Word*. If wards senM satisfv the heart, The heart might find lees car#: Bat word* like summer clouds dsptrt, And leave but empty air. Th# heart a pilgrim on the earth, rinds often when it needs. That words are of as tittle worth As just so many weeds, A little said—and truly said— Can deeper Joy impart, Tlisn ho-t of words that reach the head, But never touch the heart: The vniee that wings its sunny way A lonelv home to cheer. Has oft the fewest worda to aav. But oh I those few—eo dear 1 Farm, Harden and Household. GTNOKR COOKIES. —Two enpe of sugar; j two cups molasses; one enp of short ening ; one cup of hot water; three teaspoonsful sods ; ginger and untntcg. Roll thin and cut into round cakes, GRAH AM BREAD—TWO cups of swoet milk, two cum sour or buttermilk, one half cup molasses, one teaspoon soda, with unbolted wheat meal to make a stiff batter. This eau uot bo beaten for bread. Tir Tor CASK. —Three eups of flour, two of sugar, one of sweet milk, two eggs, one tablespoonful butter, one tablespoonfnl soda, one teaspoonful es sence almond, aud one-half teaspoonful cream tartar. PROTECTION AGAINST MOTRS. —Flour of hops, one drachm ; Scotch snuff, two ounces; gum camphor, one ounce ; black pepper, one ounce ; cedar sawdust, four ounces. Mix thoroughly, and straw, or put in papers, among the good*. To MEND CRACKS IN STOVES.— Take woodasltes and salt, equal proportion in bulk of each, little less of salt; reduce to a soft paste with cold water, and fill cracks when the stove or range is cool. The cement will *oon become perfectly hard. SMOKY LAMES. —CoaI oil lamps that are subject to smoking may lie improved by putting from two to three table-spoons of coarse salt in them. It will make the light more brilliant and clear, and keep the wick clean, besides the prevention of smoke. To PRESERVE CLOTHES PlNS. —Clothes pins boiled a few moments and quickly dried, one cr twice a month, become more flexible and durable Clotheslines will last longer and keep in better order for wash-day service, if occasionally treated in the same way. A CANDLE TO BURN ALL NIGHT— When, a* in case of sickness, a dull light is wished, or when matches are mislaid, put powdered salt on the candle till it reaches the black part of the wick. In this way a mild and steady light will be kept through the night by a small piece of candle. To CLEAN JAVKIXO-O LASSES. —Take a newspaper, fold it small, dip it in a basin of clean cold water. When thoroughly wet, squeeze, it out as you do a sponge; then rub it pretty hard all over ute sur face of the glass, taking care that it is not so wet as to run down in streams ; in fact, the paper must only be com pletely moistened, or dampened, all through. Let it rest a few minute*, then go over the glass with a piece of fresh dry newspaper, till it looks clear and bright. The inside of windows may be cleaned in the same way ; also spec tacle-glasses, lamp-glasses, etc. SWEET PORK —lt is beyond a doubt that cleanliness has much to do with the flavor of pork. The filthy state in which many fattening hogs are kept has a ten dency not only to give a rank taste to the meat, but to render it positively un wholesome. A very common mode of penning hogs ia in a rail pen, without protection from the weather. The con sequence is that sneh pens are not fit to keep a living animal in ; wet and filthy, | cold and uncomfortable as they are, hogs will not take on fat, a great proportion of the food is wasted while they ore kept in them, while the filth, a consid erable amount of which the hogs will consume, must be detrimental to their , health and to the health of those who eat their flesh. PRKEARATION TOR SOILING CATTLE.— J The practice of soiling instead of pas turing cattle is becoming much more common than heretofore, and it will be necessary for those who contemplate 1 commencing next season, to prepare in time. The profit in soiling lies chiefly in raising heavy crops of green fodder from small or comparatively small pieces of land. The soil must therefore be I made rich and be well worked. What- j ever portion of ground is laid out for : this purpose should lie well manured j and plowed now ; and early next month a jtorticn of it to be sown with rye, for ; the first catting. Another portion 1 should be prepared for oats, to be sown as early as the ground will permit in the spring. The clover that is to be de- ] pended on as part of the supply should be top-dressed late in the season, and under no circumstances should it be pastured In soiling successfully the secret is to have plenty of fodder always ready for succession, so that one supply may not run not before the next is ready ' for catting. Calculation and early pre paration are therefore absolutely neces sary. WASHING AND WORKING BITTER.— A dairyman at Watertown, N. Y., write? I as follows: When you first begin to work butter the particles of brine are exactly the size of grains of salt Work it a little ; how are they now ? Two or three have gone into one. They are now the size of a wheat kernel;" they , will soon lie the size of a buckshot. . During the little working all the globules that have been brought to tlie surface . have escaped. Let its see if you can put one of them back again ? The question naturally suggests itself, why sp'nd your time'and strength to put i salt into the butter and then work it out again, at the aaine time reducing the worth of your butter from five to ten cents per pound, and lessening the butter five pounds on the hundred. My plan of washing butter ia probably new". I use a plain crank churn which goes by hand. The average time of churning is twenty minutes for large, and twelve for small ehurnings. Ido not claim to make more or better butter from the I same cream than with a dash-churn, but I do claim that I can do the work with one-half the time and labor. Mnch of this saving is caused by the convenience of washing, getting rid of the butter milk water, and in working the batter. As soon as I discover that the butter be gins to separate, I put in a quart of cold water to thin the milk, which will canse it to free itaelf more readily from the; butter. I then churn until the particles are about the size of a large pea. I then draw off the milk and put in a gallon of water, churn and draw again, and some- { times put iu one more washing. The j common way is to churn until the hut- j ter is about one solid mass.. But bow is j the water to take effect on the inside I of these large lamps of butter? I should as soon think of washing the inside of a glass bottle by washing the Qutaide. I think that in order to make the most and best butter in hot weather, it is particularly necessary to cool the miik immediately after milking. Milk | in tin-pails; have a tub similar to a , wash-tub for each pail ; set the pails in , tubs filled with cold water from a good spring or well; stir the milk every few minutes until the milk is about as cool , as Uie water. If you can get the milk ; quite cold before setting, and set shal low in the pans, it.is better not to let the pans stand in water while the cream ' is rising, as the cream will be all up be- | fore the milk beoomes very thick. Bkim 1 as little milk as possible with th* or earn, as that is tha great secret about quick l •horning. SPECULATION IN CANCELLED POSTAGE STAMPS —The Post Office Department is almost daily in receipt of letters from various parks of the country, makingj inquiry as to the truth of a current news paper statement that the goverement will pay S3OO to iha collector of one million cancelled postage stamps. Of course this statement is utterly without foundation, and it was doubtless started by designing persons to induce the col- ' lection of quantitios of defaced stamps, i with the expectation of picking them up ! in large lots at trifling cost after collec-, I tors have ascertained the futility of th# i origins! expectation of selling them to 1 the government 1] Sew* Summary. A REER barrel exploded and killad a boy in Boston tha other day. THREE men wore killed by an aoeident on the Belvider* (Bel.) llailroad. TH* cholera epidemic in the Baltic provinces of Trussia begins hi abate. BILIOUS fever is prevailing to an un firectnlenbHl extent along th* upper •otomao. TH* Republican State ticket has been elected in California, together with two Congressmen. THB total assessed valuation of real teraonal property in New York State is 2,052.537.898. AN aff ur between Catholics and Prot estants occurred st Portadowu Ireland. No