r were in th building, yet the atructure waa not oulv totally deatroyed, hut the foundation waa iujured several feet be low the level of the earth aud the bricka HI -altered in all directions ; one of them went through a blacksmith'a aliop aliont a quarter of a mite distant from the scene of the explosion. The storehouses near by were aoiuu -h damaged that only the crackinl walls are standing. The building in which in stored 6,000 stand of arms waa considerably damaged. The slate roof, for a distance of nearly three huudreil feet look* a though it had heeu plowed in irregular furrows. All the windows were shattered not only in thia lnit in all the ueighlsiring structured. The houses were levelled nearly to the ground, and the trees nearly stripjied of tlieir t>ark, their bnuicht a broken, and their life |terha| destroyed. Fuse*, cartridges, kc., wen* scattered all over the ground. One of the guards, liviug alamt a fourth of a mile from Uie scene of the explosion, state* that Uie concus sion waa ao severe aa to throw htm from hia bed and to break ojieu the doors of hi* dwelling. Although s, v. ml families live within sixty feet of the site of the magazine, none of them sustained any injury in uenon. They were, however, considerably alarmed by the pelting of tiyiug buck* against their fruue tene ments, Fotunately, the large quantity of allot and shell stored in one of Uie buildings waa empty. The euginea re mained on the ground for six or seven hours. It was thought that wheu Uie tire was in progn-s* that tin loss would lie oue million dollars, but aince that; time the officer who made the survey tliiuka that the loss will fall far In-low half a million. A TonißUt C'ot vrnv.—Near the con flnea of Fresbo, Tulare and Inyo conn- i tie*, in the vicinity of the head-waters of the Ki wtwb, there exists a remarkable piece of country. The Indians say it is j the abiding place of the Evil Sprit. The ! country it rugged and rocky—mountains, with deep valleys and precipitous cliffs. ! Snakes and reptiles of every description alauwid in untold numbers, and, taken . in all it is a wild and moat uninviting i region. But aside from this a most curi- 'j oils I'hetiomenon exists. The gruuinl j trembles and otiakea almost cuutinu otialy, and the abundant rocks grind and grit together aa if 1 icing urged by some! terrible influence. Frequently, deep! iliscbargi-a are beard, mullhsl and dull, like the distant sound of heavy artillery. ■ At night (he sound* seem to In- more j abundant than in Uie day-time. No In- j dian can bo induced to venture near the locality, regarding it with ati|M-ratiUa*sagc. While the ship Idaho was at Liverpool Auburn secrets! himaclf in tlie bold, aud after she had got to oca he wan discovered and taken on deck. He told the story of poverty. The Hvnijmth v of the sailors w as excited aud they gave him food, aud he wni per mitted to remain on deck. As there is said to be a law, however, in Great Britain against stow aways, the Captain of the Idaho resolved to return Auburn to F.ngLuid for punishment, and when the vessel arrives! in this port he ordrrrd Auburn to be locked up in a little room The English prisoner, when the vessel got to its pier, eould see from his little window the free shores of America, while he remained a prisoner under the British flag. Anxious for liberty, he ent away the window of his room with a pocket knife. Passing through the opening, he found that then' were no other means of reaching the shore than by crawling along the hawser, as the |Hi usage ways of the vessel were guarded. Auburn msde the attempt, but, liecoming exhausted, lost his grip snd fell into the dock, where he was drowned. The body was taken to the Morgue.