- - -..,.. . -,..',. • ..-- .J.- 'W"V::l•W''';';' , ', l 3 ., ..., : !,, 2 J r ' 1 '`;' ,.-•47 J l ? , .,_S4'Y' , ' . 'Z 7-. f' , /7 - ''"'.., - :`;' ,- 'V,," , . - ... , ,:: ....: ' , „ , ..,,,:-.=,',. , J.,, - ,j,.--....-, • ...1,,,,, , ,-.... , -„- . ..,. -,,,,,,,,, ~. . ~.. ,_, . . , . . , -.- , . „ . , •...-. ;.,- ...; .._ ', J. ,-' '7. '; , •,',.'.--7. --,.. •' • '„. 4,4- -.":," .."',r.,',..;.1.-.--, i . " , ' , .: ,--, & : . :4:, . ,' ;' ' '.: . : • :' • 5 ..- :' '- ' , "" •,' "''''''' , 'f': • "`' , ' . ::' . '" • ''' •- •''''' ; ';'''' ' l ' ; ': • ' . : ;.; ' ''' ,.• '. l: ' '';'-',''''..,''''';'.''''''-'''''. ;''''',.::. ;.;-::',.,- *-5 5 :-,•;.F•54,:.-7,. , •.f.,..•..,5': • ••••• .r • .;•,• : „ . ,` 5, ,);,5--:.,...,•, - . - ,: - 5-:,..5•.;. 5 „ , -.,.5 - F• - .5 - ,..5.,•,„„•-.- - .5••.5; - ; •••, , . - •.:•:•••' : ',.. • ';'''',-;.;, .j":"''':' .., ,'..--.', , -t."%t' f . ,', `.,-.,": r,., , -..: :- . .',..j . , :,..;,.. -.,:. ",,',,,- , ' ..: „ ' .- . : J. , , .-, -. r . . • • . . • : . . , . • .. •'- -. :- -,' ' • 1 • s - ‘-: - ' --- .7 . t' .-- .. • • -..-, • :,- ~- .. "- -,':',.,-_.- - '... - : . ' , I; - ".'•-',...:-:•::-..--..!--: --- : • - • -,.:-. ."2i•=• -. --;_f - _ -. '-' --- '. • . -,-.- • - -- - :'''' •-• •-•!-,- --,- ----;.---."-- -1 ,:-.:=.,,,,•:-.;••.".:.,:-..‘.-.- -- . ----. . --, :.fig;= .; . •- ; '.'• • "-• i ,= .--..,=.:','.:'':-.:.',. -::••:-..:-._ -• :' '. - r. -•';,..-,,:.?,- ~ ~,- • •••.• .. : --.-• . --, f . - - -, . • ', '. :' . .. . - • . . . . • • ---- , . • .. • , - . . . . ; -, . '-• • , . . . ... . • • . _ . -.. • • L-...• ... ~... _ . ~ . . • . ~ . ~ . & ~,?. 4i, - t - ,-.:! , . , .. -., - . -.t. • ft .. .. ~. . , • . • - ,',-,;.• --- . ... . - . . . • - jf .. . .. . ...!: .... .:::: ';L . .... '. _-.. ' .. i. : -_ , ' : ;, :- .. : • - •, .: ' ,. . -' ; ' .. :, t ' ~, - • .. :. .. . . . .. • • . , . -, r , ~!'.. = '' , l : l .:* :.. 3 . :.,. . . .., .. .. „.. +. . ..., .. ° 1 0 : ... . • t,- • _ , . _-. , • . - . • F ..-.--:-.• - . - tf - .",--..%:.- -.. . . , • , . . . , . • _ . • • -- - • .. • . .. ..-,, -- . • . , : , '- i.: . - :. - .4c -'-- f - , -- ' . . 71. - . 11 . 1 -. ' ' ' ' . : l' ~AB - •, 1 ,'. ' . -.it. • . . .. .., . .... DIPO-• ~. ~ :,. .-, _ .- . . ~... -.,_ ....... ..s. . ...... . - , ... , ...,_...,.,,,,... ~,...„.„...... . . • . . , „.„..._ _ . .. I . .... . , ' • 0 . . .... .. t - 4, -,,,, • - - ~ , ~:' . .....- 1 NO . i ' . .•• . . ; :Ayr , inv. l6-.444 P410........,... 4.. --* . ..,.....- 0 ,. : ~ a....( ;, . f.. -. 4, ' T : .1 E k . ... ,,, ?_.ls. y - • , ~, . . • .. .. . . .... , . . . i - ' 'FI K A• • - • . ...- - . .. - 1 • . -.---•-•-• . • , .'. . - •. . . t ;---, -- - - -...,-- .. . . - 117)/JtO AB & ~ TRACY, Publi4m . -.4 rE e • CIPI-' . . . -...,-.......- . -_;L: - _ - _ -.--„1 _ . , .__..;......... _. ._.......,...- i• . . .1-' . . ......., _ •-• ( 7 Ni ' -1 )1 -;• V I--1 I. • , . ... • '-'-' :F. , ' t.- f!THI:TP . . . . Alm. .......___ _. • ____-- ---.--- . ....._„___..„...._ -I. ~. ..-- A .-____-_fi1E........._ ITT . • . • • and the stmahitin Gros Wonted. ' - . .. ,' . ,-. cbudifi. ..• , , . ...,,, upon the past. ", . - '"Vell, my boy,. ' e" ~ ...land I had 1001tednitr ~ • . I?.Sts' MlOll are a fa, - _., Wt 5 ,..9 CrfV. , , , , . L i 6 y e ,. 8 1,... ;:ot, oli,',my frichd, • - •- • • um, 0 i . if, - . - . That yolfpanstirone quiet puise Of Mine, • ..ti ; I I Published Eveu rhursdas, . . .. Time traced r 4 ' tho end." Liu, - • • . . . •-'..,E • . i -;1",1 - 0W.AN OA, PA.,- '. • ~ 11 ED N:, . • Net that my -7: limas .• - J lan bid your heart One Instant ' . • . , • , •.. . NO fair old folly blind y 0 .0.- Ef. ' 01.10%.) ...rAaf& TRACY. , . -- 3 / 4 )- , : .-" • • Dr,. JOHN F:\ 1 - lANcocK, ~: ' Such : powers can els , - . _. Lis President of the M.:Jinni:4. Phar' n 5i..301-err .sPM it et, in .Idra awe. v : . .. • '-: The Idle dre:.- 5 s j • j - ... At Peeved of the United : ra,,,,,d p : we i r ! ,.. t . ore , ~,,,r . ,..„i,5.y5: •._ ~, . •, , Tirb.- 110 "'Brown's Iron ;Bitters 11.... s a .4..frertisilei n„ittri--.S ‘ .'x cents aline f or At'at 1 0 ._ • ~ '..1 I.•avy 5:.1. - z, is ccatcedpd to be a fins ' i t i,,,rtson, an 1 ill cents per Due ler all sub c. . • - : `-- ' .... • lic; the character of the my li,„iit, I x,' ..•,-Tt. los Beading notice sdverthing ' • i ;eater; is a rouchir far its It - Cr line. Eight lines constitute a . .. _,.., :•yluiell•.;444,exocifeer :a rents ' • and tlreire lines . en Inch., Acidispvis . vicare. 4.4 ;,I tdmtnistrator'r and Etectitor's .!.) R . Tos-r -.,..,,,p, ~._.• • - . ...,,.- Yearly - advertising ' slfo.oo per. • . 1 ...vient 1 ' yoticca •-•-. _ cultism. . . ~ ?alt IiErVOLICLS is published in the Macy, 11o8re and Nobles Block, ist the corner of Hain , and Pine streets, over 3. P. Corset's Boot and Where! keeps& FULL AKIO, 11TNIZST or ;,-setters .its e17 , 1113t.1e1l is over 200. As an ... , ~,:ie t isi, , ,,,• medium it is unexcelled in itft im Gold - - Silver' WP 4- midistr ticl ; •, ~ , I i SWI:3S A Sill Ay . ',-..---------f---------------- - • • -', 0 5" r; "• 7 " ivi-1/ "..a" ".1.- " - ••• ..- '. C LOC .• .. Q.. ....AO .1 -, ! 1...... 14 !I 1• i . , :i .. .., • - -• .- - _ . _ ... • - . - .7 .:• . • . A TTORA I:TS-AT-LAW. . a.s. :i_:L. t xi) .1‘; Meat's: it:sL (E. J. Clerrldnd ....) w,,, m.i;:,....r.1. Canton, Bradford County •• 1 • - • -si entrusted tl their. care in ry, ..... ~.1,311. . w es t,... Dr.,.tiord will recei , cprotnpt attention. .. leis .1-ly . . . ' .. ... . 111t11 ...• 51113.1.5. Attorneys-at-Lase; , s.Offie .. .. ever for - ells - Co ri MILT• -1. N., Oilice In Wood's Block, south liflr'st:,•tbaal Bank, up stairs. , June 12.8 --- Ei,a9REE +:r•is)S' (VC Etsbree And L Elsbr,e4 0210. in Mercur Block; Par4t may 14,78 E ,N; v ,-)VERTON - t - fice ) If Peck and D A Or r. r . office over Hill's Marker 49-'72 _, -- -: . \ wi , -'• Olidco r.. 8 ov.uyton s St.r •-• • 1 ail0114;10 tV ILI'. I. iiitl*: Otnce ant illean - li .Block &Or 14.7 C ~..A 1 .. n o - lE,I'A it N• /CHAN A'. I-I-ALL. ( W ,l . Davies •,..) it ;,, Pars .--. on. LAt ;Half-} Offifd,in real • t • 5:,, r .5 . 5i..55 . - ntrance Qll 19llar 5t4k1e12.75 - - - • - - - • liffis •iri EV ••..-- _Solicitor •••t• Patents M. - ~k 01.i.r sit ntion. paid to hysffiess in ~1 . L1.,., .:,, , irt end t , the settlement or 0 tate.; oy,;. o, .1 ~ , .aliye'a Papa. 149-79 ~;',,,-, -!..., 11••;... )-. .. v . ii.'N , C (I. Mel'herAn and, *.. •.',- I r•0r.:.;.) Itir4. ' sourh - si•le of Alert:or', . 1. -- --- feb i .7 ..,•.,: -:: - )ii. ~ - .3' .-• trii,l,i ~ is \N •IX .v.;131..1vf - INGI'ON iii .1. . VV, Ws ,--_,,,/ F.' .1 Angle - 41p1 - E_ D. nu(fingron) ' in, , f , v..- , ~d - i v. l ' , rain street, tsvo si,ssrs north of i.:5 ,- 55t ••5:1•••1.5 5 :111.a, .iiiinefia. en .rusted to flirt: c 1 7 ., kW. re, tee promlt at-ten:um.' oct 25,11" -. i' , 7 1 11". 4 11' IND dOir:s: W. CODDING, Attar . 1,- . . .-ae ;1 fatnueltj , ru•st•Law. (puce •in His 1.-•••5 - 7 ; Sock. 'o'er r . T. Kirby's firtm Store., • ,--• July 3 ''so t , ' . . ~ - , . • 1,7 - \•5. .1 Air-T:1...a -Law t•tlpa, 1 , -'l , l •1 ~.tame , s:5-sos, Ist Street. . . . , i): ;. '-1-11. .• , : , • • T1i,,!,10- , iNS. NV. it tn ., ' F... ,A... Attorneys-at - f .I.v. 4. , 4-31. his. Ho. -flee 4u Mercur,:_Block, '.7 i • I' liirb3's ',rug Store entrance on Main met nr.t:4.3l.rway north. of Post-office, all t..r.:,•••: , nr•••mpilyattemiefi to Special 'alien: - : ••5..55 . . - 5. .• :mums- azilidit the United States ;•_;'. - 5-5 , ..•;... .1: 1. S - s•nntiel, liven ts. - ere"; 'and tc s'• .114 i•1t.1i.1,4011t. - Of deCoSeUt..ll 4441 later. : ‘ .1 , .; . , 11EN r e? .1. . n . KE A•T - -,' t' - ~ . .„ i , 6..NEIT- 1 • -LAW, . 4 , , ••'‘,-•Ti_iWATNIii., PA. ,_ •. 5--.5,55. r o s.'s..i.sttsi. Government chins. ot• *.rt,1,11.... .. 113feh , 52. . . . . . I'll r sle.: NS AND s 0 Ita; Ro 's . . r , :t'-"0:. I. li., 11 D ()Inca - 07er Hr. 71 4 &.