lives were lost. TURKS were 1.678 cases of foot and month disease in tlie Conuty of Norfolk, ' England, last week. Tu* Nmtliwestern Women's Suffrage Convention ia to meet iu Isdianopolia, November 15 and Iff AT the close of the year 1870 there war* nine hundred and eight agricultu ral societies iu Prussia. TURKS are five farms at Stratham. N. H., which have never jiasaed out of the original settlers' names. (IKS. ROSSKL has been sentenced to military degradation and death by the Versailles Court-martial. THE workiugmen of Maine have de cided to run *u independent ticket for Governor and County officers. CHRISTIANA EDMUNDS. the Brighton (English) poisoner, has been committed on the charge of wilful tnwrder. Tu* boiler of a ffour-mill at New 1 Haven, Indiana, exploded, killing three persons, and injuring three others seri ously. A CONSPIRACY has been discovered in Toulon, the object of which was to buru the arsenal and allow the prisoners to ; escape. TH* death rate in Paris previous to ! the siege was 900 a week. During tlie the siege it ran up to 5,000, and now it j- is only 790. THE State of Ohio has six hundred and five Presbyterian churches. Two-thinls | of these belonged formerly to the old ! School branch. A WABASH (Indiana) woman murdered I her three children by cutting the throats of two, and beating out the braius of the | third with a stone. TH* Internal Revenue Department is ' now issuing all denominations of the ' new adhesive stamps, and will exchange j these for any of the old ones. 1* the struggle with the Commune of : Paris, the French army lost 83 killed i and 430 won tided officers, and 794 killed, j ff 024 wounded, and 133 missing men. ACCORDING to the report of the Budget j Committee to the French Assembly the ! estimated cost of running the govern ment for the fiscal year will be 4,-96,000 francs. THE last of the Lower California colo nists arrived at Sau Fraucisco from Magdalena Bay. The number of colo uiat* landed there was 325, of whom 50 have died from best, thirst, and disease. A SINGULAR epidemic has lately raged in Chicago. It is of the nature of bil ious fever, is not fatal in its effect, last ing only fonr days, and baa attacked a large number of the residents of that city. THE total of the forces available for war purposes in Europe (hiking the Eng lish disposable force at 470.779 men and 336 guns), is 5,164,300 men, 512,364 homes, 10,224 guns, and about 800 mi trailleuses. THERE is conaideralde excitement among the Wisconsin hop growers. Fifty cents per pound have been offered for new hops and twenty cents for hut year's growth. The estimated crop is only 5,000 bales. A LARGE party of Philadelphians who went on a steamboat excursion down the bay last week were mysteriously poisoned on the trip. No one is dead, but all are suffering. One physician had forty patients under his care." THE reclaimed march lands in Califor nia are proving to be the best in the State, not only for the pnxluction of all kinds of market vegetables, bat also for grain raising. From an acre of such ground a crop of wheat was recently harvested yielding 75 bushels. THE steamer Leader, from Dnntzic for Amsterdam port- has been lost a*, sea, and so far it is not ascertained that a single person has survived. The number of persons on board is not accoratelv knowu, but it is feared the loss of life is heavy. The officers and crew, all of whom must have perished, numbered about 25 meu. NEEDLE WORK. —A very ingenious method of peforming needle work—styled i pantagrapnic embroidery—has been in ; vented by an English mechanic, aud the affair is altogether a eurious device. A number of jointed frames are employed, each carrying tambouring or sewing ap ! paratua. They are ao arranged and con | nected together that the needles they I carry may be made to traverse in any direction over the surfaces of the fabrics . to be embroidered, and that the mov ' meats of the several needles aiiall In? iin ul tan eons and similar. Hie ueedlc frames are also connected with a penta i graph having a tracing point capable of being led by the workmau over the lines of a pattern which it is desired to copy, and when this ia done the needles will each travel in and work alftng a path similar to that p-aased over by the trso ing point. Thus each needle will pro duce embroidery resembling the pattern, though not necessarily of tne same size ; usually it is preferred that the pattern should he on a somewhat larger scale than the work that is accomplished by its means. A SINGULAR STORY.— On the authority of two persons of veracity, a corres pondent of the Albany Journal tells this : " They saw a wasp riding on a green worm one and a half inches long. How far he had ridden tliey did not know; but after they saw him. they! watched him until he hnd ridden all of, twenty-five feet. Occasionally the worm would stop, lie motionless as though he ; was dead, when the wasp, after a j little while, would spur him up, and then the worm would go on Tlie wasp would keep the worm in as direct a Course as be could. After a while the worm stop ped, and the wasp dismounted and qnickly ran and removed a little stone or piece of gronud aliout two inches from where the worm lay, and then seizing the wcrm by tlie "head drew it into the hole. Presently the wasp came out, put oc the gravel top over the bole, covered the atone over, and seemed to be getting ready to fly, when they killed bim, and then dug down about two inches and dug out the worm, which was dead. A SINGULAR CASE.— One of those mys terious accidents that seem providential occurred daring the siege of Strasbourg, and its details have jnst been made public. At the time the bombardment j was at its height, a shell tore through one of the lieautiful painted windows, flew across the nave of tlie Cathedral.! and amashing in the organ pipes lodged ' in the organ itself. Hail it buret, the . destruction not only of the organ, but) of a great part of the Cathedral must instantly have ensued. Strange to say —for these German messengers rarefv -failed to fulfill their errand—the shell remained embedded in the heait of the instrument without exploding. The missile has now been extracted, and is to be seen on the floor below, mounted on a marble pedestal which bears an inscrip tion describing the date and occasion of; the occurrence. SAD ACCIDENT. —Ten passengers were killed and many injured by the railway collision near Seclin, in Northern France. The circumstances of the accident were ' remarkably like those on the Eastern Railroad of MHSsaclinsetts. An express train ran into the rear of another train, 1 its engine was shattered, and the steam filled the shattered cars and scalded the passengers to death or disfigured. JMUn* Mid MsriKfaetur* *f Irou. Th* London Mnchmtm Mtpotiru givet on account of an invention recent ly tmrfected for the manufacture and melting of iron and eteel. It ia propoa- H! to take petroleum and place it in an air-tight ciataru, anrrounded will* a cov ering or jacket, into which ia intrcducod boiling water by mean* of a coil of j>p. tug within the ciatcni and under the nor face of the oil, to rat** the oil to ahont 315® Fahrenheit. The ton of the cover* ing jacket ia provided with a *. lf-aottng valve regulated to the deaired prenaure. Through an inlet pip* i* naatcd a current of air over the aurfnee of tlie ml, which becomes carbnrired. The cartMiuiaed air t* conducted into a larger plje enter ing the tuvere of the blast fnrnaca or cupola employed iu the manufacture or melting of the iron or ateel, to form a oommou conduit luto which all the gaaea and vajior* supplied to the furnace or cupola at the tuvere are paaaed, and by which they are conducted to the furnace or cupola. The iulet ud out let pipes are each provided with a tap. In a retort or clone chaiulier exposed to heat is placed a compound of chloride of lime or bleaeh ug |*>wder, intimately Uiixty} with slxiul oue-cighth ita weight of dry crushed charcoal, coke, or other carbonaceous matter. This mixture evolves chlorine aud carbonic oxide. A continuous current of air ia parsed over ; the ui itcriola iu this retort, ami is con | ducted into a larger pipe, which rtyeivoa the carhtvized bloat furnace or cupula. Another retort contains a quantity of quicklime and nitrate of soda, which. 