— lf. York Sim. COBHETH. —It is estimated that the sale of corsets in the United States increases five per cent, every year. In 1870 ten million dosen corsets were imported, and the annual domestic production was one million five hundred thousand jmir*. In the same von r were imported nlxjut two hundred dozen corsets for the use of males. If this tiling goes on more and more male corsets will lie imported every year for the use of females, for tlieaha|e won't make much diflerence. Perhaps, however, they will not be needed, for the old adage says: " Waist not want not" THE Southern Express Agonav at LE banon, Tenn., was robbed of $.'1,000. A. C. Johnson the Company's agent, wa< arresh-d on suspicion, he confessed his crime and surrendered the money. DULL WORK. —Mr. Justice Bylea, of tine of the London court*, given it as liia opinion that not one in twenty of the ban-intern of England makes a living at his prof oration. One who was lately proaecutetl for tlebt liefore bin court hail only one brief in a year. AMONO NIL SHEET.—The sheep of Northern Missonri have lwen almost ut terly destroyed by the ravage* of a dis ease known ns " the scab." One gentle man alone. Dr. W. H. Crawford, of Mirabile, has lost in this way three thousand sheep, vslned at A chap in Cairo, in saluting a newly married couple by discharging an old blunderbuss under tlieir lattice window, was blown up by the weapon bursting. He succeeded in scaring them out of their wits, but it will cost him n arm. A man was divorced from his wife, and she married another, whereupon husband No. 1 inquired of No. 2, "W hat relation are yon to me?" "None, that I know of!" "Yes you are," said No. 1, "you are my stephusliand—l stepped out and you stepped in 1" THE Connecticut Fish Commissioners have caused to lie hatched, at Holyoke, Mass., this Summer, aliout 06,000,000 young shad. Five million have been placed in the Kaugatnek River, at West port ; 800,000 in the Poqoinnck Itiver at Groton, and the rest have leon turned into the Connecticut Itiver. No BETTER. —The Norwich (Ohio) Rfflrrlar says : " A lady, whose name we will not mention, caught her hus band in the act of kissing the hired girl. The doctor thinks his face can be patch ed up so that he will be recognized by his friends, but ha will always b# bald headed. " A FKIUIITFCL IHKANTIK. I. > riui-a "f a Maw VMI> Perry Meal Meet Uvea l.aat aa* war* iSaa Oaa tl aaa 4 r*S IsJurrS. The Mtatcti Island forrv-boat Weattlehl expliMlatl her Wiler at Whitehall terry Sunday afternoon, at twenty minutes Iwst one o'clock. Between Hi*) aud AtMl persoua were on board 111 the tiuia of the sad affair. The front of the (toiler waa blown out, lodging in the bow, thirty feet distant. The forward |iart of the IKISI, upjM-r cabin and all, waa instanUy slnveri d mid split into a thousand pieces. As uu eye witness expressed it, " the forwuid part of the boat was lifted fifty feet in the air, the awoke stuck fell, and then everything waa buried iu the hold. Many persona were blown overboard. A father and a mother had their chil dren blown from their arms. The water iu an instant waa alive with men, wowau, and children struggling for lifs. A num ber of persons, it is not known how many, were ilrowned. The debris in the fore part of Uie hold waa ftr*t removed. The cries of the poor half-boiled victims were heart rending. HUmuhuita were given them as they struggled Wueath the beam*, tuid oil waa poured upon their burns. As fast as Uie wounded were re covered they were borne to the deck of another ferry lioat moored alongside, where they were tenderly rami for. Aa fast aa it coukl be done, they were r* moved to the various hospitals of Uie city. The Wcatfleld is a very old boat, and ! belonged to the Btateu Island Ferry ! Company, Her deck, aa couhl be seen after the exploaion, waa rotten, but