• 5.; 5 , rt. , r ,• o.Drug Stdre. Cob 1 1 4 7 r ~1 . ' ,:::','. N 1455•••• -I. •. N. .sr. F.O ifit!ne at DwAlling -5 1 ••:, 5..... r ...tree:. c , rner Westou St. feb 42..77 ' •, •;'l.', , '. R. '4.1) silic•r. set door shove old -' is.c... bidet 14;4 .01 Mutt , etteet. Special- at . .7:ZI ,!: , I ....II I. 1ice...19.11i ..:1 tile throat and •-, k . A julylir,ie , r , ____________ ;____.. fr • I.•A • i•N. , f. N 1... MAL c)t,ce and reel ,, v ), 'we_ 1 . 1.'441.1 ottree% north of M.E.ChurA.i. ' , -5. .5 5:1.550a.0 . f's.r Pensi o n Bs s-srtnient. .. - :13 251.76. -).:\,r 15. '4 .1,. ; . .illice ' Pine S!, spposite i• 1..1 •21.....• heir. fr•Tas i 0 to .2 A. IL and . • - •._f.. - .5 1., 4 P. NI special attention - given to ale ARIS ~: tn. Eye. and ble.-3141 . ',94 of - the Ear. - - 'oct 20 77 ,Ti• a N i l" ll* . 1. . M .IE. '• : s .I..:st•ses - rnic Pitrsican st: Smut VON . •,-,..,':. a,.•1 ”tak , 'net north . of Dr. 'oreon's :a. .5 . .. , H. L 5t1.1.-ha Ps. . _. . : ,ti. HO TELS. ~'• . r,..1 , .. -:: : ,!. )r - ,ir..., Main at., next corner .oath : Bri•Ese street. New - house aticd, new :•:;•3 in• tbr.mglinnt. The proprietor has ~; ar..l to-uter pains or expense in snaking hie i... 1,5 f.rli••••lass• lad respectfull , solicits 5 share •' Vfs'is.- ~ a tronage. Meals at all hours. •Terins • - a5.:135.1.• (.ssr •e" Stitile att..410 , 1 .• s - ' ./r 1:7 ' .-.- • • wlt Hpuy. 1 • :2..„ sE,) ,- RET 'Sp CIETIE.V. , 4 , - 1 -: ~ 47 . 111;1NS CO:Q.t . , - Nu. Gs, (1.: A. IL - . flleets " t• s ...r y sitordny ,-r-uing. at Military Hall. ^ GEO. V. ilYEit, Commander. ; 5: El7 - 1 - 141DGE. Adjutant. feb 7, 79 , •"11: - 1••3 r ?I. LODOE, Nth 51 , - Meets lit K, of P. V '3,,1 every Monday eve ling at -,1i30. In ',.-"zron 1 2...'. Benefits $3.00 per week. Ayer il••s•.,:fasi. c o st., 5 years experience, s'll, • JESSE.AYERS. Reporter. .L i'ir. ,, i• - .. ' Dictator. ,1 . feb '2'2 'lt , . e_ i 1 :n I' . "Iro Loi)a E 7i ~167-; I. 0.. ). F. Meet • -15. 5 '..1. • .ir PI Hall. - every NT sod ,- es - ening 14 - 4.14.4E51111,1.:, --yotd‘gr afui. .. 11. .5t...1ND . 1- &'.1 7 PA/NT/NO. . ' -, .., '',. i L. So t.: 1444 . 0/1:141 .street All orders s• 44,', re. -1-14, prompt attention ..nine 12. 1 .r. --` --- _ ED UC.4 Tlo N.A L . : 7 ‘q r E!1 t ai A . 01.1.1rnATE' INSTITU T E , le- 31'5%1NG l'Elt ii will begin '- Monday'., - s . ird I. l' - l. For catalogue eir other furor. claß , ll. shires; or call o. the Principal. . I, •,, . • EDWIN E. QUINLAN, A.ll ...71.-,:• ~. Towanda, Pa. . ' • .... . -•, PLCMBER AND. GAS' FITTER. . . ••• . . WILLI - A*3. EDWARD- .1 , racil4.l Plumber 10 Has Fitter. 5-Lste of business in Oder : .i .. 7;...0t nett door to Jouriii ,:office - opposite 2,_' • • • . , square. Plumbing, - Gas Fitting , ` Repair 4 r , Tuti r of all kind., and AU . kind& of (leering • rs tldly attended to. All wanting work In his tt aipaid Ore him a call.. • July 27,77 ..,... , - ' 'f' INSURANCE. - - --__:_._:• . . . . - : ittljELL, P. 8, cieneraVinguraficte Agency, i art iG . l mads. Ya. °Mem in Whitcomb's Book July 12,70 . . ..... . ,----_,_____ --- - - ' . . f 1.34 * ; . ..., , • I I Z . , '• • ; i lki, , . ^ ~ .;,'F,S*; . - - (-- ' 4 .* -, - • , - - . )-19 ~,_., ' `i ,•11 4:- ? , 1 •-q, A I. _ E.sl'. ..k . •--:..- ' Alf ,-. i. ~ , ,ii7 ....) ~.• , _ • t• - :11,' ~ -t - d , ... 1r . , ' . . . . ri t: •-•` . „•,,,,,, ‘,.• ..., ~. ~,.. .„ • _, , , „,. - . i..•! ,'• j \ -- 1 ci, ite••• • .."-- • i '!",, : . 1 We Ravedit . ' • - • , . -• ~ ek Bien 'Tea • ,i . , .--.' aEELEIra ' 1 . kk•. .-., • . . '• ~. - - - -- -- !,' •'';,;.-, ~., . . -.., , .• . • •- . ~ - -- ' . . ). And :had Quc of 117 . . . . • . 4 OENT DINNEas . .. . , . . itrr • , sc, L'ER HEADS BILL HEADS .14 E_ ELMS he. pitated ta the beet style 'lt the Rtratasoas Mee. ESE ...4 I i Miscellaneous A.dvertisements. NEW FIRM I NEW STORE! NEW GOODS! Edlimillesseux, (k9rmerly with Ilendelccan,i • 11AS OPENED F A • - J fill 3 OW2i • IN P r T TON'S • With, ,Swarts & GorTclen!s Store, Main Street, Towand - A', Pa, Where he keep* a FULL ASSORTNIZST or Gold ; :,Silver Watches 1 S Wf.,S ASIA) CLOCKS, EW RY, _ _ 1 4c•." s PECT A.O ES, 'ETC:: ." I sir His Stock lien NEW and or the FINEST QUALITY. 'Call and sic, ter yourself. REPAIRING _ENGRAVINi; A SPECIAVTY Aerie. TROY, PA. . We keep on band constantly for builders, LIME, HAM - BRICK, LATH, 411LN I GLES, SASH, DOORS, 1 DLINOSHEETINg PAPER, i PALNTS,_OILS, ITAR.NISHES, _ . -. CHESPEAK NAILS. WAGON DIAKEIi'S SUPPLIES -Fellows, spokes„ Hat, Milli, Poles . Carriage Trii 'thugs. Also sr Stmt.' an.' lli.tcyllardwa-r,atid a fullline • t Carriages, Platform and' Lumber Wagon 241.15, Made by tie w th eki led woratnen, atid war. anted in every parti,ular. BEARDSLEY & SPALDl'_\;(;:ifi_ liardwal'e Dealey-,_.:,, , Troy, AP ?7 27.1 Y .„,. .. , - [DL 11q1( 1 BOOK - Iki XNUFACTIIIIER i P . . . BUCii Et'INDER, VER &c • Alfred j Alku ry s • ••:. • ~ N. .1.31 Gt t t t , sii • -" t:V. t , t, • UTICA. 514.17 • AU work in 'his lino done well and promptly at lowest price. • ' • Parßea bavihg volumes incomplete will be fur nished with nay missing numbers at cost price. All orders given to J. J. Scanlan, Agent for Bradford County, will be promptly executed ac cording to directions. ifc•p9.if M. - lIENhELMAN JEW L ,14 1 .1 A • ottlti tt! Ti,t• 111.1:V S7 7 lt E 1 7 Next floor to Dr. II C. iir;rier . 1-):•;q1Store WITipA AINE. CIF FINE AMERICAN AND SWISS AVATC IT 1-4_;S, F R Y. STEitLWG •SILVER AND FINE PLATED lU.' ' • - SPECTACLES & EYE GLASSES, CLOCKS, FROM TIIR'CIII;APEST 1118,,BEST ARP ALL OP - WHICH WILL BE SOLD AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES, Clocks. Watchim and Jewelry promptly repaired by an eiperienced and competent workman. 111. IitaNDELMA&. : -4. aeptlG.tt The land Challenged: _ 3 This liniment has been ~ , ineolufieptured and used for 11-ty.flve years. and our p www innumerable certificates of • cike prove it to be an nu ' ,tiarsielled aelaess. We do MA offer' it as •an internal '-"• • Reniedy,positivelv asserting '— ' %. that any Liniment that can be taken into the stomach without injury can have lit. tie efficiency in acting as • specific when externally I L plied. This being componm ded entirely' of Oils. is ly absorbed into ihe system giving.prompt relief wean in 'i I Ilises of acute pain I :peed by Itheurnatiam. ' 1:, , 7' 4 Sciatica, LumbagO, Sprains, Bruises, Chilblains, or from T or i on &B e astany cense where!' Liniment .is depended. , The Oils are so penetrating that a ihorongh use . of the Lini ment:will remove all stiffness of joints, lameness of muscles; or pain arising from intimation .or ant cause. Even in chronic Spinsi. Disease, and Parflyais, frequent used OP Liniment will elf ektmearly dares. Finally, for Otis in any. , part of the body. We freely. with rubbing and warmth and we guarante. relief. You will - find a•Arial of the best mertificata.ct its value. It In the . only LiDiMeLit made entirely of Oils, and we chal lenge the world Its its equal. Price .2.3 and 30 cents per bottle. BOLD BY tLL DEALERS. • Try Dr. Sawens Improve t Mandrake Pills. they are made pleasant and effective. Price 23 cents. .--,- tr.. , A. N. NELSON, DEALER. IN . . * ' C " 14 WATCHES, CLOCKS, FINE GOLD AND PLATED 0 le, ' • JittV.DLES of eseifiztiehhand Spectacles. Sr Particul atestion pad to repsitins. Shop in Peeler Vong/it's Grocery Store, Vain Street. Towanda, Pewits s, siep9.4 I iRNAMENTAL JOB PRINTING 1..11 spodaltrst the larosucal office. 1. I tiro DM il Gil SE •• f" 1, ^ • gil El I ° I " _ TOWANDA, BRADFORD °COUNTY4 P 4. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1883. New Advertisements. • Ji ! Nom) MEN D. JOHN F. , lIANcocK, l is . President of the Natonal . -nactutical Association of the United says: • "Frown's Iran picters Ass a tcLayy s:.l z, is ccaxedpd to be a lino t the ch.iractei of the manu. • • 1 avers is a rouchar far its purity 1• . • josr.r7a R.PBERTS,. • ' • tvient lialti=orel than:aux' utieal , -Iys• • indpk.t It as it Atte medicine, . • : 2. strengthening. , tonic :Le e I.sras poisons." 