MUBNCHIPTIOS RATES : j Per year, in advance ♦' 50 Otberwioe | So aab>fcriptimi will be tincontinued until *ll / &r.' pai i. J*o6tm*irt©rß to notiry as vhin «jOr' riber* do not take om ilieii papers wiil l»e he!«l liabie (or tt.e Mubucnpticn. Subscribers ron.uvuig from out- jn.c!oiijc«> to another should tfive as tJie name of the forme: \» well art the present oUitt*. .VII cotniuniucatiou. OiiendeJ lot [jßblic.uiu! n this pa,Hjr iuur( be *c«.'OUj|«nii>-d l>r the rev. :iam-< of the •mter. uot for publication but a* , 4 gnaiantee of good taith. and deafli aoticae must be aocompa- ( Died by a reeyomiuble name. Address THE 81/TI-KR CITIItS. BCTLER. PA. raj|| aam FOR MOHMTIM, Mauralgia. Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of thi Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth «jnais ST. JACOB* OIL a* £ B'ttr. *ure, simple and cheap Kzteniftl Keni€f 50 ObU, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and poidtive proof cf its clajns. Insertions in Eleven Languages. SOLD BY ALL DETJOOIBTB A3TD DEALERS II MEDicnrE. A.VOGEJLER to CO., Baltimore, Md., V. S. JL MRS. LTDIi L PiNKH&fiA, OF MM, MASS., I LYDIA E. PINKHAM'B VEGETABLE COMPOUND. laaPoeltW^nrj feral! tIMM Painful Cmlalate amd V»ta«M HMBBM MMrkWtfmlt l>«p«l»tlo». It will cure entirely tlx worst form of Female Com plaints, all orarUn troublea, Inflammation and Cleera tlon. Falling and Dleplareraenu, and the consequent Iplnal Weeknecs, aad la particularly adapted to the Change of Ufa. I* win dissolve aad expel tumors from the uterus In sa sari/ stage of development. The tendency to can eerooe humors there Is clicked rery speedily by Ha use. II rwaoTM falntneas, flatulency, destroys all era ring for stimulants, and relieve* weakness of the stomach. It cure* Bloating, Headache*. Verroos Prostration, General pabUlty, Sleeplessness, pepreesHm »u4 Indt gsstioa. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, Wsight and backache, la always permanently cured by 1U use. It will at all times and omlar all act In harmony with the laws that govern the female *y«em. For tha rare of Kidney Complaints of either sax thla Compound Is unsurpsss.il LTPIA L PIXKHAMU VEGETABLE COM POCir»Is prepared at ta and IU Western avenue, Lyan,Maas. PW-s fl. Six bottles for (6. Sentby maU ta the form of ptlls, also In the form ol losengea, oa receipt of price, $1 per box for either. Mrs. Plakhaaa freely answers all letter* of Inquiry. Bend for pemph laC lIIIIISSS a* above. Mention t MI Paper. So family shopld be without LTDU X. PIXXHaIfV pvET* fllxa.' fhrr rare constipation, biliousness, ud torpidity of the Uver. M csots per bos. _ $r Ml by all l>r«»«lsis. GREAT GERM DESTROYEK DA KIII 'S PROPEYLACriC FLUID. "■■■PittingofSMALL SMALL POX VOX Prevented. ERADICATED. Gangrene prevented and cured. Dysentery cured. 1 mjlinsio!. uestriived. _ WdDftds h.-aled rapidly, hick room* purilied and scurvy cure!e;u«aiit. „ nle . KevertHf and Sick Per- T( . tter dried up. join H'Juwl ami re- | r j s perfectly harmless. fr ft, h 2* sy,5 y , K " r *•» Throat it is a Propliy actu- Flu- sure , :urr .. id added to the water. Holt White Complexion* fBaKBBBBK secured by its use a 4 in bathing. 1 HtPTMPRIA I Impure Air inii'le hnnn- 1 Vtt Int nln I lest and punfled bv I ___ fi nprliiKliiiK l»arby■• 1 > d about the Removes all unpleasant corpse it win prevent odor*. any id to carry coal more than one- t tentb that distauce for thtf same price, i This extreme cheapness it is that has 1 called into Is-i.ig this trade, that has t caused its growth, and that will |»«;r- 1 petuate its existence though the con- < tineut be cobwebbed with railways i The river transportation of coal has j developed to such an extent that t whereas in 1844 the coal from seven t acres of Pittsburgh coal seam was | floated from that city, there was left, | yc ar before last, a dark echoing void of j t 720 acres under the smiling farms of t the Keystone State. The intrinsic excellence of Pitts- i burgh coal a? a heat, steam, and light producer must not be lost sight of P.S i an element in the building up of the j , trade. It Is a fuel as yet without a■ i successful rival in the Ohio and Mis- ! sissippi valleys, shut out, however, ! from all but river poiuts, only by rea-. son of the prohibitory bar of transpor tation charges. These rivers reuder it possible for the sugar planter of Louisiana to evaporate his syrup over ! Pittsburgh coal, tbe ocean steamer to nil her bunkers at New Orleans, and for that city, Baton Rouge, Natchez, Vicksburg, Memphis and St. Louis to light their streets with gas. To these j benefits must be added the enormous supply of coal for domestic purposes. I Many of the consumers are as remote : from the parent beds of tbe fuel they 1 enjoy as New England is from old Ireland. An open map of tbe United States will show the inland highway of King Coal to be an inky, tortuous