1 by the aid of heat, envolve* turnout hints! ' oxygen and nitrogen, nitrons acid and nitrous oxide gaaca. A current of air is i also forced over these materials lie/ore it )uuss into the couunou circuit of the aforeaani gases ami air. The residttm jor non-gaseous portion from these last named materials being treated with boil ing water Yields a solution of caustic >ods mixed with lime. By sulsademv ; these may be separated and utilised in anv conveuieut manner. the sir chafed with the vapor of petroleum oil, besides acting as a gase oua fuel, also acts powerfully as a reduc- I ing agent, and rapidly effects the reduc tion of the irou trom tlie ore. The air charged with chlorine aud carbonic oxide removes wholly or rnaiuly any sulpher or phosphorus with which the ore or re duced iron may tie contaminated, and the air charged with oxygeu, uitrogeu I aud nitrous mud and nitric oxide pro motes combustion, and rapidly raises tlie j materials to the temperature required. 1 The air charged with vapor of petroleum may be used throughout the aoaeHiug : processes, and the air charged with ■ chlorine or chloriue aud carbonic oxide, ' as well as the air charged with oxvgeu, | uitrogeu and nitrous acid and nitrous oxide, are employed only duhng part of ; the smelting and melting process. l'p In R Tree-Top A lady balloonist who has been enter taining the people, a Mis* Thurston, made an ascent at Watertowu, N. Y., and got locked in a tree-top, being com pelled to remain there all night. The story is told as follotrs : As the balloon approached the earth the strong current of air would drive it over the woods, until, by throwing out Imliast the balloonist would rise again ■UKI keep on her way. Three times she tried in this way to alight in a clearing in the woods. At the third trial, the current, which was auiUr strong, drove her back again over the forest, and the balloon refused to rise again, and settled itself in the top of a tall birch tree. Making the network as fast as liest she could to a limb, and leaving a portion of the gas in the balloon to preveut injury to it by it settling down upon the limbs. Miss 1 hurston considered her pruspecU. It was at seven o'clock jxm. Not being acquainted with the locality, and fearing to investigate a strange country at night, in tha midst of a forest, she resigned herself to her fate, and made prepara tions to "camp out." The basket uung partially on it* side, so that she could not rest on the bottom of it, but upon its side, a very perilous position in which to be rocked to sleep. A light shawl and the canvas used to w rap the lialloon was all the extra baggage she carried. Wrap ping herself in these, she sat down to " pleasant J reams " of comfort and con venience at home. The cohl awakened her during the night, as she l>ecauie nearly chilled through. She awoke at 4:30 a.m., aud took another survey. Be low her she raw w hat she supposed to be bushes. Throwing out her canvas it would not reach. Then she tied a rope to the canvas and thought it would an swer. Reaching the end of luir rojie. about thirty foot, she found the " bush es" to be birch trees twenty feet in height. She could not go back and dropped to the ground, and waa cousid ably injured. Death ia the Coal Mines. The casualties in the mine* of Schuyl kill Ootuttv for nine months of 1869 were 57 killed and 91 injured, or at the ' rate say of 72 killed for the year and 115 injured. This was an average of 67,800 I tons for each death, and 42. 1' M) for each person wounded. In IN 7othe c inunltie* in the three districts were as follows : SI-W. XiW-. Orftm*.. ; Schuylkill ...112 2-'2 72 232 i NorthnmberUnd .... 14 33 7 26 , Colombia. 2 9 1 None. Dauphin 12 1 2 122 296 81 ISO Of the injured, '2B sulwqnently died, j making 157 deaths during the year. Nearly one-lialf of nil these casualties oc curred in August, September, and Octo lier, the three months of fresh work, following the resumption. The fall of Goal and Rock caused nearly one-fourth of the casualties, 94 iu all. and explosions lof G*s, of Powder, of Blasts, ami boil er* caused 146, or more than one-third. The deaths by fall of Coal were 38, by i Explosions 19, by fall of Slopes 2ff The loss of life and limb iu 1870 was much j in excess of that for the year previous, ! and is stated as follows, in figures repre senting the mini Iter of thousunds of tons to each person killed or injured : KVli. Wvwnd. WIAMT,. O>AA. Schuylkill *6 16 55 V 6 Nnrtfinmbtrlsnd..... SI * 85 190 47 Columbia .-. 194 41 383 None. Dauphin ,M 2*4 54* 284 In England, in 1369, the average of casual!ies.wu.* one death to 84,226 tons of coal raised. In the worst district the overage was one to 45,969 tons. RAINY SEASON. —During three months New York aud the surrounding country I were visited with an unusual amount of rain, making the season the wettest and most variable we have had for n long time. Prof. Draper, of the Central Park j Meteorological Observatory, reports that during the month of June there were ten rainy days, nineteen in July, and thirteen in August, making an aggregate of forty-two rainy day* for the three months. The actual time during which the rain fell in these months was nine days, two hours, and forty-five minutes, and the rain which fell amounted to 18.12 inches. This is certainly an ex traordinary rainfall for this season of the year, and more than makes up in amount for the protracted spring drouth. As a set-off to this excessive moisture, Michi gan and several of tlie Northwestern States are reported to be suffering from drouth. THE CONDEMNED INDIANS. —You have already been informed, says a correspond ent that the sentence of death Passed on the Chiefs Batanta and Big Tree baa been commuted to imprisonment for life. The commandant of the post, Fort Rich ardson, still has custody of the Indians, and, as the Sheriff of Sack County is suspended till a charge of embezzlement against him is disposed of, the com mandant will not deliver them to the deputy, as that official is unable to show that lie is duly qualified. The Indians will never reach the Penitentiary unless sent under military escort Tne fron tiersmen swear to kill them if taken by a civil guard, and will try to bushwhack them even with the military. Big Tree wants to be hung. Satanta has not ex pressed any wish. SHAKERS.— The total number of Shakers in this eountry in 1858 was 2,- 750. It is said there are now but 1,800. In time they will all die out, unless the marriage rite is instituted. lw lark lit j AflMra. Tka hearing upon the motion fo sea tinun the injunction again at tba Comp troller ami other oily ofllemls of Now York, iu tha anit brought by John Polo? was Itegun in th© Supreme Court, Chrnn lcr*, before Judge Barnard. Thar© am % large numlier of citizen* present Rirbsid O'Uoruian, Corporotiou Coun sel. appeared for the Jloard of Super visor*. tlie Aldermen and Commonality, mid for Peter B. Sweeny ; \V. O. Bart lett. for William M Tared ; J. Stirling Smith, for Mayor Hall, Ei Judg© Bar rctt ami Mr. Strahau represented the plaintiff. After aome preliminary (lis I'uaeiou by©onn*©l the answer* of Mayor Hull and Comptroller Connolly, the affi darita of Deputy Comptroller Btorr* ami Charles E. Williour, and the record of the proceeding* of the Board of Ap portionment were read aud a further hearing wae aked. At thia heariug voucher* showing how the city money had lieen spent were to lie produced. Thee© vouchors, it is claimed, were ah. strneted from the Comptroller'* offloo at uight and cannot be found. lu view of these cirrnuiataiices, Mayor Hall sent the following letter to "tho Comptroller : MATOB'S Oram, Sept. 11, 1871. Mv 1H AK SIM : I have just been in formed ly the Superintendent of Police that last iiight the office* of the Finance Dejiortuient were secretly invaded, and , that, a* a consequence thereof, valuable voucher*, evidences of payment* and enucelod war mm* (together repraociiUuß a large amount of diaohargod city lialnli tins), are alleged by aome of your aubur- I dinatea to have then disappeared. The Suiierintemlent and the Mayor . immediately had full conversation re garding the mean* of investigating the untoward cirmuiwUnces of tlie alleged | burglary ; and so as to punish the guilty, procure* restitution of such papers us may have been taken,and protect the interests ' of the city. Our constituents will have a right to hold you responsible, and in a measure j withhold from the Finance Ihqwrtiucnt droit able public confidence. It i impos sible uot to percoive that the city credit will suffer, and in a very critical period of municipal government. With great personal reluctance I offi i dally reach the ooucluKion that the exigency requires your retirement from j the head of the Finance Department, in order that I may place there auother I gentleman who will he enabled thorough jly to investigate affairs, and restore public confidence. I aaunot suspend the Head of any l>e. part ment, not even pending an invwdi gallon. 