1 j.".t.' AIM - MOOR* l'H.. ' 14 - oktsscr of Pharmacy, r mure Phinuaccuti di College; says: •rl3rox-es I 0 Bitters is a.sate reliable edicine; positively Leefromalccli 'c poisons, and can • t a steam:nen:l 4 as atonic for use Allo,a v.; io oppose alcohol." • r:DIVARP EARICICSON, Sccretar}tllaltim' ore .Collcge of Mare- Tnicy, sa:yi • • • • “1 - IndorsC it as an excellent t.lcdicutte, - a good digestive agent, ••1. cmd.a.non-intoxicant in the fullest • ' tense," - )., • Dr. RICIITaD SAPINGTON,- one of Laltitnore'sColdest and most rclia'Ac physicians, says : " All who httveused it praise in virtues, and the well. 1... char.tcter athe house which .I.lkos it • k q sufficient guarantee f as h ing rll that is claimed, for Voity -t wl:o could not be in. decd to e r anything else but a rc4iable f tvr .üblic • A Druggist Cured. "• BonnSboro, Md., Oct: 11, 1E53. Xttltitn:l6 , l I.truvrt.'a Iron t.-.7.; . s cured me of a 1..4 attack of . tkiligeition i nes i the scorn. at. ita.;:itt testcdt take pleas. .4_ •E t: in recominendill.; it to etas tomers,-an.P.n. . to s.-; it giv,s A - catire sari- , : , " • Cao: li jos:. ;full . ;•• c:trefr sickwss, , :•: , v.yzit. did herolitar.);;;..pr'edisposi • . —•ill oper:ltc toAnrn thC'hair . gray, sail eith.u. - of them__ inAings:. it to shed .tr;smatarely. Ave 4s LIAM VIGOR Will ie re ° fatted. or - g - ,14: I ight or. red hair li to a rich brown "oryep. Wick, as may be desired. • It softens and CleUnsCs the scalp, giving it, a lie ilthy, aetton: It remoy'as and cures dandruff and humors. It's•use is checked., and a new growth will be produced in all -leases •where the • folli.des are not, de 4royed or Idie •;41an1s 4;2e.ayed Its, 'effects aretbeautifully shown on brashy„ weak' or . sickly hair, on which a Sew'. applicatiOns will produce the glotislind fretillues of youth. harmless and sure in its results, . it is incomparable as a dresSing, . and is • •-especially valued for the soft. lustre and richness of tone it imparts. • ..NEIt'S ll.ttn Yumn is .colorless; contains neither oil, nor -- dye; and Will not soil or c - olor white ,Cambric yet it. lasts' long on,. the le ir, and kcep.; it fresh • and Vigoro'is, 'lmparting an agreeable - perfngie. For sale by I druggiAs. - flop Bitters are tieeurest• and Best Bit ters 'leer Bade. ' Tliey are compounded from- Hrips ' 4%1 Lilt ; Buchu, Mandrake and Dandelion,4---the old est, best. and most valuable medicines in the' World and contain all the best aticl- most curative properties of all other remedies, being the!greatest Blood Purifier, - Liver Regulator, - and Life and Health Restoring Agent on earth. No disease or ill health can :possibly long exist xvhcre these Bitters are used, so varied and perfect are their operations. They give new life and vigor to the aged and infirm. To all whose thaployments cause irregularity of the boles er urinary organs; or who require an Apetizer, Tonic and mild Stimulant; Hop Bitters are in- Ivaluable, being highly carale, tonic and stimulathig„without I No matter what your feelings or symp toms are; _what thelfisease or ailment is, use Hop Bitters.' Don't until you are sick, but if you only feel bad or miserable, use Hop Bitters at once. It may save your life. • Hundreds have been %saved \by so doing: - , :3500 will -be paid for a case they ;will not cure or help. I Do not sufferer let, your friends suffilr. but use 1/1:e Olen] to Use Hop Bitters. • ! Bm.ember: Hop Bitters is no vile, drug': ed, drunken nostrum, but the Purest an • . Best Medicine ever made; the :"Invalid - - I Friend and Hopq." and n o p e eson or ta t ni should be without them. Try the Bin, to-day. t4i . Oct2oly. 11y Universal Aceor:l, C.tvn.tirric Plus are the best purgatives for family use. Thtt ). v.:a the product of long, laboricius, and successful chemical investigation, and their extensive use, by physicians in their practice; and by all civilized na tions, provei them the best and most .-effectual purgative Pill that medical • .seience can devise. Being purelyiNcg!. etable no harm can arise &oaf 'their use, and being sugar-coated, they° are pleasant to take. In intrinsic value and - curative powers no other Pills Can e compared with them; and .every -person, knowing, their virtues, will =employ them, when 'needed. They. kelp the system in .perfect order,. and' . maintain in healthy action the whole , machinery , &life. liiild;' - 'searehlng and - effectuak they are - "especially adapted to the needs of the digestive ,apparatus, derangements of which they prevent and enreAf timely taken: They are the best and .safest physic to employ for children and weakened constitu tions, where a mild but effectual .cathartic Fs For sale .by all' druggists. Mmted AGENTS: AGENTS! •AGENTS! ForGEN. DODGE'S tuba' lets 1.4A1k., entitled Thirty-Three . . Years Among 901 - WILD INDIANS ! true record of the Authara TAirtis-Tbreerears Tenoned .Experiinee among our ArdiMui.' With enable Intruduction By za n. This new work was at once subscribed for 4y President . Attars and entire Cabbies. and by G.-n. &ennui, Ges. Graas, Ges. Sheriekri,6e4. Ilancock. sad gori.rands of Em inent lien. GILN. GRANT tayii:—..ll is (/..Y Lea book On Lulias'Life ever written.' BlSilOr 'Write atetho4lo says r-. 0 .1t is a took RI &unease 'mho." ItistheoNytnthea tid abeount of our /flatus ever pubLlibeiL fully reveal ing their "inner life." seem. doings, exploits, etc. It Is Miele with Gaining experience" of the Author, and of fa wow Smuts. TsaPPees. Cos-hoTS. Mines, Border Ilutronc, etc., vividly portraying Life tiLthe Great West es i Pea' 4ttdt)aeas diejuvw With Steel En:Ma - Ins and Chromer-Lithogroph Plates lb 15 colors, from Piton;,,-.., • - evade by the 11. &Government enireratifor sib great aura. AGILVISI This ;mad bads is now out-selling all others 10 to 1. No clowetitios, Agents seems 10 to Co orders s day.. •We wont 10011ithorp. agents at. aaa. Ls. elswire Territory mod Spriest 2 r nnii Ores. Our large cbmi hag with foil perticaltall awl free. • tine Specimen rhiti seat Saathfitioa fat s 3 cent stomp. Address thotole • A. D.WORTHINGTOX 0 CO, Masson, Calm To met no more. I hoped that seal was set upon the past. I boiled that you and I had looked Our last, life was o'er. . : sot, frlehd. That yofOin stir one quiet puise of mine, words'ean ever loin the brohen.llue, Time tracedl the end." Not that nay` feline an bid your heart One Instant faster boat; No talr old folly blind youth found so sweet, 4 Such powers can - The Idle dream 'ls Passed.as the morning mist will roll away. When "on its Lary reit of sweeping gray; ; pullstinll?htsgleant. - • • But in Its coign, Idle although : , - 1I false, and brief, . came many 4.11 I) vieless grief, Cattle utany a p.dn. Its - Intral has fled. , • Vat round It hangs the memory of its woe„ faring the swep . t notes of.the long ago, lb heart and hea. • . . rheretdre i ' a:1k; ' - I lath Cad left uhturald the silly page. I lain tagl Ic,l t.l4'.. , . , :eited the dust of age To gathe r gray, -* Aui thick, and fait Upon the coffer of inc. : faded tioirers, We plucked and tiiirk.: away in tivp wild hours,. Whose spell has pasix.i. In calla content, *-‘: \ . ~,, ~ Blest in our , ; . ,ohered joys, apt Nve sv i lad. t r 1 waist no.sP,.‘tre trom the sand= tatul, : • Ot fancies Epi..-..rit. 1, And so I say, Smooth be your path, your 3 , ,:y trOm cloudletr tree.; But let lire's riTor roll Iwlxt you and nr...