line, ex ■ tending from Pittsburgh to Cairo, I Illinois, and laltelled tbe Ohio, from I Cario north to St. Louis, and from , i the latter south to New Orleans, fonr i teen hundred miles alon? the Missis sippi toward the equator. During the year 1880 there entered this highway at Pittsburgh ninety million bushels of bituminous coal and coke. The latter article comprised but a few million bushels. The term ''bushel" is prob ably not a familiar one as applied to coal. Twenty-six a&d two-thirds bushels make a ton, so that the quan tity given above means about 3,500,- 000 tons. Of this mnch-sought-for fuel Cincin ! nati mills and homes take thirty million bushels yearly from the river. Louis villle twelve million bushels, New Or leans eight million, Memphis and Yicksbqrg flve million each, and smal ler towns and villages along the two rivers absorb fifteen million more. And every pound of this coal, from the mo ment it first rests in boat or barge at the Bhute or tipple at the pit, until it leaves the water at New Orleans, or strews the bed of a great river, is sur rounded by the dangers out lined—vicissitudes such as can only be found in this trade ; dangers that call forth the peculiar characteristics of the navigators of this treachirous highway. Moreover, the coal consigued to the care of a single steamer frequently amounts 2P.OQU tops—enough to load five of the largest ocean steauievg to a dangerous depth. And the men in charge of this mass of fuel are ex pected to successfully overcome diffi cultiec that would appall the most ex perienced navigators of pepper yatefs. This hazardous and peculiar paturp of the trade has develojied a race of nayi gators whose dominant traits are pluck, fertility of resource in times of disaster, and promptness to act at all times, united with an all-pervading disposi tion to take evils a« they come philo sophically. Let a suddeq rise in the rivej-s pwell ihe waters of the Ohio. At an hour's notice the cables must be slipped and the huge boats floated off on the crest of the rise. Else the chnuces are in fa vor of stranded boats and coal scattered along the bed of the stream. It is this capricioueness of the Ohio, engendered by the vagaries of the Weather, that renders the experiences of the coahchipper unique. The east ern navigator, who revels in a pleuti? tutle of water, can form no just concep tion of the skill necessary to guide a fleet of cumbersome coal craft of seven feet six inches draught through tho windings of a channel where the uner ring marks show there is just seven feet eight inches of water Nor can the eastern or other mind unfamiliar with this coal-shipping trade know of the brain and muscle and machinery and skill which must go hand in hand iu order that a solid mass of coal afloat longer than the "Great Eastern" by two hundred feet, and as wide as a city park, may be steered clear of be setting dangers, and safelv borne along a route nearly as long as that traversed by a Cunarder. To tow, iu North or East River parlance, is to pull. On the Ohio and Mississippi, and al) west ern streams, towing means pushing, The acre of floating coal craft must be bound in solid rigidity, and must lie in front of the propelling steamer and the pilot's eye, before the dangers of the rivers can be met and overcome. In this connection it is appropriate to refer to a step recently taken by the general government to lessen the dan gers of the Ohio, Mississippi, and Mis souri Yivers. This consists in the esr tablishment and maintenance of the "beacon-light" system on the rivers named. During the nights of inky blackness of sky, when even the con tour of familiar bills or clearings or bluffs escapes the keen-eyed pilot, the steady, clear radiance of the "beacon" indicates bis whereabouts, and marks the ripple, or scantily*.covered bar, or the point at which the boat must aim in "flanking" around the loops of t|ip prratip streams The es» tablishment of these lights, a few years ago, was looked upon with iudifference by nearly every every pilot etraged up on the tow-boats. Some went so far as to oppose the beacon on the ground that the pilots' duties would be simpli fied thereby, aud thus the value of their labor reduced. But, as night after night, in storm or palqi, these calm, steadfast rays lent their aid to the pi lot's strained faculties, their mute elo quence asserted itself. And to-day, when a fierce gust, or caving bank, or sudden flood, extinguishes a light, a mightv growl goes up from the frater nity of the tiller-rope, the missing star is restored. Every three months, or oftener, a trim swift steamer sweeps tq» and down the rivers, repairs damages to the lights, changes their location to suit the unceasing shifting of bar or bend, pays the light keepers their well-earned dues, and supplies each with the oil needed. A beacon-light is simply an inland light-hoyse of modest propor tions. A short wooden post, braced to withstand wtud, and bearing a small hooded platform at its top, eight or twelve feet from the ground, forms the support of a lantern of siqxirior con struction. In general appearance the way-side shrine of the Old World is reproduced in the beacon-light of the New. Aad in this connection it seems emi nently fitting that Pennsylvania oil should light Pennsylvania coal on its way to market. 