her ! (toilers paaaed inspection two weeks ago. The engineer of Uie boat save : I have lieeu employed bv the (ximpany i for 16 years ; I waa in tile lire-room five minutes la-fore the explooiou ; asked the flreyian, Patrick Finuegau, about the water, and he said it was ' all right *' went to the boiler myself, aud found the water above the third cock ; went up through the engine-room aud notified that the gauge indicated 27 pounds pres sure of steam ; then I went on deck ; in two minutes I came back, and juntas I waa going down the stairs to the engiite rooui Uie explosion took place ; I cannot •>ay * hat caused the explosion ; Uie boil er hail a patch on the part where the break was; 1 examined it three days ago. and found it in good condition." The fragment of the Wiler which was thrown out npon the Barge Office plat form was prouounctd to be ao plainly an unsound piece of irou, upou examination by several persons who were presumed to be gistd judges, Uiat Inspector Jame son cauaed it to be removed to Pohce Hi-ad quart em fur wife-keeping. It waa stated that some of the deck-hands asserted that the engineer had been absent from lii* wart for at least IB! minutes instead of five, aa stated by him self. There was also much com mailt upon the fact that while the Inapector'sj certificate gave 2' jHiimda pressure of steam as Uie limit of Uie allowance, the J engineer admitted that the boilers were subjected to 27 pounds pressure five minutes previous to the explosion. Fully 30,000 peojdc ossenihled at lite dock as soon as the iicculimt was known and the scene aa diwcrihcd must have ltoeu heartromling. Within the hospital tbe ecn was bar rowing in the extreme. Here npon tbe floor of the middle room lay a boy of ID writhing and twiatiug in the agony of worse than death Hia little body Was scolded from haad to foot, and Hie tor turas that tli* iKMir child suffered were intense. Near him lay a strong man luiff sed and lairned lieyond the tMMuubih ty of recognition, his once healthy frame now one horrid mass of broken flesh. In another part of the room was a fine looking young man, whose head and shoulders were raw, and whose limits were bu mil to livid whiteness, by the boiling water. In all the rooms were men, women, and children in all stage* of diotrem. Two wee things of perlis)>s five months and sp|x,renUjr twins, were brought in at three o'clock, their boiltea taru and scnldad moat tesnhly. A woman of thirty-five was suffering the last Jiangs of a distressful death, and another, with hardly a stitch of clothing on her IHKIT, filled the air with her heartrending screams of agony. At thia time there were jierliapa sixty wounded people in the different wards, tli* women occupying the upjxer floorx The surgeon and assistant* were indefat tigalde tn jiLi ir effort* to sooths the jmin and agony of the sufferer*, and their various aids deserve mora than praise for the teudernea* and care with which they treated Uicir suffering charge. Witlliu two hours after the arrival of the first victim, death began to move among the ranks and relieve the terrible torments of the sufferers. Those who dud were taken to the Morgue, A passenger on the boat says: Be fore the time for starting I went ashore to bny nomc peaches. I had got oulv a few yards from the bost when the boder expioded. The jlooseugerm mailed for ward, and mnay jumped overboard. While doxens were in tno water, some of tno ]Muwengers and deck hands began to throw the wreck overboard. (By the m reck I mean the loose timbers torn away by the explosion.) This operation was. in my opinion, the cause of many fatal ities, for the plank and other timbers struck the strugglers in the water even while tbev were being drawn up over the side of the boat by their friends. The