„. E'en ars'to-day. 31iily paningtou was only eighteen_ when she came to live at Holly' Lodge. - -Very yontigjo lie-married, said the,gossips of the neighl;nrhoodj still younger to assuiuo all the cares and responsibilities of the 'house. hold. And there were not laelriziedivers doleftd prophets, who declared, with 'eyes rolled up 1141 mouths - drawn down, that Mrs. Barrington never would " get on" with the old coloqel ~n:r,~ist t.:-lared a third, . - But to theittrprige—perhaps a little to. :heir disappointrnent—Mißy and her father- in-law were the .i';e§t • of, friends • from ,tie very firsf moment in' which they lockediipOn each other's frtes llilly was so nnxi'ons to Ik►rn, so eager ft to comprehend the ins and outs of the' great, roomy old farinhousn, so ambitions to eteel evcry lioniieheeper iu the neighborhood, that the 611 gentleman said, lyith a smile, to .bie SOEl: . . • :.:1)011't lct thati little girl undertake too .. .:c .; much, Dudley." ' ' • - And Dudley' Main',Ton answered with a yawn: "'There's no danger of that,: sir. .The ladies of Holly Lodget harealwoys been first dnss boiNeluniers, pi t i. know. And if a wotrifin j_e-; itt work, tilie(i4ii't speivllitrioney foolishly', or go,;sipir.g.4':, Colonel Barring,ton'sleen , , Mae eyes re 'girded his son, sharply; fora moment, "Do yoti think filly is addicted to either ..)f those perriehitts practices ?" said he. "They eoaio natural to all women,. don't they?" said- lipfclle..s' shrugging his shonl ders. ! • "Not to.ala" (saittthe coldtiel. ; And in his seerdi Seal he wondered if , -lityl• ley was reaVy. wp4y c:' such P a jewel'iia Millicent, his wife. . So the weeks went on, -and 31illy , :stood bravely to lief helm Until, one bright Octo. ber day, th4olont•ft , chancing to pass the_ low kitchen . windoW, where the hop.vineS made a scr een _.of moving , shadow, looked smilingly in • to where hia 'daughter-in.lat4 was at 'work. . • "Have yon got a glass of cool milk for ne, little girl?" said he. Willy brought the milk promptly: . "See,. papa," she , said, triumphantly pointing to' the table. 't what a baking.' I have done to-day! Three apple.pies, three " , -tves of bread, a pan'of biscuit, a, loaf of a l , cake, and a dozen vlum.taria!". "Bravo !" said the colonel.' '","But,Ully,' why are you. baking ?. Where is Hannah?" • ," Hannah wanted her wages raised," .said Willy, rather soberly. " And Dudley said it was all nonsense keeping a;girl, when I was ;o fond of housework. :so siatqw.s.gone." • " I3dtde you fond of •house Work ?" asked the colonel. " In itself, as an abstract thing, I rqau.?" " Yes; papa," Milky answered, with ' some hesitation, ." But I'm a little tired this morning. I rose early and swept the hots!) bifore breakfast, so as to have time for the: baking.'.' . . • 410VERNMENT NO MORE... , .... • —All the Year Mud, THE MONEY ACCOUNT. "fie i. 4" sci . fastidious," said ope "So difficult to tult," said another. "His ideal is 8:3 impossibly high!", de; "You are a good little: girl," said the father-in-law. ",13nt wer'innstu't let you work too uiard." • "Papa," said Milly, with downcast Lsshes, and a deep pink shadeW creeping over her cheek, "I've ireen thinkiFifor some time that—that—" " Well," said the colonel, encouragingly. "That I should ‘ like to ask you for a little y.f money," (Altered dilly. • "Money!" cehoed Colonel Barrington, in surprise. "Doesn't Dudley. give you all you want ?" ' . . Once more ,hilly hesitsted. " fie wantslo know what everything is for," said she "lie thinks fifty cents is too much for ribbon, and he says bonuet-frames enzlit to be bad cheapdr than a quarter of a dollar, and , ho declares it's all nonsense to buy silk filoves when cotton will do 'as Iwell. And I do need another Plume for my hat since the rain spoiled the eanary=oslored one, but I don't like to ask' him for it." " Do you mean to say," said Colonel Bar. rington, leaning, his elbows on the sill, "that you don't have a regular allowance .very week ?" "No, papa 1" said limy, lifting her pret. 1 lily-arched brows: "Dudley says women don't know }how to use money, and that r wifei should always' receive 'every cent she spends from her hneband. And—l can tell On, papa, becari4e you are so kind to me— L 7141 so rvlta ,t 4 to have him thh•le me ez fmavagant, and I do really need so many. lir le things that then hisven't any idea of. It's s little hass3, sometimes." Colonel Barrington Cook lt,g,oodly roll of bills out of his pocket, and Vlid them on the , . "'Here, litlle girl," he aid "you have earned them a dozen time-4 over!",, filly reached up to kiss him though the vine.leavesi: t • " Oh, papa, you are such a darling!" she said. . • He only patted her cheek in reply. - —.matey don't know what a treasure no has got," he pondered, as he ,Itept on :hilt walk up to the front verandah, where a great maple-tree was showering its yellow_. trophies over the steps, and : the balmy stusl: shine slept on the painted ltoor. " making a Circassian slave out of 'that- dear . little woman." And the colonel Oak his book, and stretched himself comfortably out in the hammock for his evening's reieries. It was the neat day that his gut came to him, in the library, where a little ere Gibes hail been kindled, for a dull northeast rain had blown all tbe yellow inaple,leaves away, avd the sonshitto was obsentliff4.. elands. - -, ".We11, my troy," said the !kindly, "':yon are off for the city, , "Yes, sir," said Mr. )3a . tau, straight, bandsonie you:* --with • f gown complexion, and daritisieseirditqg esei. " And befOre I go, pad:4oM- IS totter give me alcheque - on the 1,4 k, . quite convenient." , "A cheque!" said. the,..Ookuetk, , what? „ rip about out of ready cash, t lisid Do. " 42 4 a litaa-14 00 agall, Moneiyould'obao very handy Mr - current expenies." . 00:4 1 "Ali !" observed ,the what are you going : to,bnyr Dudley looked at his faihrer*AZOSZa. "I need a fan suit, sit,r,so4ll4l l Fllndrr" "Yea. yen !" 'nodded tlik old 411**Man• "And Low nielelz do rui pay taf-INILIGit " Oh, thirty-five or forty•dollors In =river , ad Dudley. "Thirty-five or forty dollars !" echoed Colonel Barrington. ' - "Lin't. that rather vague ?" "A fellow never knows exactly—" ex plained Dudley. " Ah, but you ought to know !" inter rupted the old gentleman. "And now I ain ea the subject, you buy your clothes era Ltsuier,, don't you ? And preset there chew. er plates ?" "And," added Dudley, " tv_e a little7bill at the cigarltore to settle, and there are some new bookie' should like to read; and—" "Just scr u d l in the bills to' me," said Co oriel Barrington ; "I'll pay them." 't "The boottnaker, sir—" • "Yod must try and not be too extrava gant with your boots," said Colonel Barring ton, gravely. "Young men have so many fictitious vrauts, now-adays ! But, as I Said before, let all the bills b sent to me. And .s for spending-money, here is enough for present." He drew but a bank-note, and handed it. his son. was stared at it in amaze -. ment. It was a one-dollar bill. KM " I expected a cheque; sir," said he, some what discomfited. - ` 4 Did you?" 'mid Colonel Barrington. • '..'