1 can only prefer charges to tha t'ommou Pleas, who alone con re move, after a considerable tim© for trial. I am compelled to thro* myself, there fore, as Mayor, iu this sudden and un expected emergency, upon your mag nanimity, and ask under the cirvum stauces for vonr resignation. Your*, very trulv, A. OajtKV li alu Mayor. Hon. R. E. Connolly, Controller. Comptroller Connelly declined to re sign. In his letter to tii© mayor lie says: Would not my resignation "at this par ticular time give the advocates of the partisan attacks upon the City Govern ment just cause to believe mo to plead guilty, uot only to particijiatioti (at h-ast (Missive) in the burglary, -but as well to all the charges uow made in the legal proceedings ? So it seems to me. My official acts have been superria*l and approved by your superior vigilance. So far as my administration is questioned, equal responsibility attache© to yourself. In yonr answer Mid affidavit, road in the pending litigation, you have adopted and vindicated those acts. You coidd not justify yourself without so doing. Consequently, I do not perceive why my resignation should b© naked, or how. if tendered, it would have any just influ ence in appearing public clamor. Con fident, therefore, in the steadfast good opinion of friend*. in the altmnu- judg ment to lie r*ud< red by the Courts, 1 1 cannot, cousirisoliy with soil-respect, accord to your desire. lam unable to" submit mj nelf as a vicarious sacrifice to satisfy the hnugry appetite of advorsarie* f<>r a victim, or. at this juncture and under these peculiar circumstance*, f>e tray weakness of position or fear of rigid investigation by tendering my rcrigua figL Suggestion* A bunt the Baby. Alt for the baby, whatever rudimen tary arts ho may develop, be does not show tho slightest possilje glimpse of the development of moral sense. His i notions of sleep are simply inordinate. I Ilia times for awakening are the email bonis, when alj conscientious ha hies are asleep. lie then displays a earweitv for yelling, which otherwise could hanlfy be expected Iroui so minute an insect At other times he reclines, sucking his thumb in dim yearning after a pipls. or doubling his fist in lively anticipation of i life's coming struggles. " A bahv is gen- I erally born looking extremely old. One i almost begins to speculate whether the Platonic theory of reminiscence may not lie trua, and whether tbia alleged I*by may not lie aome extremely old gentleman who has acted rather badly in another sphere of existence, and has another muudume nluuioe given him. Babies look awfully old and wrinkled when they are born. .Sometimes they look ninety ; but I have seen them look as young as eight-nnd-forty. Iu a few days they throw off the old existence, and are fairly euiiiarkod up*>u this real sea of human life, where they will have rock* and aho&ls and quicksands enough before they can come into any sort of haven. Yd there is something mad dening about a baby. Uoswcil ia re ported to have once said to Dr. John sou : " Sir, what would you do it you were abut up in a tower with s baby ?" I forget what the response was. "Sir, you are a fool," I suppose, or some thing equally laconic aud straightfor ward. The suggestion is an awful one, prolmbly uu impossible one ; but still the dread idea recurs, "What would a uiuD do if he were abut up alone with a baby ?"— bunion SOCK It/. Tu TEEIURLK Surnmpos tx PnnsiA —The accounts in the Levant Herald of the terrible sufferings of the people of Pernio, which, though not unlike many of the similar stories published, shows that the days of famine have not yet passed nway. The Persian army has been disbanded, business has stopped, and the people are camped in the moun tain*. No ouch terrible famine i* recorded in historv, ond we fear it may continue for month*. While contemplating these horrors it is pleasant to hear that the march of the cholera has been stayed. But this should cause no cessation of the sanitary measures in this country agninst the disease. The misfortunes of other countries ought to teach us the lesson of providence and prudence. THE MORMOX PROPHET. Brigham Young, President of tly Mormon Church Society, savs a correspondent, is a fine looking old gentleman, having not long since passed his seventieth year. He ia a quiet, pleasant-fneed, mild-eyed man, who counts on the steelyard* alvuit one hundred and ninety-five pounds net. He dresses plainly, as almost any man would with more than a hundred per sons in his little or "Young" family. On the street he appears like a solid old Pennsylvania farmer, who has just gold five hundred firkins of good butter nt three centa a pound above the market price, and feels able to do the wnr thing again, as he hastens homeward, enjoying his luck, and indulging ID the satisfaction he will feel in teliing the " old lady" of his good fortune. Swiss churches are very peculiar, In them the men are separated from the women, and nearly all ait bolt upright lon wooden benches withont back*. Peo | pie never eongh during the sermon, hut at its eloee there is an astonishing chorus ofeongha. . A cheerful Brnani baa discovered that mosquitoes are a providential guard against disease, upon the supposition that in rammer the hnman system ia peculiarly liable to fever, and tha inserts, by depleting the qnantity of blood, get np a counter irritation. Tire New Jersey Republicans have nominated Cornelius Walsh for Governor. Explosion of Union Torpedoes. Moat of our reader* have seen the Union torpedoes, a little affair much re sembling a Mull marble. It ie known that then© torpedoes are dangerous May things, and many serious accidents have oeeurred from their use In large Q,l ' M thrir sale is prohibited by oral nanus, nevertheless they are still kept and dis poned of alyly. From these little "play thing* " an arcideut has occurred iu New York, by which tlirwo paraoOa Wore killed and several severely injured. A truck man was unloading a quantity of torjve dues, when one of the boxes slipped from hia grasp and fell to the ground ! The contents exploded with a terrific j report, aud the contents of the truck were also exploded by the ooucusains, the report r< ambling that of a onturon Tho entire block was at ouoe unyekied in smoke and dust that completely ob scured the view, and for a few moments effectually concealed all objects within ; 11. When it had cleared away sufficiently, i scene of ruiti was presented. The j truck ou which the torpedoes were had J Ita'en blown and crushed into a splint at ©d j mass Portions of it were blown entire : ly acroas tlie street, and not a single wheel was left entire. The force of tlie explosion M-eiued to be principally down ward, and the vehicle was flattened to the earth. The unfortunate owuer of the truck was blown upon an adjoining awning und a street lamp, and hung suspended there, his lu-od and shoulders projecting | beyond the edge of the awning. He had scarcely a shred of clothing left upon him, and was shockingly mangled. Hi* face and head were torn and cut in a moat sickeuiug manner ; there were gashes aud contusions visible on various parts of the body, and three compound I iroi'tures of the liuibs. 11© was insensi hie, hut alitc, atid breathing faiutly. It was evident at a glance that he could j not recover. On the opposite side of the street lay the dead body of Henry Erown, aged U. uiaunled iu a shocking manner. Mary J. Burr, aged 10, was sitting iu front of her parents' residence, nearly opposite the truck. 