Curious .Story of a *7O Bill. A few days ago says th< AVW York Ausisjr I'rmt, T. Rose, a well-known sporting man. won ninetv dollars in s gaming house kept by one Patrick Bran nigan. Having received his winnings Mr Hose went to Saratoga, and after staying a few days at one of the principal hotel* tendered in payment fornialsiard the fiftv dollar bill which he had received from ftrannigan. The clerk, however, refused to accept it, alleging that it was counterfeit, ami Rose was, it is reported, compelled to apply to John Morrissey to lend him money to pay hia bill and re turn to New York. On his return he at once visited Brnnnigiui, who indignantly denied giving him a bad hill, whereupon Rose laid a complaint before United States Cnmmimioiifr Shields, and Brum a gnu was arrested. In the meantime the experta. Clark Bros., in Chambers street, pronounced the bill genuine, and of fered to give another bill for it Bnuini gan eras, of course, immediately dis charged from custody, and the party adjourned to Delinouiro'a to settle the matter over a bottle of Clicquot A ('HRtrar. LETTER.—The following is the letter from the Corean authorities, declining to hold intercourse with Ad miral Ilodgers : "In the year 1868 a man of your nation, whose name was Sehiger, came here and communicated, and then went BWAV. Why cannot you do the same ? In 1865 a people named the French came here, and we refer you to them as to what happened. This peo ple lias lived for 4,000 years iu the en joyment of its own civilization, and we want no other. We trouble no other na tion. Why do Toil trouble us ? Our eonntry is in the extreme Hast, and yours in the extreme W-st! For what purpose do you come so many thousand miles across the sea ? Is it to enquire about the ship destroyed —Gen. Sher man ? Her men committed piracy and murder and were punished with death. Ihi you want our land ? That cannot he. l)o you want intercourse with us ? That cannot be neither." HANISOMH MEN.—An exchange says : one of the greatest nuisaures at a hotel is u handsome young man. He is an intol erable bore to all the ladies of good sense |in the house. If I might be allowed a suggestion, I would advise every father who is threatened with a handsome man lin the family, just to take a clothes Founder and batter his nose to a pumice, or some cause or other, nine out of ten I of the handsome men you meet are con ceited jackdaws. They cultivate their hair aud complexion so much that they have no time to think of their bruins. By the time they reach thirty, their heads and hands are equally soft. There are three or four of tnese specimens of humanity stopping at the West End. You are sure to find them astride of the piano-stool, or boring some young lady to sing an air from opera bouffe. The Markets, azw TOM. | Haav (Uma-rslr to prim IX* at* to Mites c-jw*. w.w aia Boss liw ••••• -J • ■•*}* rrrr-1 * a -Mil Oorrua—MWtailns • • ■* , rout s—Extra }to •••" ' ;sii*Kiti*. • WAIUT kmtmr Wtoteru M • *-*• u Mists. I-M S I.M Vklto lltBSKi 8itra...... 1-W • I* Vs. 3 Uprli'K "j* Hts—Wratorn -• a l. lusitt - Stole *J • ■•*4 Mi.il fsari. M m M *sr • • •". OSs Westera ki Vs. uJ sum i last* -1° a .11 i fataouew—OaMs ttsisrawi, Hcriss ststo *• • Ohio w a S M - iwr M • M WrMors Ordtssrr .11 S .U l-cuiurl.suis Sua -M s M csnsss -auto rs-KM-r u •* aklunsod -V> # is Ohio ts s .u Kuas—Mats .U S .11 CMU'IOU. i VmtshlVlM.,... ........ |t OS s ITI iws i* sin Fslr Oftoles ............... I B V'• i Stuos Osrnji -Pwasiss- ♦. s T.IS < lalsriur aas • 4. OS B*s-U* *• ol.il Kunr -U -)li4 h t'toSns ....,, 4.08 *4 00 ! Putus- Whito WUtlorKtUS SIS It* Spr.u I or* aw s O.W IMMMH AW # i n (lasts llurs ha 1 m M ttorisy -Ko X sow to* • . dsto-Mo 41 • .41 •1.1 .