„ll.ip . p't agreeable to, be put on such an agiiwauce;"lventini Wiley. sharply. "I'm hint accustomed" lb, it, and—" • " Not agreeable; ;:eh ?" said the colonel, comfortably adjusting his feel on an em hroidered vest. " Then why, do• you prac tice the system with your Wife?" "I give her all that she needsto spend," said Dudley, coloring up. • " And I have given you all that you need," asserted Colonel Bairington. " I win a man !" said Dudley. , " And, she is a woman!" retorted the colonel. , , . "I am the manager of sour down-town warehouse, and I claim toy honest remuner ation as such," cried Dudley. " I am no beggar. There is no . cent which I ask tont Ido not earn." . • ".That VI Millicent's case exactly," said the wise old advocate, "She does the work of the'house, and does it well. She is an economist in'every sense of the word. ;Is it right that she &odd receive merely her board and clothe:4.2 Is she not entitled'AO a regular allowance to spend as she pleaies ? Do not think me a meddlesome old fogy, nc; son," Colonel Barrington added, rising sad placing his hand kindly on his son's. Shoulder. "But I have been observing Ell these things, and I merely wanted to eve you' apersonal applietion'of this lesson in political economy. lon see how it humili ates one to have to beg humbly for the money that one has,lfonestly earned—to be called upon for an account of every penny one wishes to'snend. Don't put , your wife into such a false position as this. Treat .her as one of the firm of Barrington Sr, Co." Dudley Barrington stood still 'it moment, peatiering ; and thewhe said, earnestly: " I will,-sir You:die right r And Tilly was delighted, that very day, to tceive a cheque Torun ample Sum of tuoney from her hnsblind.: - - "Is it all for me P she cried, with glitter ing eyes. "Yes, all," Dudley analvered, laughing.' "nut what am I to do with so Mitch mod. , „ Mai "Lock it up in )..ur desk dear,',' be 'an. lawered, "and spend it • for -lour needs as . t they occur." • • , . • , " But 4 . - never has so much before all at 'one time !" exclaimed the a ". -134 Milly. '. ' "No,.you never had,' more el to to Me," ac • knowledged Dudley Barr ington . " Bat I Have come to the - conclnmon, Maly, that you are no child to be givens a few cants .at a time. Ton are my little housekeeper, and deserve' your regular salary. -:I shall give you this • cheque of fifty - dellam, for your own personal expenses, at ,the beginning of every month, and you shall use malecon,o. mize it,'.as you choose. The„bouieheld ex t penses,_ of course, will be paid out of the common stock." ' ' ~ ..% Milly clapped her, plaids joyously. ' ' "Oh, Dudley, I never felt so rich in W# life !" said she. : " Now I can dr t ess like other women, .and give a littlewtoneY to the church, and help the poor, and feel We: pendent ! And I can lay up.. a little, too, . Dudley, every month! - Oh, you shill see what an excellent manager I can be!" • Dudley Barrington • looked at his:. young wife with a sharp prick of conscience at his _heart. Why had he never made her so in nocently happy before? Simply becauseit had never occurred to'hirn.. . • . • . - . - -Andildilly ran one:ly to father-ili a:le; • . - --..-- . " Papal" she cried, "I fin! to 'have fifty • dollar:4n mouth, all fcir my :awn, and never to•giver - account of a •cent - Of _it, rad* I please ! It is Dudleys own offer. .Isn't be kind ?" And Colonel,Barrington sadlekuld pat ted her head ; andanswered, gravely: , "Very:kind, indeed!"—ifeters Farrell I Grave*. AtSUNDANT L4TatcAtti TALENT. Speaking of the death of prominent liter ary men the "Hermit” of the Troy , Times gays; The question is domed:no naked, how are such icepoitant vacancies filled on so short I notice To this it may be re. plied Wert' as such an mess in the supply of literary:Vent . that no difficulty, occurs. There are so many - able writers banging round jottig's and periodicals that , select tious catilie made un t day's notice. Liter ary people'-generally prefer the.,lletropolbi, even if (lety starve. This is nothing new. Wee tin* a century and a half ago Johnson weal, to London to try the chances of a lit ext4h.'fe, and ho suffered Wept!, yeses of painful struggle before he reached a sift:lent degree of success to give him - a . *Cent living. Thomson,the author of "'The Secusotta," went to eindon about the =me' tithe and . published "Winter," - for which he only receivid guinesa. Ras only his good **nue - which gave him a tutorship that saved him-from the game fate Which Johnson enduredi. ' Nov YOth never Whined so much unemployed Went as , at ' the present time, and tide teadimc met milldam to isamale: gr ' - - gp FOR THE PEOPLE." • Mina RSV <>LYCRA "The glad if: Weapons 0411kt/el_ mud . dit• Priers Paid for Them. " What khut of n weapon does the ordin. ary business man buy "He bays a revolver that will kill—a thir tystio or thirty.sis eafibte weapon. The calculation is that he will never use the weapon eicept when his life is in,Areat ge.r, and csmsequently he wants 'ono which will be - of sea- puietical service. Th eprloes run from $5 up to. $,lB or. s2o.' 'Private ' Indelsman and otHcers of the law . all carry good weapons and ply good prices." "Thieves and burglars usually ciirry sobd weapons, do they not?" " - I can't swear to that. Yon see they'do. 'not tell me their business when they buy from me. In fact, I never asked them to. Rough, villainous-looking men often drop in and ask to see revolvers. They :always buy the best there are, id - the market: and '4 lOOl O. of.-10.11.41:f0kre! *PI in s tomerairno;-.lioni their personal appear ince, I might be justified in classi was bturglars,, and roughs. ' But, as I remarked before I . never ask tkem what their occupations are. Salem and Italians' seldom carry revolvers. They are customers of mine, however, but always buy knives. Look at tide _instru meat," he remarried, as he took a large dirk riem the showcase. The blade was six inches long and as , sharp, as a razor. "That is what Jack Tar carries. It makes no noise and does its-work in a' more effective: way than the revolver. There is anotherXiation tlitYwllichlSays heavily of both revolvers Ind knives. It- is the Chinese. .I.2obri has learned that he has got to protect hiniselL `sad he always :buys the finest kind of 'a volver. He first asks the price, and never buys until he succeeds in beating you doin several dollars. The' consequence pi 'I id ways, put the price up about $4 when I see a Chinaman enter the 'store. He sets to work and beats Me down about 1,;, , 5, and I-. sell him a revolver for about $1 more' than the. average citizen would pay- He also buys knives, and prefers a- large one with a very long: blade.- I will tell you one thing about the hi:mine - SS which I think ought' tq be attended to, by the authorities.; This is the selling of deadly weapons to 'anal! boys, and, in fact, all boys, big or little. I sell a great'many revolvers to boys, and I, know that I artklaoing,Wrong. But ;what can! do? If I do not Sell to them, some one else-.wi11,; and Ism Obliged to do wrong because' , my neighbors do. Now this revolver here is: called a toy pistol. It is twenty-two calibre and will kill the :strongest Man that ever lived. They are . ; sold for from $1 to it 3 each, and alreat many are bought byrboys and women. The, misguided females sup. pose they - , have thus provided themselves with an effpctive safeguard against burhns. They nevet use them against burglar's,' Anti they sometimes shootthemselves.—..Halicew , kee Sentinj 1. .gir ar. "And THE WILD WELSH COAST. _ -,----- , Nearly threo-fourtps l of the entire c:res,ii of Wales is seacoast.?,rilj`sreat part. of , thin coast is rugged liti dangerous, but there aro frequently recurring barlxors of refuge easily and safely entered-' Steep and forbidding eliffs, with frouti of iron, black, jagged. frowning, receive the ,Ailantio's rudest buf feting'', grimly. The' southern shore of Wales, froth a point just, below Cardiff to the extreme „westernmost reach of 'land at St. David's Head, is washed by an ocean whose free sweep is unbroken straight across to the coast of" Newfoundland. At ,iarions. points the cruel cliffs -are made . still more cruel by huge disjected rocks scattered about. at a distance from the mainland, as if the shore were shinving its teeth sin .warning to nu io the mariner. Where this froWaing f, nt is tanken occur bights and bays of e qnisite beauty; with long reaches of - tawny sand which•the waies lap lazily of asu jer af . ternoon, or across which wild winds Bowl in storm. It is a striking line of coast, . - 'full of feacinationinifsell to the lover of thepictul, , Tque ; but mina : on every crowning sum nut stands a castle (Aden, lookhle, seaward, iv Rh its hoary facades and battleniented tow- • era—perhaps inhabited, pedlar , ' s crambling still slowly away, as it , has been brambling for centuries. At every lovely harbor' is an 4world village, or a great town with clank-. ing hammers, the one rich, the other poor, but both dowered with those.aspects of an tiquity which are so dear to the eyes of the cultured American. There are villages along this wild Welsh coast of an ancibutriees to be equalled hardly anywhere .. -else iti-tritain— villages whip/ in some bases have undergone little chani,epf aspect during the past, five hundred - j'y4Ars. Remote from railroads, primitive 41411 their ways, they are , of the old world, Olden. Time has hardly, dis turbed therdsince' the days when London was a village too, with , thatched roofs , and winding lanes. In the caves and bloAras hewed in the cliffs by the long rollers of the Atlantic thundering in a thousand' storms have been found traces of primev al -• , nian- 1 nis bones, his implements, the bones of the beasts he ate—in gr4at abundance. Tho very land is old "than the land of the Eng lish, Scotch, an Irish. . Ages before the Aid parts of earth on which thei rest of Britain was built had risen above tlo Wide waste of waterEpoveriug the world, dos' land, now eculeds;Wales, stood alone in fits glory, au island - by itself, where strange monsters dwelt, and -in: ' - s.dtiqz•en birds anif, reptiles, wandering, left the tracks of limb feet, which are fonaci to-day, in the solid rock where ,they were imprinted comities ages ago.— Wirt Bikes, in Harper's Maga zine.. t , . Washington was in 1843 the greatest skive . martin the - United States. Within riigh,t' of , the Capitol, and not far from the lower gate, and near, if,not upon, the_ land . where the Palk fiarden now is, was a building with a • _large 'Yard around it, inclosed with a high fence. r Thither slaves were brought from all the slaveholding regions, like cattle to the Chicago stock yards, and locked up until sold. There were regular auction days for those not !Nerved of at private sale. • The Chicago fire" destroyed a hard cracker vihich I had preserved as a specimen by which the purchasers tested the age of slaves. And to this dey, if there is anything that the aver. age Southern negro does set know, it is his own age. The slaves were' placed upon block, and when a question arose as to hir . age, lhe auctioneer regiiestell them to bite from a cracker which all the -shim . anOtion ems kept for such occasjcuis. 'The` theory was that While a slave could masticate well he could work..,Nearly all the lahor at Washington was performed 'l4, many of whom were hired from thei - ; neigh boring States. The slaves were=led to collect their wages monthly and them borne on some Saturday night. Oire mom lug I missed my boots, and when I went foe • the bootblack he was mhadng Ow :After a few days I saw ; a procession of captured slims, who had sought their' liberty in' $ Potomagi schooner, chained two - and tiny conducted !award the slarepen ;UM inatked my bootblack trudging erg in my boots. I had made a saeconfiti camas for Cougmealn thine boots, but they failed the aim in his canvass far hec*tm.—Jelat Venteartn " Remfareteneet." -- ( WASHINGTON IN 1843. TRAIN IN A SAND STORY. The Southern overland train, which sliqull have reached this city on Monday afternoon was delayed forover a day at Sumner by terrific sand storm that • raged throutli Mojave Desert and spread out over a portioty ,of the surrounding country. The storm tnt the early morn'ng, and when tilt: brain reached Stunner, in Kern county, had hew* e a regular simoon. - The wind swept across the sandy wastes.with such force that theindn swayed and rocked under the vio lenUof the blasts, antfieemed ready to Otago fro& the track. The moon bad be cote overcast: in the early part of the night, andlthe journey was continued in a darkness thatrapidly increased until the bkganin Stygian gltiom. The track was _lost under the billows at sand - that :were tossed scrolls the rails by' the angry storm. The desert Moved like a ses,,. sad when the waves of mud struck the shivering sides "of 'the train the? utter* Ulm *weed tapit the: air "with a dust which made fiee breathing, ha-, made. , The travellers' buns of being stopped by a sand drift were soon realized. After leaving . Sumner, which is 314 miles from San Fran cisco, the train moved cautiously for ten. miles through the shifting. waste and then stopped with a crash. The alarmedpassen 'gers hardly dared to face the 'driving storm to learn the. cause of the unpleasnt halt. The few intrepid penSms who ventured into the blinding) simoom found that their ex.? press training run itdo a freight train which had stopped in an - -impass,able sand drift. The slow rate at which the express was mov ing enabled the engineer to stoßtVe train' in time to prevent a serious accident and the collittion was only sufficient to cast the loco. -motivelronathe track. The darkness of, the nighthad only increased, and nothing *as Visible except within the focus of the train's light. For 'fve weary Loire the passingers were compelial to remain on the detached train while relief was being obtain ed from Sumner. Assistance having arrived, the track was cleared of sand sufficient to enable a relief engine to pull the ezPress back.tcOutnner, where the passengers found slim accommodation until the storm ' , blew over:: :Toward 5 o'clock in the afternoon thealkiness began to disappear, but the 61Elilipp.intantained its vigor until nightfall. Yesterday inorning . the unfortunate passen geielprOceeded on their journey, the remain der if,which'was niade without sensational. incident, as gangs at Chinese had been at work all night and had , cleared the track of the accumulated sand drift.—Son Francisco ARTISTIC *MISS OF. I V ORY. • 44,1 - There is tiothing in the history of art that bolas amore important - position than. ivory; not only on.ac count of its extreme antiquity, but also because it almost impossible to imitate it, and because it is amenable to the instrutuerits of the carver, the turner, the painter and the stainer. As to its an. tiquity, - collectors have traced -examples of US existence from the middle of the fourth eentiWY downward through an unbroken 4 chain ; and, indeed, our sole knowledge of the general aspect presented by Tcertain ex tinct aninuts which' roamed the primeval, forests of our earth before the flood is de. rived from rude earvingql upon ivory; that have come down to us from the hen& of cave rum in prehistori , times. In the rausencitiil Europe there are carved ivories lof everyted centu7. We Feat that I -,..4010m0nt" made a great throne kyPly." and the 44 , l prophots speak of "benches zof ivory," " horns of irony " an f' beds of ivory." . And before the da.ys or even Moses, the Emrptiins worked in thi¢ material, small objects at ,it having . .been found in their tombs. a l iitilleetionlis the 3ritish Museum is quite '"large, and among the inlaid ivory chairs,\imounted mirrors, statuettes and nun:len:qui smaller pieces here are the famous Assyrian ivories, more :ban fifty iu number, found at Nineveh _and dating between the eleventh and sixth een. furies before the Christian era. Mr. Layard, by whom they were found, detirfes them "elegant in design, elaborate i4xecution and showing an intimate ,inotvgdge of the methods of working in ivory." .1 While ivory is inferior to marble in White ness and in available extent of surface, yet it greatly exceeds marble in beauty of polish, is less fragile, being an' animal subsumes and of true tissue and it - rowel Its sub. stan , 2e has a dense appearance and without visible pores, as ihompaiestutifully L , cement ed by oil or wax ; anitttiongh it is known to possess a large share Of'hme,, it t l capable of acquiring the most exquisite smoothness, snd ltas nothing of the harsh, meagre char. icter 'of bone. In alfrespte ivory"is the most suitable material for prnameiltrd turn. ing, because it s can receive the most? delicate treatment in the carving and may b§„worked Into objects of the most slender proportions. The tusks of the elephant are its wenOmi of defence, and when jobbed of themithey trn doilitedly suffer more of less. The theory that male elephants only possessed tasks has been exploded, as many fetnales 'have! been found carrying tusks of a smalkz size, bnt so solid that from these the billiard balls are made, and these tusks are termed by ant. noisseurs " ball ivax y."