111 the 800 lights on rivers uamed, elaine, a special prepa ration of petroleum, is used altogether, as being fully equal to lard-oil for light bouse purposes. The Ohio has 324 of these lighu, and the Missouri and Mis sissippi 480 more. 'lhe pntire system is one whose benefits become yearly more apparent. Within the past few years the growth of the river coal-handling trade has re ceived* fresh impetus by reason of the success attending the completion of the Eads jetties at the South Pass outlet of the Mississippi. New Orleaus, here tofore a mud-blockaded port for vessels ('rawing over fifteen feet, is now easily approached by sea-going vessels of twenty-eight feet draught, and requir ing a thousand or twelve hundred tons of coal to stock their capacious bunkers. Originally, aud before the present per fectly appointed tow-boats were drijam -led of, coal, to a limited extent, was BI TLER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY K 1882. floated from Pittsburgh to New Orleans and nearer ports in boats whose only means of propulsion were huge oars, "sweeps," actuated by the muscles of the easy-going crew, whose patience was commensurate with an average speed of four miles an hour for weeks at a time. These primitive craft jour neyed in pairs, and the owner aud nav igator who succeeded in bringing one of these safely to New Orleans was fully reconciled to the almost inevitable loss of the other through perils by the way. Coal-towing by steam to southern ports dates back about a quarter of a century. The civil war interrupted the young and promising trade, but with the cessation of hostilities, Pitts burgh capital aud enterprise found a profitable field in supplying the cities already named. To meet the increased requirements of the trade there was called into ex istence a class of steamboats not found elsewhere in the world. The boat de signed and built for coal-towing along this high-way must of necessity pos sess qualities difficult to combine in the same vessel. There must be immense power of engine, backed by enormous steam-making ability, to cope with the force of the mighty currents. There must be lightness of draught to enable the craft to hep home port during seasons of low water, and there must be tremendously powerful steering ap paratus, four times AS much as that possessed by the largest oceangoing steamer. The latter quality is indis pensablp by reasoq of the inprtio. and momentum of the fleet of coal craft, which must be guided by the power of two men at the tiller. Speed is an ele ment in a measure lost sight of in the construction of a coal tow-boat. What is required is that the completed craft shall be a good "pusher;" and supple menting the best work of builder and mechanic muse come into play the cool, clear heads of the men whose duty it is to handle the boat aud h«*r tow, and with these to thread the aqueous mazes between the foot qt the AUcghauies and the Gulf of Mexico Such a boat is the "Harry Brown," that will pu.-li 20,000 tons of coal down the two rivers at the rate of nine miles an hour Her hull, of the best white oak. pipages jjfto feet in iength, fifty in breadth, aud siif in depth. Machin ery aud boilers occupy the greater por tion of the first deck from stem to stem. The propelling engines are at the stern, aud act directly upon an immense pad dle-wheel revolving on a steel ehaft from the hammers and crucibles of Fred Krupp. These engines turn the wheel with the combined power of 000 horses, and draw their potent va* por from seven steel boilers that evap orate ten cubic leet of water every min ute over furnaces that devour 1,200 bushels every twenty-four hours. On the second or boiler deck are the com fortable and even elegant quarters of the officers and crew—a pretty cabin and state-rooms for the one, and home lier comforts for the other. Cleanliness and good living are enjoyed by the in land navigator, and to this end is pro vided a table comparing favorably with that of a first-class hotel, and a bath room with a huge tub and a limitless supply of hot and cold water. Paint ings, Brussels carpet, and other luxu ries of furnishment give a home-like air to the cabin, and are in a measure con solatory to men who must be absent from home for months at a time. The cabin of a tow-boat is at all times a comfortable place, and a favorite re sort for the officers. It is the realm of the chamber-maid. In this particular the lady was known as Violet. 'ls your name really Violet ?' 'No, sah; 1 tink my real name's Sal; but, law! Sal wouldn't p'serve de dig nity ob my position for four days." Therefore Sal became Violet, and Vio let reigned like a dusky queen over a kingdom of equally dusky deck liandi. Then there was Augustus, a table boy, whose mouth expressed every im aginable phase of grin, and whose per ennial good-nature it was impossible not to admire. In the forecastle, or forward part of the cabin, the pilots are wont to con gregate when off watch. Their memo ries, especially the older members of the fraternity, tee u with anecdotes of hair-breadth escapes from hidden guer rillas, who during the war seemed to have a special weakness for perforating pilot-houses, and the veteran who can not add a blood-curdling yarn of a boil er explosion beneath him would be re garded by Ids fellows as having passed a too pastoral existence. Above this deck is a structure which, j seen ashore, would b«: taken for a con- j servatory. or queerly-shaped green- 1 house. Three of its sides are formed \ of sliding glazed sash, and surround what may be termed the seat of the brains of the b4at, the boilers being luncx of the steam-pipe, and blending in a most lusty bowl—a blast distin guishable for up' 6B . a, *d known to all boatmen as men recognize the voices of friends. The front or fourth side of this crystal-walled structure, the pilot house, is opeu—a great eye protected by swinging lids that droop in storm and lift in sunshine. Through this open space is viewed the double pan orama of passing shore, of bend and hill, and all that goes to make up the ever-changing scene most familiar to the pilo.t's gaze. In the immediate foreground rise the black columnar proportions of the lofty "smoke stacks," pouring graceful festoons of jet-black carbon cloud iuto the air. Further off, and midway between these tall cylinders, rises tho graceful "jack-staff" from the bow of tho boat, the slender index that serves the pilot as a guide and pointer. Ahead and beyond, stretching into the distance, ' extends the fleet of coal-laden boats and j barges—a peninsula hemmed about by I the river's bright surface during day ! light; at night a blackness merged into [ the surrounding gloom for all eyes save the marvellously trained organs of the men at the wheel. Aft of the pilot house the twin "'scape pipes" rise from the engine-room, and cough responsive ly, mingling their snowy breath with the inky torrents that roll from their big brethren the smoke stacks. From the pilot-house lead the tiller ropes to a lever thirty feet long, swing ing under the ceiling of the engine room. This operates other levers that actuate the tour massive rudders under the stern of the steamer. Two ot these extend through the water thirty feet, and their shorter fellows are fifteen feet long. All sway in unison, and are | moved at the will of the men in the pilot-house. Such a boat costs $65,000, and of this, SIO,OOO represents "outfit." Under the latter head may be mention ed 20,000 feet of ropes in coils of 1,000 feet each, and of all sizes Seven tons of ponderous chains, ratchets, blocks, and tackle come into play in binding a score of coal craft into a solid mass, making this mass, in fact, a part an*) parcel of the steamer itself. And such is the strain brought upon the steam ers in this trade that the life of one of the fleet rarely extends over twelve years. And if by reason of strength tbey be fifteen, their added years are only gained by constant repairs, CRCjiqg in coljapse and wrecking- Pittsburgh is the home of a fleet of 140 tow-boats of the "Ilarry Brown" pattern, but varying in size, power and finish, from the harbor tug of modest proportions, costing about $3,000, to lioats of the dimensions of the 'Brown.' And of the luttef tfjere pre at lya-it fiftv. Important but humbler adjuncts of the traile are the homely craft whose only office is to receiye poal at the I'ittaburgh mines and retain the same until the distant market is reached. These are known as coal "boats" and "barges"—model and square. The coal "boat" is a most primitive-looking b"X shaped affa|r, f'rai| in make-up, and ap-> pareutly as illy adapted to stand rough usage as a bandbox These craft measure 180 by 26 by 9 feet, 'draw' feet of water when loaded, bold 22,- 000 to 24,000 bushels (740 tons), and cost SI4OO a pair. Their pine sides are only inches thick, and once strained in swift water, go to pieces, aud scatter their contents along the river.bed. The coal 'barge' is a stur dier, smaller comrade of the 'boat,' is 160 or 180 by 24 feet, and feet deep, drawing 6£ when loaded, is 'raked' fore and aft, and will safely carry from 12,500 to 14 000 bushels (530 tons), and costs SIIOOO each, be ing made of heavy pine timber. There are other coal carrying craft in use, but those described are the moat iiu* portant forms used iu longdistanco tow ing. After being unloaded at their des tination they are known as 'emptiers,' and are towed back and refilled; and so on until their life is ended, gradually through successful toil, or suddenly through the dangers that lurk on all sides. From the earlier stages of their journey to the very latest these clumsy boats and Uarfcea peem thp victims of uutoward circum stances. In the sluggish pools of the Monongahela, during tho winter months, ice surrounds and threatens them, and the coming of the spring thaw is certain to bring destruction. Further along their southerly tour, the jierils of tho Upjter Ohio surrounded them. A "lump' may break through their bottoms while gliding over a hid den bar covered with just enough wa ter to float the craft, or a snag piereea the boat's frail shell, and vicious wa ters ripple cheerfully over her gun wales. A loaded boat sinks to within eighteen or twenty-two inchces of the surface of the surrounding water, and the care and skill brought into play in order to guide and propel fleets of the»e deeply laden cruft become ap parent to the dullest observer. Just at thp point where the wedded streams Monongahela and Allegheny create the Ohio, a motley assembly of boats and barges are herded together during the greater part of the year, awa'ting the pleasure of the clouds and the dropping of the rains, which must fall lilierallv in order to release the waiting erat. At adjacent land-j tng the tow-boats are also grouped | during the waterless or icebound months—the steamers, great and small whOse duties are comparable to those 01 the shepherd's collie. They must gather together the coal -bearing flock, keep them in solid phalanx, urge them along the devious highway, and re strain «.heir desire to follow seductive cross currents, and finally aid in hand ing them over to the waiting purchas er. And most faithfully do these boats fulfill their mission. A stran ger who chances to visit Pitts burgh on a day when the message, "Rising at head-waters," gladdens the heart of the coal-shippers of the Smoky City, may note in tho looks and at the landings near the city scenes of stir ring, often of surpassing, interest. 1 These locks of the Monongrhela aro all too small for tho wants of the coal men, to whom an hour's delay may mean a fortune lost. One by one the laden craft are dropped to the lower landings, where the tows are made up. Little tugs cleave the mud dy water with one, two, or lour bar ges, and transfer these to tho waiting monsters. Smoke and steam roll sky ward, voices hoarsely issue orders from the "hurricane-deck," mingling with the bang of gongs and tinkle of bells in tho engine-rooms; capstans creak, big ropes swash across the swel ling tide,Jand,the di'i keeps up until the last tow-boat of a procession fifty miles long steams slowly out into the Ohio. Such sights and sounds are familiar to every Pittsburgher when the marks show a rise in the rivers making a depth of anywhere over eight feet; aud on such an occasion the writer and the artists liegan a two thousand mile voyage, whose gathered results are here laid before the reader. The first spring month of 1881 was but a few hours old when the "tow," ! already made up and "hitched" to the ' steamer, lay in the deep shadow of t "Coal Hill," awaiting the coming day ; light to be, with others, started on its ; long and hazardous jobrney. With J the coming of keen, frosty dawn the j signal bell sounded, and the ready 1 steam filled each cylinder. The mons trous wheel, as big as a country church minus the steeple, churned the water and $40,000 worth of coal and $60,000 worth of boats and machinery swung out into the current. At the first sweeping bend the pro cess of "flanking" excites admiration, and shows what can be accomplished by a wonderfully skillful co-operation of engines, tiller, aud propelling wheel, acting as accessories to the force of the current. To retain boat and tow in the current, as is done when the river is straight, is found to be folly on a huge scale. The momentum of the mass would drive the fleet ashore at tjie toe of To "flank" is to so handle the fleet that its onward march is checked be fore entering the curve, and so steered that, at the center of the bend, boat and tow lie almo6t across the stream, with the forward barges exposed to the force of th° carreut as it sweeps around the outer edge of the semicir cle. The resultless tide, bearing against the distant end of the fleet, swings the mass around as if on a piv ot, and the pilot, promptly seconded I by the engineer, hrin£s the full power of engines and rudders into play. | Thus the solid fleet is headed down ! the lower half of the curve, and so on to straighter shores. Where the ] curves succeed each other until the ; river is a huge ox-bow, boat and tow seem waltzing