••* Wfcost -Kprtoi. Mo. X 11* s 1.14 '. .10 a II Puss—Moss IXto ali o* servile. Rasp rinu. x a T.to Mar.*. XM a 4.0S Hous—Ua XM a XOS Piers...., 1-to It* Waaiv-Ro. 1 Siaiag I.W s 140 Ouss M s J* iha..., JS s .SB RIB .to a I. to Haul Tl s J> La so 1* S .11 lUIXT. Wait Rtoto. Ito s 1 Ritra. 1-40 ill Rva-Rtoto Ml 0 XM | Ooas—MlscO to s .to Xur Mala M a XM : (ha siato .to a .to rmtansu-wu. ' draw-- {Von. Rsm *Ol a XM Wm- w>ntom Rod I.M a I 44 Whits. la* a las Oosa—TaUow .Tt s .rt Musi to s 14 Pmuajuw—Orada Ui.RHhtod • U*s Cintl or s .toi, Muasua, PL .ra-OnprriliM *4 to a 4 10 Kxirt XT4 a TTI Cues to a .to ; Osts *4 a .to Class Poas IXO* sto-to i Laai* 11 a .Mix < Bcrra—Oautuiw .14 s .to iXuSmLoto 14 a .41 cartas .... .11 a .11 i Xuss— Waators 11 s .14 fcsatorn .14 a .l*s lixtsa aasi>-Ci.m .14 a .M Tlia Hhr 444 a 404 Had Tap Xto a 4* H*t—Chotoa js oo sto to C->tumsa to aXXto ()orm-U BlddlU**, .MM .to ] floCl-tlto 4So a ITS ' Vaut—lab-t I.M td> Ouaa to a .to dsn 44 a .to Ou> Pn&rt tucito ANA DYUMI Otrr,— New facts are killing tham. The idea that invalids weakened by dieense riui be ; roli.-v. ,l liy prostrating them with de -1 struelive drug*, is no longer entcrtaiued i except by monomaniaca. Ever ainee the introduction of DR. WxutKK s Viaaasß Kirtß*. it has l*een obvious that their regulating aud invigorating properties are all-sufficient for the cure of chronic I iitdigwdinii. rheumatism, consUpation. dtarrhaaa, nemms sffcctioni and malari imih fevers, and they are now Uie stand nrd remedy for tliese complaints in' t-verv section of the Union. Trnihl. < .lamlt/. The I**ndon Surndtinl pu) dishes the details of a series of terriblie earthquake shocks which rwnUy occurred in one of the Philippitß- Islands. More than •JDO persons were killed, many of th in being swallowed up by the earth. Sixty doad bodies have been recovorcd. Tbo rtwt of the inhabitants have fled from the Island, which has been utterly de- j populated. The Philippine Islands, are over 1,200 in number, and are situated in north 1 latitude 117° 14—126- 4. They lie to the north of Borneo and Celebes, and compose a widely extended archipelago in the great Malaysian system. The entire group is supposed to be |iarta of a submerged continent, and is of volcanic origin. Scattered thronghout the islands are many voloanoea, some of which are al ways active. These often are the oroa eon of great devastation, the destructive eruptions Wing accompanied by earth-1 quasi-*, mud-torrent*, and other terrible ! phenomena. The City of Manila. Mtuat ; cd .on Luzon, the largest of Uie islands, waa visited by a great earthquake in 1K52, which loft scarcely a building an injured and in 1863 another shake Tory nearly destroyed the same eity. In 1864, an eairthquske proatratral every house in ! the provinces of Zamboango, in |lhe • Island of Mindanao, one of the south-' ernmoat of the group, and caused several! small islands to disappear. Tomadoo*, j hurricane*, and storm* of wind and rain j frpqoently"devastate the eoaata. TTie islnnda twdong to Spain. Uiongh about one-fourth of the population re tain their independence and the govern ment of native princca. The popnlatfon of the group ia estimated at 5,000,000, but of many of the lesser island* almost nothing is know. The Philippine*, though afflicted with these great con vulsion* of nature, have a delightful climate, a soil of wonderful fertility, and j are rich in anclt products as coffee, and gold, sugar, hemp, tobacco, rioe, dye wooila and hides. The earthquake in the Philipine Is lands, affected in a terrible manner the small island of Camiguin, five miles from Misamia. For some months previously, there was a siuvenaiou of violent shocks, which opened extensive crevices in the earth. Finally, the level plain near the village of Catarmin, began gradually to