—PAikidelpAits Pro. wear. AN UNLUCKY MAN. A Georgia man writes to.the Atlanta Cm- ;Whalen that a thokage of five he fell off a Clair imocking out threo teeth;.:in . trying afterwards, to imitate a'ropeAtarker; he fell 'off the fame and thrust a paling through bit foot.; a 4 ten be was knockedf ora hour or two while playing "shionVin try' ing to imitate &circus !icier he wasthiowskoff the strange horse he picked up in the road and was nearly pled: at the colkge gym nasium he swung - so high with ropes tilt-be : , lost his bold, fell and tyas pickedNp for dead; just alter recovering from this' be was pushed Off the platform at the, railway sta tion and. had to be carried home; ..he was Invading with a campanion on a dray when he fell, anil the dray ran over him; shortly after rheifell froM a tree, running a sharp CM stab Umiugh his bend; theisamei winter he was laicknp• serail days with one of his `shouldera- abb . & bad been knocked out of joint; he thou after contrived to stumble and run another tree stub. through his hand; aubseqUeOly he was practicirgitheslaight-ot. hand trick of swallowing a button and got the buil+ up lit nose from which he - was unable to get it out; in cutting stinewood he cut of the of his toes, dodor sewed them on and he went on crutches for seven mouths'; then he tried to 'want, ant he fell two or three times which set him back sex. end months ; once be, snick a pea, into his ear wb4 i the doctor bad great trouble in re. covering; he went to a machine 'shop when a lathe knocked tim,senieless with a pine; of timber, het failllown a flightof stabs and .had hisanoidda broken he afterwards bad -two Wets tirto off him by lathes ; the shop elosikand while cittaisg wheat bands he stuck abutebrzknito through his leg ; 'gap at the shop, be got his thumb. In a lathe gauge and bed apile of lumber WI on hble; ass bb thumb was Out of, a pleee at rip siw mot him In the bait, its lay sense. His toe some days, but finally went to work spas,' who the shop burned and be fell off the root What be has boa dOlng the Tut 111 91 f t Vieth/ink* b+ - doss ioot sq. IN THE DARL.IHO "ATLI DEVOTEE. i Tier wady little hat petthed b1:11 - .Above ber lianas and trims There vas a spittle In eye La% etlamPaltaa when It &sea. Kedit ^ant flattered white ' - Iler silhaautdo a loud rustle; Iler te'r-lltsiid cloak was In the style As, also, was-hcr tscale. Her dainty kids RUM butt:Med tight Wen to her elbows dimpled : Her perfumed kerchief, snowy white, All lace; was sweetly crimpled. _ ) And, oh, her tiny feet peeped out Like timid mice enhancing The charm that ctrch4l her about— With splendor too ent=:l,cliur. u Where are you goimpretty mats t. , I spoke as Ette was fleeting; Nob, 18m going sir," she said, u Diato our prayer-meeting." • :IL -V. Dodge, In Whitehall Times, =CI \ .P 11,744.41- DRIVER. ! "Driver, what time is it r . ' V It waist El Paso, and i! was on the °Mai. bus going from the, Santa' Fe depot across the* ford 9f the Rio Grande to the Mexican opt:nil Station. The driver, a typical New lifilican, looked up as Tasked the question, h a tii shook his head. : - -! " We're all broths up on time here," fie said. k•'".All brokelnp. What kind of time do 9 06 , ' want, sir?" . , " What kind have you got'?" - 'All kinds. That's what the , matter with. tis. Thas local time. That varies some.: wikat 'conga' to gents'es, 'yer know ; biz! I calls ik—pulling out ' watch and' *king at it.-4:= " 7.50 A. vraA s at the Santa Be. folks bete runs their trains . ; on Jefferson City time. , It ought to be 8.4 by them, ,I expect. But mebbe, ,as ycr goin' by the Central Road, yer wants their time. That's - City of Mexico time, 'and it's not 'bout half-. past eight, I should say. "Bat lots of gents want Chien° time an' keeps tes finite lis sommers about *1.56 by ,them, Trackoti.' - But ask most any of these Western through gents, over the Southern Pacific, an' they'd probably tell yer 6.50 A. DL. ar they' Mint changed their watches' an' 'give yer 'Fritts) time. Though 'bout at nniny.reore might say 9.:;0, tai they've emus right-thfough from the East and. have , New Ycirk time." . "It's very puzzling and vexations," I said. "Val, I shottlfTsuggest ik. i war. ' We fig- gess Ras snug's we can on rem, an we trier 1 to fit!em all. Bat gents gits left eve - 1i day on us, are thar's no end of hard talk. I donne what we'll do—onless, perhaps, the boys allgoes and gits watches thatikeeKall the ideas ortime ter want. Fer it's a fad, liist lets gent get a 'retie hurried and Anat. tredilir t e, an' he's dead skre ter god an' add the difference of time onto the wroneend. - "Biit..l can tell ye, at the , hota - IrS, ha 9 the wust-times," continued - the. drivel., :With A pat4tio gesture, " amnia' , gents ter take the trains. Ye see,. they leaves word at the office toA called at five o"elock, or tialft /Asti or m:mebbe. *We goes ter knockin' far 'ail asinigh t time they say as we can Igger i--ttditeri as any way they all 'conies deiwn madder'n snakes. Some's an au= too airly, an' seine's got left an' lays over alday, a-futain' about it.. , Thar's no ;gangsn;it.. _Were all broke up." : _ ._ 1 The driver was evidently wrestling—not very stiocessfully--with That • troublesome problem which vexes bettez instructed heads thau his, and bids Lair to continue to do so: DOG AND WILD DOG. kp enterprising traVelei :and naturalist, am*ribing the wild doge of Mexico, and their 'mitred of domesticated ariimats of their race, given an instance of their Origuinary pro. pfteity. " The only anirnall ever saw torn to shreds," ho says, " was a Mexican butcher dog that bad followed us across the Bolson de )4pimi, the rocky plateau between The plain of Durango and the valley of the life Grande. ?". "The brute gat little but abuse, !...67in sorry td say, bol he followed us with the resignation ofatinoyr. One day when we were passing thelsige of a ravine, "me-itaw, forty 'feet belou - the road: a swarm of tramp' dogs devouring the carcass of a dead mule. ' "As we stood looking down at them they leered at us with their savage eyes, but went on with their eating, till.stillenly something seemed to excise them and turning around, I saw the mastiff, standing at the' very 'edge, gazing down with a sort of pensive interest. "At that moment $ heartless muleteer. apProached him from behind, and gave him i'prtsh that sent him heels over heid into the gully, landing him plump, in, -the midst of lig gaunt, wild brethren. -', !'.The unluckyhN e picked biinsolf up, Oil stood rigidly still, 38'ing:4he ' tramps; who had 'Scattered in "every direction, but now' gathered around him ::with ominous gob: " They approached within ten or twelve yeses, and then came, to a halt, watching the intruder with a steadfast gaie, silentlY, and witk a graduld contraction of their haunches like panthers crouching for a spring. " There was a moment of suspense, and then the whole pack leaped upon him, and ;we seconds after the sound of cracking bones announced the 'end of the unequal struggle. Three of the big 'tramp' dogs did most of the killing, but at tines all- the Vest hid hold, and in leas time than it takes me to write the words, they had Sterally tors Min in pieces, with a fury and rage of deittructivenees which plainly showed thit !Ramer had nothing to do with their mo. :# l * - • Tit was evidently an act of 'revenge, pro. coked proximately byethe malitilf's uncere monieas intrusion into their midst, but chiefly, without doubt, by the ocrium UM pariah's deep-seated and 14e-cherished hatred of the privilege kedste whose repro sentetive had hearted thee) in their den."