8o great was the force of the explosion that all© was was lifted up and hurled against the aide of the building, reoeiviag severe but not dangerous tnjurns. In all, three persons were instantly | killed, and at least eight more seriously wounded. One mau had his ucck broken :by being thrown down. The horses at tached to the truck were cut and torn in a shocking manuer. The jaw of one was fractured and a moss of Hedi torn away. < Theie wore also cuts on various parts of ; his body aud limits. The other had a long cut in the side, exposing the en ' trails, and there was a hole in his hip large enough to thrust a man's hand iuto. Thev w©re killed to eJ their suffering*. Tii© explosive malarial of the torpedo' is aaid to be nitro glycerine mixed with -urn© strong acid, probably either nitric or hydrochloric. This acid is poured oat of oaus constructed for Lfea purpose, ( made of tin, and having long spouts tike oil-cons. The filling is douc prtn- I cipolly by girl*, whose lals.r is cheaper : aud manipulation more delicate than . that of the men. Warnings of the i danger of the work have nut been un -1 frequent at this factory. A hammer ! thrown on one occasion, which fell upon a few loose t rpodoe* 00 tb WOrkiug bd.de, caused them to explode, aud tiiv coucussiuu immediately mod© ©vary package lyiug near dctuoate also. j The Harper Murder. ' A m*t brutal and cold-blooded mur der was committed near Lexington. Ky. The old aud feeble brother of John liar ; per, the owner of the horse Longfellow, i woa murdered in his bed, and his scarce ,ly las* infirm and aged airier wna cut and harked with a h.ricUot until there is no ho|v© of her M-uevarjr. The two brother*. John and Jacob, and the sis ter. WUabeth, have lived in th© ram 1 hotioy together inc infancy, ihey ore all 1-ctwv-en 75 and 80 years of . and as nonn of thm ever marrw I or toimed la-ting friendships, or roHivntrd thsir less thrifty kinfolk in thctr youth, thty have 1 .e©n consigned to aort of sorb' in derly and sffsctionatcly to each other ' r that ran ami. Their home is shout four miles from Lexington. Here thsv . hsvo on estate of some fourteen or flf iiundraS acres of the richest Und in Kentoclcv. enjoy the repnu tion of being worth ov r" §900,000, audi live in Hi* plainest and most aconomfePj manner in an old weather-beaten house, that can net l© said to lie much more than a shelter. Here it was that the murder was committed. A Moody sigLt met the gar.o of those who first diacov ered the murder. In one room lay th© body of the <>Ul man, flung diagonally acroea the bed. besmeared with dark,! coagulated blood, hia head beaten to a fcPr-. His right hand wna clenched, as if lie had made a struggle for life, and one foot nearly touching the floor show ed that he waa trying to rise when he was flung hark to die. The t>©| clothe* were sat united with blood, and on the ( pillow that had hanllr been pressed, ' wna the crimson outline* of a natchet. ■ The sister wa* found by the terrifisd colored ]>eople lying straight in bed, 1 covered with blood, and still bleeding from horrible wounds in the ha<L These wounds had evident!© boon mad© ( with the aaiue instrument that Jud boon ( nsoil upon Mr. Jacob; hut in hi* case, , however, only the hnt-snd of the hatchet wa* used. On Mia# Elizabeth'* : nnprotected bond the aharp edge of the J hatch at descended several times. The, old ladv was cold and unonnactooa, but showed sign* of remaining vitality. It i was shown that robbery was the cause of i the murder, and arrests have been made of tlie parties implicated. Eight Hour Movement la Jew York. The parade of the variou* I-ahor and | Co-operative Associations of New York and neighboring cities, was an imposing demonstration, there being over 10,000 men in the rank*, embracing all of tho ! Society organizations and Upion*. white and colored, of the vicinity. The pro cession paraded various streets of the ! city, each association wearing its uniform, carrying its colors and being led by a band of music. At tlie City Hull tho line was reviewed In the evuuing a meeting was held in the Ooopar Union Hall, on tbe plat form of which banners of the various union* wore conspicuously plaood, bear ing such inauriptntns vpeg peace able effort* fail, then revolution. " Eight hours, peaceably if we can, forc ibly if wo miiHt." Mr. Quinn of the St onecutters'Unions was the find speaker. Ho asked why 30,1)00 or 25,000 men had walked through the muddy street* of Now York, ond soul it was because they Were determined to show by n monster demonstrntiou that tbey were indignnnt at the trampling down of tho law—more especially in Albany, tho seat of legislation. The law-makers had become the law-break or* Moot of those present had fled from a land of tyranny to find a despotism in the land of freedom, "aland where the fetter* eat to the very bone." Alexander Troup of the Printers' Union proposed to .send a telegram to Ereoident Grant to demund the immedi ate enforcement of the " Eight-Hour" law. and to tho District-Attorney of die County of Albany to demand the arrest and puuudunent of the CoinmisMionera for building the new Cnpitol for ignor ing thatlew. Mr. Powers, the President of the Stonecutters, declared that every man who mnrehed in the procession wu a hero. He wa* followed by Mr. Mat thews of the Bricklayers' Union, and other speakers. Resolutions expressing the sentiment of tbe meeting with refer ence to the Eiglit-Hour law wore also adopted. The meeting adjourned amid many congratulations on the aucccM of the day, and avowed determination to fight out tho question of workingmeu's rights. • Tn sWßpas is MAWE.—The Swedish colony in Maine now numbers ono thou sand person*, who hove brought from their fatherland over $30,000 in money. The crops are looking finely. Wheat will yiela fully thirty bushels to the sere, j Tho Swedes ore perfectly contented, and : occupy their time in clearing lands and ; opening roads. The Haratoga Regatta. Th* great fonr-oarcd race at Saratoga has created no little sensation. The tint boat to pull up to tlie starting point waa the Coaly Tyne of the Taylor- Winship crew. The men all wore white ahirta except Sadler, who hail on a brown Jersey. Everything almut them seemed to justify the eonfldenoe that lias heeu universally felt ia them, and on their ajipearßiiee sold better in the pools than at any time during the week. Two minut©* later Ui© Words pulled out from under the grand ataud, and osuie alongside the steamer to receive their final instructions. TltaJ wer© closely followed by the Higliu bo vs. whose brown back* had Iveon tinned l>y many a long row in the hot sun. The Ren- J forth, the Foughkeeiiaie, and the Pitts burgh men followed close behind, and I took their station* in the following order: j 1 lie Tyne crew were nearest th© western j shore of the lake ; next to them, and about 15U fact dietant were the Right! crew; next the Taylor-Winshlp, th© I Dutchess County, tho McKee, and tht Warda The judge# were in a <mall tioat a liltl© in tlie rear, aud th© signal for starting *a the tiring of a pistol. Th© crews and boats thus ranged for th© ( start may It© thus briefly recapitulated : The \turd Brother*, Cornwall, New York.—Henry Word, stroke; Josh Ward, Ellis \Vard, and Oillterl Ward, IMIW. Boat, Duustaii, built l*y Jewett, ! of Dnnatan-on-Tyne ; aggregate weight, i 627 pound*. Taylor-Winahip.of England.—Thomas ; Wiuship, stroke ; Roltert lUgiiull, Jo ! seph H. Kudler, and Junies Taylor, bow. Bout, built by Jewett, of Duustan-ou- Tyne; color*, whit© and blue ; aggre gate weight 598 pound*. Th© Ronforth Crew, of England Robert C'hamlter*. stroke ; lleury K<-1- ley, John Bright, and James IVrcy, IKW. Boat, Queen Victoria, bfiilt by j Jewett, of Dunstan-on-Tyne ; colors, black and white ; aggregate weight, C 33 pounds. i The Coulter-Biglin Crew, New York and Pittsburgh.—Henry Coulter, stroke; John Biglin, Joseph Kave, and Barney Biglin, bow. Boat, America, built by , Elliott, of Greeapoiut; colors, red, white and btu© ; aggregate weight, ti'U pounds. Th© Pittelmrgh Crew. William ' Scharff, stroke ; Froderick Nunn, Nich olas Dcuuiandt, Courad Mint-h rt. bow. Paper lioat, built bjr Waters, llalch Je Co n of Troy, N. Y. ; aggregate weight, 613 pound*. Dutch©** County Crew.