sideways down tho river in tv Uiauuer incomprehensible to tho.se unfamiliar with the mysteries of ' flanking." From th»- pilui-hotise the feat possesses absorbing interest f« Slowly the forward motion of the mass must be checked, and on nearing the selected spot along the shore the most agile of the yrew must laud with ca blet), and make fast 'breast' and 'stern' lines. These are tied to some conven ient and sturdily rooted tree. Then comes a tug of war, the more exciting if the current be pretty Bwilt. It is .steam and good hemp and Manila pitted against the might ot a river. The ropes grow taut as piano strings, the smoke curls from the m&give 'check posts' in the boats as the coils are eased to check the fleet's headway gradually, and the ruddy light from the coal-burning torches lights up the weird scene. Finally boats and tow lie immovable, and silently await the coming of another dawn. And when drifting ice-cakes pile against the boats, or a howling wind adds its strength to that of the river, 'tyiug up' is a labor full of danger, presenting a scene of pe culiar excitement, uot unfrequently ending in the swamping of thousands of bushels of coal, or the crippling of a 'deck hand' by the untimely snapping of a cable. AH the voyage continues down the Ohio, tbo banks between which glide river and boat and tow fall further apart. Side stream# add their quota of muddj- water impregnated with soils of divers hues. Day and night the big boat with her charge of black diamonds continues her course, unless, indeed, the nights are starless, moon less, and blustery. Towns and cities drift l»y on either hand, tor the south bound coal fleet recognizes but one balling.place—busy, pretty Louisville —ami only halts at thin lair Kentu kv city wln'ii the water does not oermit bo«t and tow to 'run the tails.' and forces , the fleet to pa>s through the narrow j confines <>f the Louisville and I'ortlaud Cunal, or when th- size of the low must be increased by adding the tows of suuller boats which follow the large lower river ste tmers to this point. Lot a New-Yorker imagine all the wheeled traffic of Broadway obliged to pass through two pairs of country 'bars' and obliged, moreover, to await the putting up and taking down of these bars before and behind each vehicle, and he can form a pretty good idea of the adequacy of the Louisville Canal to the wants of the river coal shippers. The Ohio at Louisville, six hundred inilos from its source, is three fourths of 11 mile wide, and a bold ridge of transverse subaqueous rock gives the stream a fall of twrnty-seven feet in a distance of two miles, and a current of of twelve miles an hour dashes among bowlders iu such a way that a flood of over thirty feet stage is necessary Lo enable river commerce to lie independ ent of the thalldom of locks. This stage of water in the fickle Ohio is by no means common. During the 366 days that dawned in 1880, but 103 days saw "falls water," and during the 263 com paratively waterless days coal-carrying craft representing half a million tons passed through the well regulated but tedious little ditch. A coal tow will measure from 500 to 800 feet by 200, while the capacity of the canal is limi ted by its available space in the locks, which are 340 feet by 80, so that the descending tow must be pulled apart and marched at funeral pace through this canal, two miles, to its lower end. Hero deep water and a convenient shel ter for re-arranging tows for southern ports are found. Very often, when falls water is not, there may bo noted at Louisville a solemn, immobile line of great tow boats awaiting their turn i to pass the narrow portal that comes ' between them and distant ports. And ! the cabin of these craft as well as the : levee at Louisville will on such occa sions be haunted bv rueful-visaged i men whose boats are far from the head of the line, and from wbo3e unwilling pockets each day of delay to each steamer draws two SIOO bills, to which are added the neat little bills of harbor tugs for towing. And this is not all Right at the gateway to the canal, . where on the one band there is the crest of a foaming, roaring dam, draw ing all floating things to destruction, and on the other the encroaching shore, there is permitted by the municipality of Louisville a half-dozen clumsy "floats" or coal-landing platforms, these" also flanked and made more obtrusive by barges and other coal craft in pro cess of emptying at the wharf. To make use of simile once more, it is as if New York city were to allow pea-nut i stands to block the junction of Fulton Street and Broadway. The govern ment has abolished tolls, and has done much to improve the Louisville Canal of late years. It can make the work complete by condemning and absorbing that portion of the Louisville wharf extending from the mouth of the canal up a distance of one-quarter of a mile. Tow-boat life is au odd existence, and in a measure soothing to those who by good fortune are the recipients of tow-boat hospitalities. In the pretty cabin there uxuU an air of perpetual i hush, broken only at meal-times— 6 A. M., 12 M , and 6P. M. The tow-boat i man takes his slumbers and labors in ! equal portions of six hourß each, and j between meals (when the "watches" I change) half the crew sleep the sleep j of the weary, and the other half respect their rest. Only the pilots enjoy a less than six hour subdivision of the twen ty-four. Their day consists of two six hour watches, u five, a four, and a three hour watch, so arranged that the kuigbts of the tiller wheel do day aad ; night work alternately. And so lb' IT rout boat and h»*r crew of forty men aud the mass of fuel move ou, the river growing wider and the air milder as the Ohio approaches the Mississippi The stalactites of ice that lent the wheel and "fan-tail" a novel | beauty fall off or melt away. Snow appears only here aud there in shaded places among hills that grow less bold in outline. Then the willows that make lieautiful the waste places on i either hand show a deeper and more definite verdure. And as the low-lying roofs of Cario are sighted, the forest oaks give way to cottonwood, with buds swollen to bursting. The tow which at Louisville had grown to a mass 800 feet long and nearly 200 wide, swinga into the Father of Waters a fortuigbt after leaving the landing at •Pittsburgh. There are still a thousand miles of water ahead, with an unknown of fog and wind to be met and overcome in tbis distance. Fog proves a subtle, swift foe. The ice-cold waters of the Ohio and upper Mississippi and Missouri are swept by a warm, moist air from the south, and lo! there springs up on all sides fog—fog everywhere; thick, penetrating, and shutting out the nearest shores, and even the tow from view ; an opaque wall of shifting mist. The pilot-house seems to its oc cupants tbe car of a cloud-riding balloon floating miles above anything tangible Such a visitation, coming wben the tow is flanking around some grand bend in the noble river, is fraught with danger. The floating island of fuel and boats seems suspended in mid ocean, with only clouds of whirling vapor for companionship, and nothing to recall earth save the flash of unseen water. The solid vertical bank may be five feet front tbe head of the fleet, or it may be five hundred—who cas tell? Overhead, the vernal sun sheds bright but ineffectual rays. Underneath, ten fathoms of turbid water or one ? Not even the wily pilot can tell. The yawl must be hastily launched and sent ahead, the engines stopped, the lead heaved—every precaution taken These are moments of deep anxiety, subject, happily, to a speedy termination, for the watery veil lifts or drifts away as rapidly as it came. In some cases,however,speedy landing is tho only salvation for boat and tow. Another terror to the tow-boat man is a high wind. Such a wind sweeping over the mile-wide Mississippi converts its surface into a yellow prairie where on myriads of muddy-wooled sheep seem disporting themselves. Every j sheep is. however, le these rate*; addition! ■'barges where weekly or monthly changes are [ma le L\-.-al advertiseu.ents JO cent* per lint for iir-t in-ertion, and 5 cents per line for each v'. l.tionr*l insertion. Marriage? and deaths put -I,r d free «>f charge. Obituirj i.oriees cLaiged a- advertisements, and i arable*vrhtu handed in An lit .™'Notices, 51: Kiccntors' and Adminia ;n;or»' Notices. #3 each; Est ray, Cauticn &u4 Dissolution Notices, not exceeding ten lines each. From the fact that the CITIZEN is the oldea* established and most extensively circnlated Be- Sublican newspaper in Butler county, (a Reput c»n county) it must be apparent to busineah men that it is the medium they should use ixi advertising their business. NO. 9 ; boy, but a fifteen-horse-power engine i on end in ibe narrow space, and ready for service at the turn of your wrist. In other dark nooks the mecbauism of a powerful pump or a "donkey" engine can be noted. In the engine-room a quaintly named machine, the "doctor," is constantly at work pumping water into the boilers. The "doctor" is pos sessed of diguified slowness of motion, and baits not day or night wbila the fires roar in the furnace. If it did, the good steamer would be in danger of ascendiug skyward piecemeal. The prettiest occupant of the engine-room has the power of half a dozen horses, and possesses owl-like traits. Ita strength goes forth at night only, and its whirr is the signal for a stream of lurid, intense light to pour from the locomotive reflector on the "hurricane roof," two hundred feet away. It is the radiauce of electricity, that shames the brightest glare of the furnaces, and pales the gleam of the ordinary lamp. Workmen far out on the tow go about their