subside, until the tops of the houses Wcnme level witli the surface of the earth. This remarkable phenomenon at tracted a Urge numWr of people, when suddenly, some terrific shocks were felt, snd before the thundering reverberations had died sway, the whole level plain fell in, engulfing 150 persous. The plain became the crater of a volcano, 1.600 feet wide, and from it amoke. aahes, and stones were thrown into the air. A pause till dark succeeded, when there was an other explosion, and a rain of fire fol lowed. The woods became ignited, and men and cattle went flying before the flames. The spectacle was a frightful one in the extreme. The volcano continues to eject stones snd earth. The inhabitants have left the iidatid which formerly contained a population of 26,000. Camiguin pro duced one-tenth of the uiauilb hemp grown. A Frightful Scene. At the execution of Thomas MeGifiin, ,at Greenville Court House, Va., 2000 Crams were present The prisoner was 1 forth from the jail, followed by a large crowd, and took up his march for the scaffold. Gn coming in sight of it he turmal pale, and showed some trepi dation. It soon recovered and walked on with a firm and steady step. He was assists! to tha platform, where, alter a short prayer by the priest, he addressed the erowit denying his guilt, mid express ing the conviction that he would soon le in everlasting bliss. Ho asked every body to pray for his child he left behind and warned all against laul company and whisky. The rope was adjusted and the black cap put on. A moment afterward the drop fell with a loud crash, the rope broke, and the criminal lay struggling and gnspiug on the grouud. It was a scene of horror, and many loft, afraid to witness another such scene. He was again taken np, carried U|KHI the plat form, and the rope again placed around his neck. He then said vtry calmly, " Sheriff, if the ropebreaka again, loosen it quick, for it was very painful." In another quarter of an hour the drop again fell, and this time the rope was true to its purpose. The body swung to aud fro in the air for nearly ten minutes by the force of its convulsive motions. The neck was not broken. In twenty minutes life was extinct, and the body was cut down, placed in a coffin, and buried iu the vicinity of the scaffold. After a wedding it was formarly a cus tom to drir.k honey dissolved in water for thirty days—a moon's age. Hepce the origin of the honey-moon. WHO MADR TRR FIIMT WATTB F WtotchM war IHIMIP io Numnburg,lLATA ri, io THP ISPKTUIIING of UMI 161b Mntnrj try IVUT HCLC. Tbvflrai moord of wtotcii mtokiug is found in the works of Joiuut iias ('occisnps. who, in 1111 wrote Ui following: "Ingpniotu things AIW just now iMting invrtnted; for Peter Hide ss yet tmt • young nisn, bath made works which ev< n the most learned nuttheoiati -ians Hdmirp ; for be fsltriostes small horologes of iron titled wiUi many wheel*, which hitbersoever they sre turned, sud without sny weight*, botb nhow and strike fortv hours, whether thev be onrried iu the bosom cur the pocket" It took a year to inske one, sod s plain one would cost about SI,OOO ADI'IVTHRATED FOOD.— Dr. PEAIMM, tedoro the Itritisb Aasocistiou, stated j that in Londcm, suit and retined lump sugar were the only articles of manufac tured food which were not Adulterated. THE lost Karl of Aberdeen is spoken of IJT s nude ou the ship with him ss hstring endeared himself to the whole .•rew bvbissmiablemanners, gentleman ly nondiict, and eager adaptability to a sailor's life. • TKS PTMBFT ond aweeteat Cod-Lirw ! oil in the w irid is Hsaard I Ossarell's, made on the aea-tibore fnim fresh, se lected litreta, by Mtuard 4 Ou., :of New York. It is sftaoluUrly pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have decided it superior to say of the other oils in market ORAM* LKM ON AD*. Taks three oranges, one large lemon, aud two or three ounces of sugar ; rub off some of tbe peel on to the sugar, tqneew on the juice. ud pour on two pints of bailing water ; mix the whole and strain. HEXET K BOND, of Jefferson, Maine, waa cured of spitting blood, soreness and weakness of the stomach, by the use of JOHNSON'S AN<>DTKS LIXTRCTT. A WART has been felt and exprmaed by ! physicians, for a safe and reliable pur gative : such a want is now supplied in PARSONS' PUMOATITK PIUA Of one thousand infante fed by their mother's milk, not above three hundred die, but of the same number reared by wet ntirsea, five hundred die. TMirrix toys* aaoyss wtS |W'"si swsf of aba ASM saw |s toilias is ITO* Usrtoic sad toaw mmm. A* *oas so sssruol* ysrysrtoss (stossl aUltog toa* 'UMs*s si a* artmto Soaw Us** "mm. snaq. Is Um *4 (to* M*WS4I aad lire*. atoA* gsSMs* wa* Mi *4- misiMud for Ito* stollto. AltosttHMSlf.a.sid retorred to *4 hrto Stoat stosßssWr to wtototoaa *aAlsto*sa* •d la kunasfaad thaa* Than hare tores tossy •varl- MS* BLUO ylsid syos Um wnsimssitf.stototo.sfto* lost toare bass fossd p**fo**ly w*retolreß, wtoA* HsstoOs*"* mtoimsUns to toaaMto. fto sway yosre oo bare sssstood (to* asasdy sracrem of lUMtoi ItoonniTti Baton is patoU* saMaattas. aad M* liisiSmiai Hlvct* a*acarela*aSaaaisiMßtoarsaaS<>sai Ito preanatore bare awda (to* absre gi isanSn 4a* rear* of aarefal ready aad toMias, sad are no* itogas tbo reoatd otoaared bg tfu* rahnbto aiali, ad atototo Itooy re nctdr amrtiL II to Uw oaAg gngamllng of |rw kind relisbto is sfl oca*, sad A (ti to ito* in dtoaaad* (toa WANTED ZSZrtSm cM WMAUAITAA T . ft*.*.* , *, II WIN UlJlDroiD ACAHKHT. IhitMM* l JK> tufuiM AJ4W. fat imnlan l> fnMM^ ' Mlm AWT a JUPCT. Mrt. Maaa. RUPTURE Bali ..ad aad M h Dr 1 nan . PIM AMKMII juA . mapuand tlfie. R Broadway. sT MMa !wf book rrtfc PBN4 W ulin " fteatfrae. 1 AIMT> H T LA( <> WL W>A .. 5 Y crty F u 2lJttJ&^Z&rnJt&Z :W AW-TLW RWO LNAM. MA <* Addruan V. 8 PtAW OTK. M* new I Awna RMMI tor Ha. RHHmtMnh CWMAMA- < R WMUMTAWII. F* K"L'BI HP* PLATR -The HRGM* MMHML j WjXCEMIor I1T and ]>ratneuc Worto la CI KRRIHW H" wnrid, prepared far Kihitauotd of all kiada, and Home Am oat* TfCW M*nt- Shadow Panlotnlmaa. Cfcae ' ra4lit#r-. DiaHnwa, Tabieaao, Amatcw I (Itride, R.U.IOPIAD Dramas *c-,ete. A new and explicit Daaeriptive lint of all PU-ni mailed trwa. -! SAMUEL VBKKCH. Pnhlieher ~ 123 Sawn BL, Saw Tort. Tbe'lost Popular. ICTAE Eitaat. Over Thirty Years FEBRT DAVIS' Pain Killer. T-ASFI'JKITFS —. j T'MbSi dually TW£?WS?2FLU <*-* A ; have failed. TWTSRAWL THR PARK KHARS Will ear* Painter a Oolie. TRE PAIR KI 1.1. KM 1 I. seed far BALA aad Harm. TLTHI£HX<..AA. IPRR PAIR KILIRR 1 Otrve Cmwru! ReUatacUue. rpHRPAIR KILI.RR, a— I I. EN a) IP"-! certain rare FAR BHOTPA YD haa. w,TB.W.L doahl IM ante illliifll In cartas tk* lar : rihledlaaaa* THEA EAR ALW LIM rwnodv. orrraalAr WAL NMRFLLL and .A.llfol I'hy-ucuan* la India. Afrlen AND I T>.A where thta dreedfaldwa*-- avar aaarrar sa^isK^SssjisssSSJ: IAI U RrMtnt T%rmTC!£Ki. A. —. A ! kaTure* BMtBTv YECmipJ I THE GREAT BIPOD PURINCR,^ A valaaMe Indian Compound, for restoring U health, aad for Aha permanent oara erf aU diaaaaaa artaing BOAT imparllina of Ah* Mood, aaeh aa Imfhla, acromion. Haaar. l aarrr, tarn rrraa. Humor, Eryalpetaa C'aakw, Kail. . Rhraa, Plmplce aad H anarv on the Pace, Vlcrra. (aaihi, (alarrA, Hronrhllla. Xraraliia, Kbra aeatlam, Palaa la the IIA Pyaprpatn, f'eeatlpatloa. Cantlrnaaaa, PI tear Headache, Plaalncaa, Rerveaaaeas, Palat aeaa at the htaaaach, Palaa la the Bach, Kidney Complaint*, Female Weah acaa aad Ueaeral Pehlllty. REPORT FROM A PRACTICAL Chemist and Apothecary. Borros, Has K M" Oaar MR— Thi* la to cert ify thai I have aotd at retail, AITLY-three doe r ** C *' , ' r *: .... a.4 Mloddrr, u— BtlWrabare .in r *i' —*"' toach PUmw ■■■* ■l—4. whtoh to l to* Hyg "■'* * "'""" <4 On Dis***l*> •WM 1j1 „, tl -- ~. BltrrIA OR l*lTIOR. fc4- Pto. .a u,. Aa^ao™^ .* a IMMIIMMMI §-wt B! nI f I at'in— m Cmi Re TW la ll* MwRA. •"•we AOaato. RaFWw * ' >tt War f-iSmitoaliiis rf I*~' —r *^^****' That laoawal* tW SHtoan* sail *' "J** ■ toa aed BmnU. sheA IMto Maa *4 H . • • mMI* aarUaa a*wl4baMntolalA*whal***Wito FOR *R IX PIMADH KafttSßS.ftea. •* thrum, Bhtotorea. Rrti Wandas. Wtoßshtoi —*. *• I Ex2s23^aasra Clreare tha VHtotad Mas* whaaswr pm Bad * fcs parture tauMUit thrsaehttn atom la Wtofln, mr Oaaaar lim. alaaaaa I* ImimMll4oi44 aadtoasctoh la tfcs .toa*. A*a*-s R etee M R Ret ul |M Mlaaa wtH toßtsawtee. Raa# tea Ihtod gam. aa4 OH h*alth of UM inua • foil**. It a. Tap*. aa4 abar *ll are, ia/tolaa ta ha Mba a a aaa Ihaaaaa4. ar. **mt mttr Amu< •4 •!■ . R" . "f tLRM it Mararit M Klkt MNr '• •artk atom t-4f •• MM torn J< aanaa It to aat ama tta haltl ■Umtaitm IHi J. WAUUW. Piavrtaiac. • R. ReOORAtoR • OR* flhnßjMp44MO R.t v* flooA AATirfitß Hdil"! f ""R Iti ■ ""'• Rtp - €IsI||IBBHWIBr jy RWJI y Aix BRtPtoiw An-itt or rkf IMmt uh i m an ultf ivy mmimum Rl(^' l WitolT 1 1' T. P. a tool KrSa Zrt"aa4 IIM M ar oKtan, f*a*d IB *M* <•■ il latna. for 2SLI'TTJ•J.STKIS' SL= < F W FFR,>RR? A ?' ROlwaaß* aO ap • K(\ARHUiR, JtoRA Tin-Lined Lead Pipe Ttoa Pint ri i alia tor •toa Wat Tla IM I. ill Pipr aaa fc'aaiAml tor Ra 'a URpM r tKiwintMw m*ml, toa an aaai Warraataa Wto* MrmMMrtta* U**4Jhywel ml. (V rla aai mmS*£ fii* AddltoOi t a'atiT THEA-NECTAR is A nn RLACR TRA ttoa firm fa rtmmr. Ttoa Snsnrti Ay HHi'B hr tto* Grrol AttowS* MM €Jmm K s feFn r O?i£S , mm* frr Thm-Kmm Chtulm. REDUCTION OF PRICES. rocOKFORHTO REDUCTION OF DUTIES. Great Saving To Consumers •T rrnx vr CLCRA mf- Saa4 for oar •* Prtea (Art aa4 a dab tana aiffl IHIIIII|OIIJ ft, foinn'M fuD itirwitlniTiii ■lii'lai" a lars*e wtUMT tatnanaiairii utnaiaawn to dab atsaaiaan The Great American Tea Co.. •1 An TISGV toTREKT. P.O. RaaMR WRW TOM. e Agents! Read This! HriVIELPAT AOERTRAMLART •I BMNS KMpr w eeis ii i|i i IIIHWI or aHo w r LuSf cdmmiwßrton. lo *#ll onr ww • nudiwtVi AddtwTM. WAGNER A Ccx. HentoO. M*oh. $QOO! SOOO! Par M'miUi ' and wmmbi aaa to* aaaf.tr mad*, tor amaHaa ttoo HaaWl*. Naaraft. iM.a*i antiridr aaa. Irht. aad boantlr tor ad or Inaal* ftor fun ton t-art Kiilin addraa with *tamp Sorattjf A*aaer. Urtoaat. * GREAT CHANCE FOR AGISTS. Do jroo want aa afitoer, tofi ar mHf . wMk • otoaarn to akr toll AMlwrdar ait.oa oar now T <4raad Pka* Wi < data Hum • fin lafi fuunr ; taarato liar, m tbor* la an rtok. ArMnaa d. on reoaij* of prioa. Oaa, Tic. Three 'o aaa addraaa. 11 Mtt diftreat araapapare pobttoto tht adreo tMpßMai Add mm A. R- HOnOHTOW. Jatwaaa. tola. SWKSUMSJL National Migration Human, of which Hoa. Hoiuca (iaEZiET to Prreidaat. Bond nun for airoator. t Vdamntaa Soattoern land Arencj. Park Row. S. Y A OOD BOOKgrsigffgGS: M ontitled " Batf-Ktamination, % ' nndorwd by l*adin c JUL nernr An atoodamraabeuar life .hould read it By IMMI RaCto. Batnwa A Mahtin lg fortlaad St. N. Y. AO 4 tfto a month Greenback* for aIL Pardnalara Now Norelt,addreaa O. Rf. Surra. Sana. Ma. Whitnpy'g Neats Foot Harness Soap. P. .mREn*EB.i It Otto. Black*, Polj-hr. and Soon* at the eame time for aale by Hareraa Maker*, t.rorer* and Dracabte erarratona. Hanofoctnred Hr G. P. WHITNEY A On.. Lwdaatoa. Maaa. of C hamhereburr. Pa. offare etooico B "Rli a • Ma wheat, fowin and Rae atoek tor a*la VwtlV. fe.hr J. A HOWELLH * 00. Jaßeralo 4 pleaeant "l!ae t koore frmSltrw Vork (its on E R R. An e*c*4!ont ovportomty. " *' trem. For particntor* Dn. B. Faaaiw. OtireJie. NT. jf" y "ir •'r i -^*r^j| ai '^- J *— u '- 1 jflfa a