—William Stevens, sirok© : Charles Burger, Uonu-r Woudm. and William Burger, bow; i colon*, all white ; aggregate * eight, 065 pouuda. A fairer start waa never made The Wards took the water magnificently, i jumping away at 41 strokes, while the others hesitated a little, as though not quite ready. At about a quarter of a mile from the start the boots stood in th© folluwing order : No. 1, Biglin, one leugth and a half ahead; No. 2, Taylor-^inahip, one length ahead of thcTvnc, which, in turn, was half A length ahead of the Wards. The Biglin* were pulling a tremendous i stroke of 44 to the minute, th© Tyne* 42, th* Taylor-Wiuship 42, and the Ward* 41. But the quick stroke of the New York hoys could not last, and with a spurt, the Wiuship men, who had Jrop|M-d to 39, increased their rate to 41 a utile from tii© start, whtlg the Dighu | boys dropped off to 30. The Tyne crew was then making good time at th© rate 1 of 38 strokes to the minute, while the Wards, who had taken the load, pulled easily along at3o Bright, of (lieTyne, . while doing hi* work well, showed his ' inferiority to the otlier members of bis crew, and it was generally remark id that with the lamented Reuforth, the j champion Tyn would be a different opponent for our men. It won appareut, however, that the Wards had tlie race ? in their own hands, as they turned some second* before any other boat, and > started for home in splendid style, never pulling more lhau 36 or 39 strokes to the minute. As the Ward oame down th© laat half mil© of the course, thro© or four lengths %hcnd of all competitor*, and were re- j ta'gniAcd hy the crowd* gathered on th© ; bank* of tii© lake, one groat shout went up from th© multitude, and passing from one group to another, was repeated by the thousands at tin? south end The Wards crossed tlie tine in 21 minutes 40 j ■sound* from the time of starting, and Ulcu with a stronger and faster stroke ■ they had pulled in any part of the they r wi around in front of the grand stand, where they were received with the must enthusiastic applause. The Tyne crew reached home three or j four lengths behind the Wards, and the Biglin and Taylor Winabip boats were exactly together w hen their l*ws reached the hue. The Englishmen thinking the j me • was done stopped pulling, wlule the New York Iwys gave one or two good -tmkes whiaii put their store s> ran* the line s little ahead of the others. The 1 judge* were unable to decide which wa the winner, and it wa* left to the referee, John Morriaev, who announced it a dead j heat, which must be rowed again at two ' o'clock. i It was th'li ■ Ts *Et>ouacxl that the Wards had von the first prizs of' j SJ.OOO in 24 minute* and 40 seconds ; I starting at 10:19, roundiug the *take i Umt at lOh. 30iu. 40 sec., passing the home-stake at 10k. 4Jm. 40 sec. That ' the Tyne crew came in second, sad won the prize of $1,250. and that the Big ! lin and Tarlor-Win ship crews came in ' third together. The starter* and judges ; were P. P. Brady for die Americans, and John Adam* for the Englishmen. The judges dowu Uc course were James i O'Neill for the Ameiixui*, and Joseph i Walton for the Englishmen. Referee, Joliu Morrisoy. A Frlghtftil Accident. I A terrible accident occurred at the crossing of the St. Louis and Vandalla 1 Railroad and Collinrville plank road, two | mile* from East St. Louis. A party of ; | picnicker*, composed of sixteen grown i people and several children, left the city iin a large furniture wagon to spend the ' day in Illinois When at the crossing of j 1 the railroad tr: *'c at the point named, I | they were struck by the excursion train i going to Highland. Three of the inmate* i of the wagon were killed outright, two mortally and four or five severely, wounded. At the point where the accident occnr- ! ted there is a clesr view of the railroad track for a mile to the west and some j fonr miles to the east ; but it appears j that none of the party saw or heard the approaching train, although the engineer blew the whistle and rung the bell. This i accounted for by the fact that the j wind was high and the whole party sing ing. "Hie horses were the first to dis cover the danger, a* they stepped from Pic track. They became frightened. One sprang forward, while the other hung hack, and between them the wagon came to a (load halt Just at this moment the engine struck. One horse w*s torn ncnrlv to piece*. The wagon was broken to splinters. Tbe train wns "topped and : all possible assistance rendered to tho wounded. Vehicles were procured and the dead and injured osrried to the city, and conveyed to their homes or to hos pitals. No blame is attached to the rail road employee, a* everything was done that could be to avert the disaster. GEXTLKMEX'S Am ux FASHIOXS.— Striped suits complete in dark nost pat terns is the leading style for morning wear. Coat, a donnie-hreasted reefing jacket, buttoning three button*, medium bold lapel*, shaped easy to figure, and one inch longer than Inst season. Waist ooat, single-breasted without a oollar, or the coat i* made a single-breasted New market, buttoned one or two buttons at option, well cut away in front, lone in the waist, short skirt, good sized flaps on the hips, edges double-stitched, and striped buttons to match the gooda Waistcoat, double-breasted English meltons, in black blue and Oxford, are taking the place somewhat of-the diag onals so long worn, snd there are some new styles of the, bosket, honeycomb aud matted weaVetf fn" Diagonals, skill fashionable. A young fellow wns arrested in Chicago recently, for insulting women on the street His defence was that the current female fashions had driven him eraay. He was told to ge. (tartans Defalcations. There was intense ©xoitement in Waob ingten occasioned by th© report, which ■uWquenUv appearwi to b* corraoi, that IJoL Hodgea, I'aymaater of the Regular Army, wa* guilty of (Mate* tiou to the Govoniment, extending I tack to 1884. amounting to a half n million of dollars. Stock ejaculations, gold gambling, and real eetate tranaao tiona. in which he hail been unfortunate, arc given as the lending causes of the disaster. Col. Hodge* was, oonveyed, under strict guard, by order of General Sherman, to Fort McHenry. Baltimore, where he will be held until a court-mar tiul can lie organised fer hia trial. (Jen. Brie©, Paymaster-general, re ceived from Col. Hodges a confession of hie crime, with a statement that be had lost the amount during the last few year# in stock speculation*. The defaulter has l>een a favorite with Government officer*, where he ho* always t**in re ' guided aa aliove suajiicion, and h© has always had what ia called th© "cream" of til"© service. ll© has been retained in Washington for several veal*, never liaviug been subjected to U© trials aud < (-mbarraosmeute of field service, and boa idways had the easiest and leant respon njbl© sen ice in the Paymaster's depart • nient. Col. Hodge* In his letter to Ocn. Brio© admits a systematic deceit, run ning back scvwnd" years to covar up false and fraudulent returns, dishonest state incuts, aud iusocurate ocoounta. His disbursements for six years pest amount to #29,291,450. For the payment of Treasury certificate* for bounty al-mc, the amount ranged from ®4(JO,000 to $500,000 per mouth. It has now been discovered that John W. Norton, ex-aitsi-tant postmaster of i New York city, and more recently the 1 superintendent of the mou©y i.nter de partment of th© New York paet-ofllee, lias iieeu guilty of peculation*, extending over a long series of years, to the amount of 6115,000. The discovery was made about a mouth ago, but th© pust-offio© authorities have Wen ever since engaged in getting at the real facta of the case. John W. Norton, tlie defaulter, is now Ix-tweeu forty-tive aud fifty year* of age, 1 and was appointed by th© tote James Kelly, then postmaster of New York, to the responsible position of aasn-tant posU master. In 1804, when the Poet-offiee moncv order srstem went into ojteretioo, Mr. Norton was given the superinten dence of that department in ui© poet (flice. Tii© btuiueos of the mouty-order h-jaartmeut had by this Urn© grown to immcnae proportions; it received and paid ovwr evenr day about as much money a* any of the honks in the city, and its j transactions every year amounted to i about six million "doUar*. Every dollar i of these immense sums was in the com plete control of Mr. Norton. The manu al labor alone of signing th© draft© and receipts became so great that the Post master Mr. Norton waa instructed to sign the name of General Jones, aud he drew and diluraed the money needed in liis department. It was shown last month. • however, that Norton's accounts, though ; thev balanced with themselves moot ad ; rnirably, did not compare so well with , th© books of the Assistant Sub-Treasury, which is in effect the bank of deposit of | the New York Pust-offioc. and upon in vestigation th© defalcation was discover- j ©d. Tii© amount will be fully recovered ' by the Government ITa* IJSJIUCTIO* SCBTAIXED — JADGE, Barnard of New York, iuaUiued the in jucctioo previourjy granted by him in the suit against certain of the at* offi cutis of that city. The effect of the de c-noon will be to keep the injunction in force as loop as Mr. Connolly holds the j office of Comptroller and thereb* re mains a member of the Board of Ap , portionment The aflkir ha* created an intense excitement in New York (Sty. THE verdict of the coroner's jury in the cam* of the people killed by the ex plosion of the boiler of the steamer It. E. Lee, near FayetteTille, N. C., cen sures the United States inspector of the district for negligence. WE would not recommend the frequent jor roustint use of any medicine, it i.