labors as in mid-day, or are as sisted in their arduous labors when a landing i- made as no other light has yet been able to assist them. In fact, the entire boat is* a magazine of pent up power, a floating arsenal of energy, and it is not to be wondered at that owners aud officers learn to love their boat as one docs bis home. As indicating this trait, as well as the more important one of fertility of resource possessed by tow-boat men, a single instance may be cited. One pleasant day in April; 1879, the tow ing steamer John A. Wood, of Pitts burgh, was comiug up the Mississippi twenty-five miles below New Orleans in fine style. Then came mishap the first. Iler ponderous wrought-iron shaft cracked, and disabled wheels and engines. Swinging out of her course she struck the iron works of a sunken war vessel, the De Soto, which tore a great hole in her hull, ana she sank im mediately. Able engineers pronounced her case a hopeless one, for no boat ever sarvived twenty-two feet of Mis sissippi water ami resultant deposits of heavy mud. The owuer and godfath er of the ill-fated steamer, Captain John A. Wood visited his pet a few days afterward. Ilis §90,000 beauty was iu a serious plight. She leaned toward the great river at a far more desperate angle than the famed Tower of I'isa, and her upper works and chim neys alone were visible above the whirling water. The man made up his mind to save his boat, and he did it. She had 200 tons of coal on board weighing four times that much besides, and mud was eettliug in every nooV and corner. A thousand yards of cir cus canvas and fifteen thousand feet ol good plank, fashioned into a water tight box or caisson, were built about the entire boat, and the most powerful pumps in New Orleans set agoing. j\>r four weeks the work went on with varying success. Such was the inter est felt in his unwonted wrestle with the river that ocean-going steamers slowed their engines in passing the spot, that no waves might add to the trials of the divers, and dipped their colors in token of their recognition of pluck and energy. Three times the river reclaimed its prey and the boat sank. But the fourth effort resulted in the triumph of man's ingenuity and perseverance To-day the resurrected boat is one of the best steamers in the trade, and her rescuer considers the $20,000 devoted to the work as well spent. As the days roll on, and Northern chill and fogs give way to balmy skies, the labor of the tow-boat man grows less irksome. His fears of shoals and bars diminish as the river rolls a mile wide and there is fifty feet of water under his keel. As his deep-laden craft nears the Crescent City he feels that his coal, worth $2 per ton at the start, will be eagerly sought for at $6 per ton by ocean steamers and waiting planters, and the reflection is a sooth ing one, au offset against the grim tact that every day of his voyage implies an expenditure of S2OO. At length cottonwood andcanebrake give way to moss-draped cypress and broad level acres of cotton plantations. The verdure of the distant shores is that of full, joyous spring, and finally there drifts into view the forest of masts that environ the levee at New Orleans At vc.rious points boats and barges have been dropped from the tow to replenish the wasted stock at different landings, and when the last day of the voyage dawns, but a fourth of tho original fleet remains. The greater portion of this remnant goes to eoaling ocean steamers, and some slips by, and nt tlx- river's mouth evolves steam f<>r the work going on at the jetties. And from a thousand chinr.ieys in the Cr« scent City ascends the smoke fa miliar to Pittsburgh ovos, leading to the reflection that the chill and gloom in store lor all, should the sun bo blot ted out, would in a measure he the lot of New Orleans, and other cities, were Pittsburgh's coal to bo annihilated, or the rivers permanetly obstructed. [Oalve»ton News.] The Madison, (Wis.) Democrat, in endeavoring to treat the wounds re ceived by the candidates for the presi dency, wisely prescribes St. Jacobs Oil. Of course we could not expect our worthy contemporary to do other wise than recommend that famous Old German Remedy,— which "heals all wounds but those of love" and soothes all pains,—save those of political dis appointment. Tho debt of the city of Pittsburgh is nearly equal to the entire debt of the State. Had very sore eyes, almost blind. Pcruna cured me. A. Pender, S. S. Pittsburgh, Pa. Mr. P. W. Carville, of ClintoD, Mass.. last season raised sixty-seven mid one-half bushels of Clawson white winter wheat on one and a half acres, or at the rate of forty-five bushelß per acre The quality of the wheat is said to equal the best Western white wheat, the kernel being plump, large ann very bandsomo. For three years my son was sore all over. Peruna cured biin. J. Neuon »cbwaader, S. S. Pittsburgh.