- 08...thts add's. • GROWING RICH GRACEFULLY. The Americans have accomplished great things, bat it cannot be said that they have hunted to grow rich gracefully, says a writer in the St. Louis Qkbe-Danocrat.. Oar thou glen in lb reitlliitTy sense, maybe said to go rip like a rocket and come down lice the stick after a great Szz of pyrutechniCs has been made in the air. It is a good deal birder to lawn how fob° rich properly than it yp to get rich, and nei until the foreir . V. is learned will the antagonism between.the walled - twee and lower classes disappear. 110 e wealth that is unobtauflye, that taunts tibiutar, endows *illegal, sustains public aharfties, or means of cultivating the gen. era taste vd intelligent* aroma no hoi. tllity. Wealth in the hands of one who has wassidetwthai for the self-respect of others, Me does not' vraste Sven if he be not laws), :llais not excite antagonism, *ben wealthy waits generally acquire-strength/ of 'mind amiugh to St their children for the respond. Willies wbich'will teat upon them as mama if properti, a long step will bare been I Men id the roper direction. Some Ihig. Ishfamillee have succeeded roawurablY well i=l..tabit taus MANI their deg te be If an American *nib of grist Wealth bas so suoceeditibe l itile# arena& a* gar. - `$ 1-4 - ' • o , : 4 , SIAO a Yon NO. 86 ITEMS or. iirrimsm EMiENiaii The' nuinber of ilettilute' tableau is Chicago is 10,000. yt, • —limber—How will yow** roar , bait cat, sir ? Mau In tbair—ln tame. —The number of - furors the thatad orates has bummed 51 per ieut. Wm pad ten years. —" T aim to tell the Until." " Tea* in. tern ted an acquaintance, bat Yon are - it very bed shot." —A London physician sap d k, Zoe Mk sparrow iasobject to smallpox and can sad. ly spread the disease. —4onts—Con you give me charge kw a dollar? Fenders= (the sharpletort)—Yas r how much do you mat ? • reicuacopenhoare Uteri hair to be like a coma sortedriasp, tostwitiithe teetb 14 ±nimikkrelPda.and NIP& • • —A man drew i crowd at ifiltoe4 Ham, by going , home ..with a laddsitslals *met on his head. He was winning the article on s wager. : —A collection of old boots is Ilk:idly to be shown at theTeris Idasee de Cluny. These ancients sboes will form a complete, Mosta tive history of bootmaking. —Willie Gully, a fourteen.year.old boy, living in Russel, , Ge., shots ballet into his leg, and,tather than alarm his mother kept - the wonud a secret for nearly two dayi. ' eloping ample -found a : clergyman on board a Georgia Cum's]. trai n and were married ins twinkling. The " wedding march" was at the rato of forth miles an hint. Providence. merchant ordered bow as Atlanta, Ga., broker 10,000 twent74db.: Confeaeiate me in advertising. The broker filled the owler anditu4 $3,000,. 000 left. —'Thera is a weedily sale in Paris Maids, which are bought in casks Gad with. dsaap moss. One hundradtood toads are n Totth from sixty to seventy shillings. These are bought for _gardens. t-iftiniart bones, a charred pipe and sev eral half melted buttons in the ruins of H. W. Randall's barn, near Stonington, Conn., indicate that a tramp had taken"- a smoke before dropping off to sleep. . - —Five amateur &littera recently fired ' - at a rabbit and them fought savagely to decide who hit the beast, and , when , ,they, mone-io aaminelt, -found it mu4t have died of fright, ss there were no marls; of shot on it, —A Dublin profesairmal man addressed en artisan, 'who was 'waiting in ,hie hall. brusquely: "Hallos, you fellow, to you want me rt The mower was neat " No, y'er honor, I ani4iting for a gentleman." —At a recent execution Japan thirteen strokes of a sword were found-necessary to decapitation.' ,'The ear . , of the iiistrtuand bad oven blonttd purposely that the agony If the doomed might be as great as par& We., , V, A very indifferent anthor once mill to . Piron : " I went to write at kind or work which has never been written, en& which nobody is ever likely to *Tits except toyeelt." Write your own eakigiusa; mid Piron. —"Doe3 be afraid to praise your stemanti when they deserve it," remarks a lady;Arrit. lag in one of our domestic magazines. !It& ,may bealtright; but the minute the . bus• ;blind praises the housemaid she has to hunt tor minutia= situation. -According to do irsurattee eompases, victims of "deadly induAtries" ate workers in hrass and copper, lapidarian, clad grind ers„ manufacturers of paint and wihe molders,. makers of grindstones,. and lead - pencil makers. —That was a frank reply to a Meta's in timation of his approaching marriage: "1 should. make my compliments to both of you, but as I don't know the young lady, • I can't felicitate you, and I know you so well that 1 can't felicitate hes." —" Yee," be said, "carrying womb beg.' gage is an awful nuisance; , and it costs a pile to Have it carried from depot to depot; bait then, you know, the raffroadi allow a man to carry a hundred and fifty -pounds, and a fellow likes to get all that belongs to him." —" Servant girls living in and about Den. ver, Col., speculate in "city lota," just as' they did in mining . shares in San Francisco a year or two ego.:, Coots residing in Colo. radO`Springs and (*her towns are allowed a day off occaeimudly in order to go to Denver • and `• see their brokers." . —Mr. 3 Clerk Maxwell, experimenting in 1868 with the best epparatas, arrived at the .smeltutiim that electrkity,travels at the rite at 17 . statute miles perriecOnd. or about 20,000 ludas per second slower than light. In submarine cables and the ordinary wire lines its:course is .greatly retuded. --The quantity of gull in the world is not saline as it is commonly consldenxi to be. There is not more than thawortha Z7,000,- 000,000, which is about half pure gold_ and silver. The animal production is about £loo,ooo,ooo 4 atorth, and the production has decreaaed forty.foor per cent. during the last thirty yearn The production of saw however, has increased 100 per cent., anti now equals that of gold. Onnttani of the gold goes to wear and '.tear, cue-third goes into iiirealstion and one-third into the arts Ord manufactures. All the gokiinthe world bald woke s pie only 52 feet 'side, 45 feet tam and 25feet high. MARRIED WISE 111 TURKEY. The Turk is commody believed to be sort of Bloeband ; bat a Inbar in London Soddy says that it it not so, and that poly gamy is the eseeptimi rat_ber than the role, as it is restricted to the' wealthy dime. Members of the latter, ,hemtrver, often hue four wives And elm* number of einew lbw. In wide of atlipmlia, at keel, the husband is the subject of men; email trea ties. He must have ILO sequaintarkee women other than thole of his Own bare* saa should he ohmse slippers outside the harem-door, he bums that ladies are vieft+ lug, sod he therefore cannot toter. Thus percianoe he strolls through As War,- there madhe so reeoguideu , his On women, though they liad be throltiou sissy his money right aim' left os gib sid *ink _ . European ladies are the_ oblevta :it meth attention and curiosity on the port at the 'omen . et the harem. A - rung !WM My, seventeen yam old. ef, great pelsonst utraistbms, some time since vidted a . Wan seecienpinied by ,ber. =the ad trial& Women questioned her, and wield At bellisre that mini lied no ebildren or even a bOsed. One Of the viler, -Adak took a iv* ton to bar, three hoz mini arena *tech And: eithesied belt hi stay with tbko bzerver eke could fate isq hatband ililiked, mid iiiiiiisisoldliiis lo spier, 1. ......,............ 'tbikalis - i* sire iliaite:**Oneell - 110Thili IriteclUla . Oilleitti4 - 610' nal 1 ` iikvaltannh'esthattt vieshniribbnike _ 4#ll, - then . di:Oro* ~pi the - . tit heVingtoirsniiffisefiliel' eel& " ::: Itesie Vies lilibelli iseliMeller. A titlins:lstivest- •beveve, tat - lbws- Inmees ishiMisseb ass sent: ''' . - . 13 .1- f '...):, , . 41 ', ,-,.' ICINI 13