-, i important to take even a good article . j judiciously. PABBON'S PCBOATITE PILL# , are safe, prompt, and reliable as a laxa- . tire or catuartic. A M OTER of Cuban Patriot officer* have surrendered to the Spaniah Gov ernment. BASE BALL ia undonlitedly good exer- ] rise and capital amusement, out it often .tccaaiuns bunged eves, broken ahina and blistered hands. We can tell you that j in all such eases if JOHNSON'S ANODTNR LINIMENT is resorted to it will reduce Un as-filing and stop the pain. aar RAILBOAD BONDS.—Whether vu wish to bnv or sell, write to Cn ABLER W. IIAHOLEK. S*O. 7 Wall at.. New York. FINANCIAL. hmMMM arfarltlM. j JATDona* Ofte. anna* axthac. sad raeammaad a* : apr BtehW mad ml* awrtaint tw all oLtmer. Ui 1V >-M W Boadx at IS* Nerthara hale i Rttaad CwtaV. tain Saras ul Thraa-Taatto I j par rant *old lata.rat aara thaa I par rant enrrener. ' tad enctusd hj Sni and astr marlaas* °e t*a setter R adwlmtupn-n... as.) am TOOT* tint, SM.SOO tare* j of Laad ta aaarr tail* of track, ar IM Arm. at Laad to , rarh 01, MA load. Tba htfhaal carnal prist sill bt J pan far V. S. F<r-TneoLt aad all albar antotaxkw , Hrearttm* iwatri la erctnapr Eaatpklau. map* asd j I tall iafonaetiae. a* sail aa tha bead* t hamwlre*. wtll b 1 terniabad oa applicettaa br ht OmiU A Co., Pfciie daipluA. Saw York aad Wanhtavtoa. aad W mm Beak* aad Baakar* tbroaahoot Ul. aaaatr The Markets. saw ■ oas. Bixr CAT-TLB— Prim# tr F.itr* | J| a .I*', Ptrat qtjkl l# U >• .11 Helium Ifl!,* -UN interior , . a .si i Mites Cowa. SLta aRA.no i {IIMS—LITS M s .01 Drneaad .00 a .I0t ; if .9S a B7S ;rrwt* Midlim* * fa .31S Fu>e*—Frtra Western...., *.<* aAW • Ktatr P.tfnt f .ra aA S | ViuT-Aabtr Western I.M a IST •• sum I.M aus l White Orneaee Extra I.AJ a I.AA > Br*—Wfatrrn .............. ....... .00 s I.M i n.Rt KT —State TA a .00 j . Onßß—Mitel Western St • .TO I 0*T—Waatarn............... AS a AC > Pt-*x—Near lAAO *IB.OO i i L*ar> A a .10)4 I Pmnum-Cradt 14 Mixed .M " Burr**—State a .34 f Oh to W, R. .OA a .JO " Fawr Si a .30 i Wextern ordinary 39 a .11 fvnnsrlsaata 0c......... .44 8 .IT . Cnrwn-Kuta Factory IS a -IS - Skim mad ST a .10 ! Ohio 10 s .IS Bone-Slate U S .U ■wits. ; Fu>f*—Suprriloa... M B 0 A M Kites A Aft a 4.00 !ons* " aw ! O*T .aa a .TO I tlx.*aPoas IXIO aIA.OO ! Mat. 00V 11 Brmx-Onmaia IW a .31 Choice Lote 00 a .40 a o .it , Bona-Western II a .10 Eastern IT a .U OSAM BKXD—ciorrr 10 .10q Tlmothr IM aSM Rad Top ft SO a A.m 8AT— Cfeat0e........................ 00.00 a.'U.TW Comnni 30 00 533.00 MMOO. Burn—Choirs... 17.00 a ITS Prima 000 a LOO Fair Oradar 4.50 a A.TA STOC* CATTIA— Common 4.00 a T. 34 interior EOO a 4.1X1 Bona—Lira A M a A.M Sauce— Use—flood to Chelae.. 4.A0 i in ; ru>r—White Winter Extra.., Aso a T.3A R|.rln* Extra ITS a A.TS buckwheat. 4.TA a ATS fliAtn—Corn—No. 3 Ad a .44 flertoy—No. X nsw -. S3 a .AS j Oats—No. 3 a .S3 Rm-No. X 0 a .SI Wheat—Njirinc. No. X I.W a I.M W a .11 [ Poma-Maas 1XI 14. ARRVALE. Prr.r Cat-iia A Ml a T.W 1 Hooa—Lira A.SO a A.OO ' norm *-M> a XOO ! WHEAT— No. 3 Rprinf til a L 3 Co** XT a .10 IOAIM a 00 a .40. Era X 0 a .10 | ! •" a .00 | 1 LAST. 10 S .10# ALBANY. Rra—Stale mo a LOS , Coaie— Mixed X 9 a .T1 BABLET— State 00 a 1.00 OATS— SO a .58 PHILABELrBIA. Piaea—Pann. Extra.. *o® a X3B WHXAV— Waster* Bad. IXS A IXO White - LOO a 1.65 COBB— Tallow a .TS J Mixed IS a .70 'J PiTMunt-Oradt lTXraOnad. 3>M Bxxr jn m M % iiiwot Cam*—Law MlddUnc .10 a 4Jt PLOW*—Extra SM a TOO W B*AT— Amber LW a LSO SO a .10 •Aa. a .10 TN COMMA RAM Onaurwx of Dm. Walk m o Vm BITTXBB, is Chitmid I>yl<a|>"i, F*WI, Nanroua disorders. r.on*tipotion, dmfieieney of vital power, •nil nil nmlfcdira afWting the stomach, tlu> liver, the bowels, toe pulmonary organs, or tba muscular system. u rxcit ng the wonder of oeieotiflc men end creating ouch n sensation among the oiok, no wo* never before witneeaed in sny : age. The mlea of thia great vagetablc | remedy have been quadrupled witliio a oiaglc year. Far DyspepsiA, Indigestion, de|treawion of epirita, and general debility In their variona forma ; alao, aa a preventive agaiuat fever and agua, and other intermiUent fevera, the " FetTo-l'hoephorated Elitir of Cali aaya," made ).v Ceawell, Huroni k Co., | New York, and aold by all drnggiata, \ \ tlte beet tonic, and aa a tonic for patient* recovering from fever or other alcknetw, It Ilia no equal. TRC be* Water-pipe, alao the cheapeet when otrcngth and duraliility are con- Kdaml, u the Tin-lined Levi Pipe, iDonufncturcd by the CovmtUM, SRAW k Wuxajw M'f'g Co., No. 2L3 Centre {etreet. New York. Flower*, natural or artifieal, are very much worn in the hair, either at the aide or fastened atnoug the curia at the back ] of the head. Thk HA< KI j> Caowa, puldiahed by Lee i k JiheiMird, ia oouuneuJed to the atten tion of all who ara contemidatmg the | purchaae of a new winging book for | choir or convention pnrpoaes. See Ad f; verUeement LiunEh* of CiKitra and Mosteal Con ventions are invited to examine the new | book of Mr. Mardiall, well known as ou author and inaahml con ductor. It ia highly praised by oowpe | u-nt jiuigi *. [' nsn ■. rui . 1 L"i -■ 1 1 '- 1111 UM TMvf, Rvvv Psml tw*f. Thi. u *1 trnm trtr 4 tkvaU fiiHSMI ot WSMI Um teat ilmM ut —A ilssl kmum *#. Usm | loan** *sa*4**i4 asM*stleia* mm** is , wit*'ai>iii*s to* lawstoi <4 lutsw. Trs* sHvae* ' iUgii Ml liw n*li" of TUB\ nf*_ flkd oildoiwra No ink* , 1 of B iHfllr l*t •! am (Cvrruwe is tluv otr It our to nswst t jto M t fall eaAMia*. par nei'tori. far ato Is to* tall I tost Intumei'M. tewpa* **a wstanwa* f*sra sraea ' I pasalpvaailnal TV fraavv. >!■*!< to to* kaal* I at was. I* i Siaif aS VWal sm <*<*. aaS ra | ' saws, wa mar my fcaa.fi arUStAa! imlCrmA AlerS ; It to OVQMIOMy 4lilC rf lihtotUT I , fc.aarh Bitiaix ul Ito **Ca nfml to may baam capad Thi rngtaai tto far w, uf cm tor waamias | j atom*] ut tto tauißwn rirara. all tto vari*iM**r partaf leal tm t ara protoblr o(a la 4y. 11a4 a nam ef Boatcttor'* Kitora toaa aoauaaeoaf to to* mrMttmn a 1 ' amath a*p. ia. 1 tto satorHWy apaa aat la. j i ariaietul* af itoas enaM is all imtofglep to Istoae . eaaal haaJto at tto pwait Law Sa sw-fc tar want at ' . toraeaat* Sa bml Ito set karpia( ia tto toaa*. am* aatas 'tody, tto toal aatasaarf afuw. rplilaaalc tat aa : daamc taaaaa. A* fceti at Impawn and tmitakarv ara ItyUf to M- 1 law ta tto vafc* at to pal Amirton imaCj. ttoaatia, toanra Hal to# aruct* yao l>y m (tmaiaM ml vanfcwl to toapasparttatoaaarto Tto umv arttato aa* oaty to ' apUiaaSia btoOaa Bwrra at Ito apamaa totoarv aoM to tto raJra at ta t*t POR JSg?-,jT^K^g' T ' : ! w "'nr a ! *|u\r* 1 MOXETI: MOW XT ITS I .'I Graat rbaaor biwwOiiiM fat *myl*4y- Mm ; u.iar in CartieaUn Fn' Daa'l ala tkfa afcuam. ! 1 CH *" W Wt.;l.l>. Hmm. IP. i lIUSKT 1 MOKKTIt MOWKVttt 1 .■ <.,t fkaao,. VaiUaafw wwikd) . Wimi f !g.tg FREE63£SSg3EaS ; Aawto mato H I Sap. SaaS lar talarfay Ca wrra. ! ; rienim mnra * m, ~-*i-wr in m- : *7.■ I fl? I|w Aamr*ma.w PsOßow. W. T .aUala , m•I Iflll Hi Patrata wvwywtor*.. TaMtra. pwan' irpanaama naS ! dvolt*L (km ipr r'aient L<-wr mk! i.mite to 1 WhitncT's .feats Foot Harness Soap. I dtSK" . 1 WWT t,l mmr Um* •' •** to Hana. ' iptn I"LAVtt—lT>* Urgrat aaatorUDent "*^o MAT* and PrauAtir Worta ia Twtr-Jgy tba world. prapAiwd for E&hitaboos mm of all kirtda, and Hotn* An w. tjibr nmt. Shadow PantanunH,Cbto j rathaTTedtorH. Ibalognea, Tabieaax, Anutonr ' Oat'k', Elbtupuui I irataaa. etc.. He. A new ui tipUrit IV-mrbw Listof all Pisveniaikdftw SAMUEL FEEhTIL PuUiabsr, rt3 Saeaan York. FARMERS' PAINT W. in auaataaaurlns a an aaparuw Paint aa bait • toartwrf tml.nar, p*s>m la to fcwn. baa to >• fihs -Lis jEz~\*v& ( aeMabt* tor awm. bar*-. Ire***, Tmm*i an. fn*. ' to" Hast *xz32ir?*rz' I . ..._. _ i PUBLIC NOTICE. Tto M aaas**, at Ito RIAL UTAH USTMNTNi Of WMfTO FW 71 ton AdhStaiy aiieilapaa Tuesday. October the 31st fat th. dra* te U. chM/ pna*. THE KKW MEM rata TRMTIP, I StLISaKSSiS'KS. 1 i OaaaliTMta*M*r|H.M. ' IP Aswv an -a trastod to drpoMi tit* sMfcay re . amard for tmtoto ia any aalaaM Bank ia itoir taaality | at|t all** tto dr *t | Item but tn-tot koiAw ean hmr any naoala iiliiMna i ;°3" tlrtou ofdrwXt win to mr- | ias that ana* tml Uctoa tolfaa* cam dnai aay at tto r ito Raal IMsaaetli to arninyaj to tto wlaaan ia to* i ■ ISC'' Ira from all aaeomtonaoa* aaf ators**-.. _ Srffi&B m M aiun A, Bvajki'. T-W*: JM , a* the aa at (Motor, ami that Ito aaie at tertoae will , ■"■"viaawgyirriy.-; - W# tto *Bda*lsß*<]. cta-a* at M aa'"*- Uto pbam I ara t* ataun* Ih.l <** are rfr-.in.ily aaqutoaaS With Ueaer- P tSSMORE A KITITS. *.to mauafr-nof tto ] Mmnphie Ru> Ear.Tr DtemtSt-rPMi whrrE fcto tak* forr-'im OS Attnrnw : r u* w. R. vai*i>*. <Vt Tm uatiact <r : L B Stotm Oar tonw : 1* ■* ; Twmtutl. flerrWr, I torn tor at (nmmerne at Mm i h ; K A. Ct. t-Wvk *W Mam ia Ctoaavap : W. i 1 M. NfUar. Rule end loaatt ru loUeriw : P.P. ks- sifltrvwSfcSStse "t'im ananaintot n'tti tto raraiaUaa at tto dben ' aaamd watlamaa. Me r P.waKU A Ermp and I i- ineltor atoaa ahnn n-praaeh ; 1. C. Ba>a*euac.Chslr mu tNionty Canit. Tto ah-n apntal earll aami nta ad | Sed ta that ot aw hn.ina-a man aad UtaCMH ■aamrm.'ly. I wMti the preaa. ta rmparOßlly eaboUttas to owr patnme sw Mtrrmr. ffill AH Tto ffio Safer; -run CONSUMPTION —OR— COUGH, -lUiO- Itcnd The Following Letter I from n Well-known Dragg Ist t Mr. Tmrar. tu., April A Utl. ' OnrnjCKX* j—l baard one at BUT onutamira *p**k to ' •nrtohivh ten... of Allen'. I.an fUtouß ta-dto. ttotl tlwnfhl I Would writ* yrm the anbataßO* ot Bla mat*" ) inert He my* hie lamhar. who I* BOW aUty yaata at J mrr. h. ei-rr**P with ponaamption far wmi. < TSAB*. w>d toe toen nndar tto ear* of all *ar to* tor*- ' ! K- .ne, but saver rnwiead any permucat banaAt; than " ! ah* rranrtod VißKatrmy klniTnt Ooarhaad Lans Bm- • •ui that ooM to pmaaml tor tor. tot aU ton* arall I Sh- etill traw wort*, n-1 i) ,he wa. eonflnad te bar baa : end wbaaato aw aatsad with a paraxya ot eaa*kin. aba <mld loa* the power a t re-piration. and tbay war* o -ir.pell. d to reeoct to vmione amnna to reator* kr at h tny ; end while ah* OOQrhfd M> bud eh# eonld aot #*- j pactmto aasthtog. aad tfc* Ibaßlty and Manda bad riran rJ all hope# of bar rerovary : hrr eoB natired the eflrvr i taaammt of Allan * Laos Hnianm. aad they thoofbt tbay wool 1 procure aad try it, Tbry eomwenoad trie-or her the Balaam at t a'cloet tb to . to ouWladL Adaaa av •T Boar, aatll midgfobt i tbeo -b* torikujaimr .j •' cooshmr, and erstotoratod* oHalhutlaf dark, JTito* matter, whirh wmr toStittlMf <■> bad fol h**a ab(# to do for eome t imai Thto anntiatodto sir* berth* Bal aam aaUl mo- lie*, aid t! i-n ahi* bas.n to ajtaatoorete freely, and wit u£i bwa boar* mm bade.peettSM Mw** pinto ot mnroar matter whsHf.ro bor jirantiato re ttat. and *i no* Out am* baa SBnteoued to intoft. She . now eito np #JI dy. and ear walk abaol tba baoee. ato tok* roaaidurabii ,t-'.-!r exemw. liar sen baaskt mora of theWHKA va-hby. imo Tie is r -ro-Tr rieiidtny It jr ht*h!y ta awir tma. *iviiiieue. laHMWBIw . ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM ia wlthaat deabt, thabeet tonaetoraat ramadr amsab .red to the afflicted public. It enntaia* ao raram to an* tana, tad ft* ana is naralam to th* moat daltoato. av Simartoaa aoaompanr each bottle. J.N. HARRIS & CO., j Fraprlslara OIMOXMHATX, OKI*. 1 •w M I* lalt bp aO Madiema Brakes. III! U I f wMtim. C*- ••* • 1 "■ .kjif MILLIOXM towar HlWlJf *• *•" W.a4*rfal C -rm.l.. Ttoyara w**Ttta Faacy Ortah. Made* raw* Raw. WMatoar, lrl' aad UwuTmM "Tamtoa." "Al'li—towa." "ttomaraaw.-fca., from '** •(Ulltoo'A tr* <W" •" *lrrln vt Ml. I.at*. Ttoy " r ! r *. rrrrsrrt; ~*ssr2^^~2r=3 unnlded ttotr tnw** "* **♦ dam nf* bp at loans poUtmar other suma*. and ti* vltol om>— ***** toyond ik* potto <* repair. ~ n t . ara a iiomli* Parllt* a# " ••• Taste. (Mwa. *l* ttepwuiar MSM* " *• . pamtotnl rasa* 1 **trv u* CrapHiaa to M tneueeof tfc* Llvrr. Mi 4 *ll ttM Vt—UXI (bsaae- Folt FE W A t.B COM P LAI XT*, fprnm<m aU *> U-Onwoal . mutoamdSM iiMtara ( lit*. tto** Tatoo Wesa# B** a* agmal — i kraato Rk—^ Itillaw. Vralllt*! aad |arnmMMH Fa* i ara. Illaraaa* af ••- l*ad. Llavr. Kld „„ and Hi a 44* r. h** Rltlar* i.attaa-""* 1 • mmch (Msaaaaa **•tob-d t-y *tlaa4 lllaad, wb** to *,*"? pr*eWdVy daiSßßSimr ut the |llfrla Ora4. Rl'*PtU*alA Oil IIOMiMTIO" Wmir h*. Pala to tb* •*•**. Cawtom. TmW* . Ckm.. Urn*****. Am Itrwtoatto** ** to* dHtoW*. Bad Ta* • ia tie# MmtA. HUtoaa Atiaafc*. r*a** a UM Hwi.lkltMuUwtf th# Iman*. Ph tafbaw <iau at lb* Bida*!*.*baadrto "fctoH**l***■ ,oam. are UM*<*rw4P.ra. ftaiwta.lfc.i aiait *ad*tlmalto*a*S*d Li vat tat ■***!•. which naser ttt* 4 to*"*" : **• I* ct*ra.id tto htoadat al! topaiitma. ato km? aniai vwaluaHmtwltotoiliaa*. rOR K I* BlaiEArtß*. RrwsMan*. Tartar. Ml 1 uww. RtetcbMfwMtoPtitoatorerteiia.Rsiia.Oer : aSTi,ibS L* U2lisw* i-g*r j * IMM mi.twnM U mart wwfcmia*thate • OUmm tbe Tiuetad Rfeed nW#l : IMIIM wn'iuc tkrewrfc Ik. At* la Pttortto Rrep- I UHMar Sorr.. tUenw M wkan re* And la abstracted ' aadatasktek >• ike falsa : ilfin It wbto M *• Rat. , ul rw leettasa aitl teUfaawkto. Ee the Mai I pete, and Ilia teat* ef RiliWiHtaf. ria. T*H> naff Mlwr *"■ lacfcint I" #A ' j^qSMe6 H' tf* 1 T"rT iftiim. ■r-iw*TfT 1* I ptfzr^ZmßSrnjg I. WAULKK. Preprtrtar. R. H- MeRMALR * OR. •^ersifzissJtSet^er^ MToui BT tlx PlamhT AP pcaugrr. RUPTURE L„ twi ft il? Mwtkmil ______ 8 O'CLOCK. _ NEWSi T r2SSJ , SKaS2S *^nrasgu^.a. S ■■■■ >1 UM.fRBB • Ftoawalaanla Im—1 tHRft rtSErria^rrri At 4 Pla*if.wM-t. PnflaiMphta. __ £59919091 SCO VILS SHORT HAWD. ragwrua* *<*^Saa. U *ii'T m*K?''Ti^^wLtng! H-bm^ A.TT_ "CUNbURANGO" CaaOwsir, Scrotals, S'ntoUa.Tahwaian, <a |i laatan. Pimplm, air. AMCftfCAJI A tJO. Hate Plupilsitwi. UaiMLUMM BaM to .11 Urasirtrta fait tar JWwM I HENKV I'uw.Xw I Wfc " Agentsl Read This I VL'I W ll.t PAT ASCSTIA UUIT r •< S3V pr w- ck aaf wytai at aßew a vsr" -* vxi^wT^rfclancr tkOX UTTER. RINC. AU. AktMAUI fnaa tbe I aiußsM toteial Dataw RmrH <*"*■ read tka new Kmtm Qa* a| timi'i Otaapwlaa.- Tt' alt abate "WarttM. MM A Tisww." Baa (a wikr Trap*, bwt and R alm> ib etnas tariff*. to la fanaO rat ma said kinds. *aari> talpacw. ? bank aMfca ktod. A no . Paw.*.... Btaadala It. - THEA-HECTAR IS A PURR BLACK TKA tke Sna fa. ra. Tka luv|r~f atr-iac* N—4 rw>yn —i ftrw<T. REDUCTION OF PRICES. TO COJffFUEM TO REDUCTION OF DUTIES. Great Saving To Consumers ■T OETTIS4S tPCLTRK •rtMlhrmtftfrmtUl MfaOrthntfß ■ ~.if) A Wiimmi fi** * a tense THE"GBETT AIERICAV" TEA CO., ItAH TBKKT STRKTT. P. <1 Was SWA WIW TORE. Bond for froo Sptclmen Pnges Xofr Hmidr! LEONARD MARSHALL'S FOUNTAIN of SACRED SONG! T i# Landtag MwHaiiana awl Ckwr Dtewtars aatkha*- 1 taa% precunei* this aW tke amy 'tear eskacMae of SS PROS *t O I MRS of CMW. swhh MM KM (isTpma. TRI FCQfrTAM OF SACKS SOM naaUMw " Jtotettea, ™ " StagtawAMaeai Jt-eeH. am." " Tool Caitmta." Gl-a.aaa Part Ls.- PrtwSIAA SIAAS h* Saw a. •eaatwaa msv part kali aa raortpA vt frtea. ftHUMtlft ST WRITK.AMITH * PCRKT, Bwrtaau M*. Bal ir ai'iw. fat Cati i tuAlaan was Nr mwd >■ aAdmatuas as akata. or ban H Tiasaas* Tif.ta.. Rwfii'at. THE TBRT BEST CBUROR MURK) ROOK A mat Ktsl), The Sacred Crown: a ootxjK'imw or %n Ijri Tnw. Aiibfat, SeNetm. Iddi i (Matt. For Pobllc and Prifsts Worahtp. Tasatkar With a Oaatitot. aaA Prarttaal Syrtnaa ml Rrtaratsn Intsrarcion. wntsm axprw*t> kw hwaork; a larra aalfartnai <>f (outvosrt Maw*. CW. ai CWaaaa forKiatas School, sal awrtlitat 'tiik-a ■x . r. HOMEM, Tka wfC-traowa Aatbar aad Coadacfar; Awortaia Uk* of tka rasf wtxawM work. " Jubilant Voters," Aad . W. POSTER. One of an mo. aaoiw Noa Ewhsf Teaohera. Price atsFTIUS pwaoaaa The .at hoc. her. upaastwe tM tn arttlar, arraa*. me and .kill la. far this work, which, to .dditton to ikrtt hart effort*. W a lamer number, a small r .arte*?, and a better artartten of ofotrfbauoa. than nj frmm Muetr Book ml . nmilar rharactar baa nrndnecd Wa Haralarre order, alrrmdy tor It. Order, will be aawwerei la tarn * .d .pscia! term. mad. to Tharbar. and Cto tmj!Sfwcunei) La>lii wait bf aaall p at>i< an racwpt LKKff mrptkk. PobMakata. Bartia. *w Of a fkr ■ laker (lata than anjr oakar preana tarx mediotne of tba dax lands TUTABPS Effsrrescent Geltatr Aperient. And kar this raascm: it la an esaet coon t part cd onaof lha mast raluabi. aataral niediotsa* in tha world. Wa tod tka neutat ml' rerS retora to their homo, onnwlaocient or eturtL ThaApar- Wrtis oyaf the flirt end to far the moot ooroowful of ill tka effort* made to mprwfac*. in a portable form, too ■opelar m n*ial water, of Kur -pe. Mm that l.a S& #R*RRM<&R nR gygsffj^Sgaafca^i S3 l prtptM, MII rStUpt rJi&ssF ied "™ VMS&J *. T. R. CBmt ~mm —
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers