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rilUL, UARDE3 AM) HOUSEHOLD. yilec and Huhbltti in Orchards. I . . . , 4 _ 1 I Ainona .. ^niec.ies tnat n ivc open inca i with more ~r ";ess success fc.r protecting | orchards r< m ttm destruction^ of hares, mice and runhits is the one of bandaging 1 the trees with still'papers or old cloths ! from the ground up as high as the pests j can reach. Another plau is to wash the trunk of the trees frequently with scft- I soap diluted a little with water. An- i other wash said to be effective as long as [ I it remains on, is lime whitewash in ; which Hour of sulphur lias been mixed ! in the proportions of one part sulphur to four parts of lime. Crude coal oil is sometimes employed for the purpose of] rendering 1 he barkof trees offensive to rabbits, but it must be used sparingly or j . tt e trees are liable to be injured. Ani- j mute' blood and grease, a small amount : applied with cloth or brush, is claimed i by some who have tried it to be eff c- { tive. Pine tar, that need be applied but i once durinsr a season, is another remedy, j A tre1 that lias been eirdled by one or j other of the pests in question maybe i oftentimes saved if judicious attention j is piven to the wounded parts. As ; pood a p]j>.n as anv, perhaps, is to insert j scions in the trunk, both above and be j low the wound, as early in the spring as j bark will separate from the wood, i 'Jr.<s are somitimes saved by banking | the earth up around them so as to cover j the injured portion. The damage is generally done under I cover of weeds, erass, mulch or snow. I Mice will remain under the snow and; subsist an indefinite length of l|?c on j the green b irk of trees. As thes^ests i work unc'er cover the prevention of e il is apparent. Clear th<? ground a foot or more around the trunk oi each tree 01 j ^ praes and trash of every kind; It prevents mischievous visits under sn?.w. Tiead or pack down the snow firmly as | soon as it has fallen about the base of i the trees.?JVcv York World. j! IMhtaicH of Farm Animal*. The United States department of agriculture has published a valuable re port on the prevalence of disease among farm animals during the past yfar, compiled from replies made by correspond- j ents in the several States. It shows a I partial abatement of some of the more I destructive diseases. The swine plague ! is one t.f these. Farmers have carried out the instructions of the department a* :o the treatment of infected animals; * h*,i.ce the dec ease. In a few places the i . losses have been enormous. Platte countv. .Mo., alone reports a loss of $200 000 for tlie \>ear. Several counties in the Northwest report iosses ranging from $10,000 to $100,000. There has ? . betn but little abatement of chicken cholera. Recent experiments have 'established the fact that this disease is cm bon; that it is communicated by a ] microphyte, and is highly contagious, j r but no remedy has vet been discovered. Three counties in Missouri and live in Kansas report a visitation during the year of Texas or splenic cattle lever. , A disease, variously known as black ' . leg, black quarter, and bloody murrain, prevailed extensively during the year in .Pennsylvania and in the West and ; South. This disease is malienant anthrax. It is quickly fatal, an t recoveries seldom occur. In a few Northwestern States, distempers prevail quite extensively among horses and cattle, owing to exposure to sudden and seven* changes of temperature. These do not . occur where animals are properly; housed. Fifty-five counties report the j prevalence ot scab and foot-rot among I sheep. Appended to the summary is a j classified compilation of reports from ; several States. There is none lrom Massachusetts. No contagious disease exists. Connecticut reports hog cholera. Maine reports small losses from miscellaneous diseases New Hamrsh'ie r< ports sheep foot-rot and minor diseases. No diseases are reported from Rhode Island or Vermont. Economizing Fodder. In the seasons of short crops of hay we are often put to it for ways and means to keep the customary stock throueu the winter without tlieir falling | away in condition. I have found that j much can be saved by keep;ng the stocfc ! cc u for table, and that a smaller quantity i of feed will keep in better condition than j is generally thought necessary, ftottbat stock will thrive without food, but that j with proper preparation and kind care | 1 otherwise, a large saving can be made in j I Jtay snd ioc*d< r. Every one knows that 1 it animals arc l;cpt warm and otherwise ; pom'orlable, it takes less food. There- ; f< ire 1 he tirsi aim should be to give good, I warm, wel!-ventilated shelter, and kerp ! them clean by suitable litter and one or 1 two oarriings daily. This latter accom- ' ) lishes an r-nd which few fully realize ' Th< n aeain a considerable saving is 1 marie by puttine feed in the most assim- 1 liable form, ro that unnecessary labor ol the animal is s^ved. All unnecessary 1 exrrtkn must-be paid for in food or < wa=te of bory. * ! The iaoor of comminution is, in prut, t Pav? d to the animal by cutting or chaf- J ting. In this w:>y, a poorer, coarser i quality of fetd rnav be mixed with the 1 .* better, and he made to perform the 1 cflices of the better. A larger proportion 1 is assimilable if cooked, or even well wet < with hot water, and allowed to lie in j bulK or soften fortwplve to twenty-tour ' hours. It is astoni;>hing to see how clean ] the coarser conistalks are eaten when i cut and treated in this way, especially 1 if a liit.'e seasoning cf salt, bran or meal be added. Straw, swale hav, and much ...? ? ^ j :n uujrr iruais*? iuuuer wuicu ia uncu thought ol little worth, is thus made to do va uab'e service. The value of swale liny for fred is often greater than it has the credit for, where properly used. I ' have found that it is more economical in purchasing cattle feed, to invest the . larger proportion in concentrated feed, like corn meal, shorts, bran, etc., rathe? than buy fine hay. Stock not only does beiter, hut the money saving is not inJ considerable. Hay cannot be taken from m mow, carted to a distance and renin unloaded without a larger per c?nt. of waste than is ecncraliy supposed ?Ccuntry Gct<ilcman. Miscellaneous ICeclpcK. Breast of Mutton* Brotii.? Choose a lean txeast of mutton, wipe it wi> h a dnmp cloth, cut out ali the bones from the iinder side, lay the meat, skin down, on a beard, and spreal over it either a I ot forcemeat made as directed in our thirteenth artielp, or one made a3 follows: Do not let the forcemeat reach wit hin an inch of the ec'gei of the meat, and d-? not spread it more than a quarter "f an inch thick; alter it is placed I on the meat roll it up tightiy, bfginning ! at the <nd. and tie it around with jevt-ral pieces of tape or string Put it! into boiling wnter and boil it gently for j t*o hours. Then ren ove the strings, | -j 1 iy it on a hot dish, pour over it a little caper space or some of the gravy in I v hic.h the turnips were stewed, and I serve it with the turnips. ! ( Turnips Stewed in Gravy.?Pare !* pr.fl vvit-u six wniie turnips; cut them j , in dice ha f an inch square, laying them | j in co d water as they are cut; meantime ! ( heat a Dint of any kind < t cold gravy; ] j wh?n all the turnips are cut put them | | " into the gravy with a teaspoor.fui of; t \ sug.ir and sufficient pepper and salt to j, 1 make them palatable; stew thorn gently !, tiJl tender for about an hour, and serve | \ tb^m hot in the gravy. I | ?cgau-Beet Pudding ?Use co:d i ] boned sugar-beets which have not been | ! pickled; either gtate them or cut them ; 1 in piece-" ns larce as grains of corn; to | : one pint df b<.ets allow six well beater t one pint of milk, one teaspoonfu"; j s of sa.lt,v quarter of a saltspoonful of j t pepper and one ounce of butter; mix a j r he?e ingredients in an earthen dish and \ bak*1 h- iu in a moderate oven until the ' t pud ling is firm which will be in about j i l??lf ari hour. Use the pudding hot as a j c table. ' j roliitu of a <ioo(l Cart Horse. j j B fore the Farmers'club, of England, 11 an essayist gave the following as what ; s he considered the points of a model cart ; hoise: n.e feet should be firm, deep and wide at the he?*l. not too long or ' p straight in p*stern. flit bone, short be- e tween feitaek and knee. A stallion ii should rot rue-isure ie?s than eleven t inches be'ow the knee, a girth from a S'ven feet stven inches to eight feet "5 three inches, should not stand more than ( seventeen hands, should have wide, v chest, shoulders well thrown back, head ? big am) mason tine,? without coars^nes- , i fin] (lowing mane short back, largemu.s t ?u!ar ^evt ioj ment <f the loin, long ( quarters, will, tail well set on, good k s?%er r d tlt>s (. Iiis i< a point wheie so a many lai ) ;?rac fhit, clean hocks; 'I ii 1?iiiy oi loi.g. silky hair on legs; or. to e sum up in a tew woids, a horse should I be long, low ai.d wide, and thoroughly ( free fu>m hereditary disease. Amain t point is aciien; l.e should he a good r i).over in tie carl bon-e pa~p, walking, c v and if ? q-iired .to trot. sbou\d havo t aoitcn like >< Norfolk vob- / ' - . ^ v. LIFE IN THE ANIMAL WOKLI>. [Ieiv n Snake Catches Fish?A Horse that Counts?Kitvcn anil Roe. Boars are destroying the orchards in Maine. In Kingfield, in a sin-do young orchard, twenty-three trees were broken liown in their (flbrts to get the apples. Two flocks of semi-domesticated quail are regularly found on the farm ot Dr. i'orter, who lives near Harrisburg, Pa. He feeds them regularly and protects them from hunters. A very intelligent and gentlemanly i^og i9 the property ol a gentleman of Napa street, San Francisro. When on the street in company with other dogs, upon nrrivine at their destination, he trots in advance to the sate, which lie opens, and wails until the other dog has gone through, then passes in himelf, closing the gate behind him. In a seine, caught by fisherman at Monterey, Cal., was a fish, the first halt r>f which was a mountain brook trout. Iiiivine the eye, head, scalcs, spots and shape of the fish. It na.fi a pair of fins attlie usual place behind the gills; an inch or two back of this it suddenly chanced into a si Iyer eel, the shape, color and absence of scalcs beinir pe rfect. Wa tcr moccasins use their body as a sort of sieve in catching small fish. In a Texas pond one was briskly turning and twisting in all directions, forcing minnows into spaces between him and the bank. The fish endeavored to escape by leaping over the snake's body into the water beyond, while the moccasin, with elevated head, caught the fish in his mouth as they passed through the air. A driver on one of the Fourteenth Urect (Washington) cars is strongly ol the opinion tint horses count. Each car, he says, makes nineteen trips a day. There are four horses used, three making five trips and one four trips. After these stated trips, if tor any reason it is necessary to send the ear hack, it is almost imj ossible to get the horses out of the stable. With the drivers nnd stablemen, who frequently witness such exhibitions, there is a iirm belief in the mathematical abilities of the horse. Animated shotguns are a favorite pet fish of the Chinese. They look very much like perch, only more beautiful. They are of a greenish color above and silver gray below. Across the back are lour snort dark-brown stripes shaded with green. As they flash through the water they are a series of lovely and ev^r-changiDg hues. The Chinese keep them in jars as we do goia nsu it is said that their aim is so accurate that they can bring down an insert from the height of three cr four feet above the water. A strange kitten was given a home on the steamship Illinois, which was th n in her dock in Philadelphia. When the 3teamer left Liverpool recently for home, it was found that the kitten had been left behind. The captain and sailors were muck grieved, because they never expected to see her again. When the British Crown, the next steamer of the American line to sail from Liverpool, arrived in Philadelphia, t^e first pas=?en- ] Ir\ nronn oolinrn CPMQ TM1QCV With I CiVi IV IW1IV4V. fJ . -r. -v? tail and mane erect she flew on board the Illinois, and began to race about the decks, showing in every way her dumb nature would allow the joy that was in qer heart at getting back to her old home. Ralph was a raven belonging to the Red Lion inn, Hunaerforct. A Newfound iaad dog that had received severe bruises by being run over was daily visited by Ralph, who brought him bones and attended him with particular marks ot kindness. One night, by accident, 1 he stat le door had oeen shut, and Rilph had bien deprived ot his friend's company all night; but the hostler louna, in tne mcrning, tiie aoor so perked away that, had it not been opened, in anotl;cr hour Ralph would have made his own entrance. The landlord not oniy confirmed the hostler's account, but mentioned many other acts of kindness shown by this bird to all dogs in general, but more particularly to maimed or wounded ones. Fetly Worries. What a blessed thing it is that we can forget! To day's troubles look large, but a week hence they will be forgotten and buried out of sight. Says one writer: I If you keep a book, and daily put down j the things that worry you, and see what becomes of them, it would be a benefit to you. You allow a thins to annoy you just as you allow a tly to settle on ' you and plague; ar.d you lose your t'.mper (or rather get it), for when men ire surcharged with temj er they are said :o have iosl it; and yon justify .Yourselves for being thrown off your balance d.V causes which you do not trace out. But if you would see what it was that .hrew you off your balance before breakfast, and put it down in a little book, and follow it up, and follow it 5Ut, and ascertain what becomes of it, ?ou would s<e what a fool you were in he matter. The art oI forgetting is a [ aless-d art, but the art of overlooking | 4UAL" ,UJ rwl Lauu* x\ duuu;U &ke time to write down the original progress and outcome of a lew of our troubles, it would make us so ashamed >f the fuss we make over them, that we should be clad to drop such things, and bury them at once in eternal forgetfuliees. Life is too short to be worn out ;n petty worries, fretting?, hatred and vexation. A Professor or Respiration. A poorly clad, eccentric-looking man, aamed Goblard, was charged the other Jay befoie one of the Paris police courts tvitn begzarv. The magistrate asxed j what w:is his profession, and the prisoner replied that he wa3 a professor of res prution. The magistrate told him that Lie was charged with beggary. Goblard pleaded not guiltv, ana asked to be allowed to say a word in his defense. The j request was ?ranted. He then stated i lL-^ 4.1. L. I. ? I 1 1 4.,. J t.!U tuat idguhii lie nau ueeu airesieu wuiiu tailing at the different houses in a street, I pet he did not make those calls for the j purpose of hegging, but merely to give j lessons. Sometimes the people gave | aim money and sent him away, but | Jiough lie took the money, yet he always j tffered his lessons in return. Amidst ouri laughter in. court, he proceeded to explain his method for curing and ; strengthening the respiratory organs tie said ihat before going to bed at nisht md on getting up in the morning the sufferer should hold up hi3 hands beiind his back, and inflate the chest j | igain and again for ten orlifieen minues : it a time, and indeed, if the patient had ' my spare time during the <!ay tiie operaion be repealed. Notwithstand- 1 ng eloquent defense th<i court found 1 )oor Goblard tuilty, and the professor { ^as scut to prison for fifteen days. A Hint tn Advertieorc. A millionaire, who lias made every foliar of liis fortune by advertising j offers, on retiring from business, this bit . >f udvice gratis to those he leaves strug- < riing Ireland, while he departs for Europe to et joy life: The fault of the ?dinaiy advertiser is thia, lie goes in , or a spurt, and while the tit is on him :iewill pay money to any journal he may fall across. By-und-bye the bills iome in; the advertiser finds lie lias spent three times a-? many dollars as he tneant to; and as there are no replies to : iiis advertising, he thinks the specialty ! !:e h?.s been trying to introduce has ' fallen llat on the public taste, or business ' Li-is become dull, and he fancies buyers ' ire few and little likely to fav atten- ! ion to his announcements, lie stops 1 short accordingly, and loses nearly all 1 ,!ie benefit of his previous expenditure rhe success reaped by those whose ad- 1 rert;sements appear every vear should each men of business li.st to be carelul ' a the selection of the medium they ] iboose, and next when satisfied on this >oint, to persevere,disregarding apparent J ailure, and mv^r retrenching expendi- j ure when business is dull, as that is : he time when advertising is most ntces- ! arv. ] I always supposed that the news- s iapers during the late civil war d-v I urved precedence for their sensational j lewspHpcr headings, until I met with 1 he following in the New York Gazette i nil Weekly Mercury, published at New fork Ooiober 20, 1777, by Mugh i Jair.e: * Glorious news from the.south- t vard?Washington knocked up?The 1 >'e>odiest battle in America? 6,000 of his i uen gone?100 wagons to carry the i vounded?Gen- Howe is at present in i Jertnantown?Washington,thirty miles t >ack, in a shattered condition?Their t itcute st frigate taken and one deserted? f rbey are tired?and talk of iini?hing the ' ::?mpa;gn." The tory typo must have j w en exhausted at this effort to glorify r Jermantown, for when the news reached " be city ot the British army to the i lorthward having been burgoyned he s ould not set up one line of cans to catch t he e\pa of his subscribers.?Mayastine oj c imerican EUtory. j BEAKS AND HORNETS. An Old IIunter'H Description of Nome of Their Peculiarities. Tnere are still extensive forests of beech and oak in the counties of Pike, Wot* no ottH Mr?>irAn ni PnriMorlTTonin and in the adjacent counties of Sullivan and Delaware, in New York, with vast areas of outlying swamp land of iaurcl, hem;ock and tamarack. These are nearly within hearing distance of the Erie railway; but even at this late day the black bear makes in them his favorite hreedingand feeding haunts, almost as freely and in nearly as large numbers as it did before civilization had made any advance in the region. From an old hear hunter of Pike county it was learned that there are now more signs ol bears thr.n have been known for years. Along the edges of the great swarup3 there is a border of soft, black mud. These swamps are, many of them, almost inaccessible to man, and the bears make them their j piaces ot refuge. If bears are plenty, the mud along the edges, at this time of year, will be broken up, as if cows had been walking and stamping in it. At intervals, also, the mud will be hollowed 1. : ? ?t /->*-? frlrvn cr f/orr* UUllIlSptKa Vlplt Ul IVH iwvu or thrco icet wide, and two feet deep. If great patches of, i scrub oaks are iound crushed to t'10 ground, that is a certain indication that bears have been " working" there. They have been out feeding on the acorns. They rise upon their haunches among the scrub, and with their forepaws bent the hushes violently. Bears sire very fond of crickets, slugs and!bugs of all kinds, and they know that their favorite insects make their homes in the fall unden stones on the ground. Consequently, they seiect spots where the ground is covered with stones and turn them np to get at the bugs.' Yellcw jacket ana 1-tnf nnofa r r vofllfll* tliflir UUi UWVI UCOLO) Ol laiuvi VUV14 vvutvu.,, are favorite morsels with the black bear. If a bear sees a yellow jacket or a hornet working in the woods, he acts like a crazy thins; until he finds the hole the one enters, or the tree or rock to which the nest of the ether is fastened. He prances and dances around through the woods, licking his chops and whining and growling, until his unerring scent leads him to the object ot his search. Then he gets right down to business. Yellow jackets build their nests in. the ground. When the bear finds one, it ta&es but a few swoops of his forepaws to turn it wrong side out. The bees swarm out in clouds, and cover the bear until lie looks as if painted yellow. He pays no attention to their pttaeks, although an assault of yellow jackets on almost any other animal would soon result in d< ath. The bear merely shuts his eyes and grins as he scoops the honey out with his paws and licks them off until the nest is despoiled of every trace of its sweets. The old hunter declared that he shot a big bear one."! in Pinchot swamp, over in the Il'gh Knob region. He kiiled it, but when he went in to drag the carcass out he found that the bear had been robbing a yellow jacket's nest, and it was still covered with the tiery little insects. " If that b'ar had nnH lllH slmwprf "ttu nuuuuvu \ UIJ, MMt* *??v. tight, I'd a waltzed r?ght into it without any delay. But when one o' them cus^ sed little hot-tailed varmints of a yaller jacket come a-divin' at me, I didn't want none o' him, and I cut and run. I wasn't afeered o' no woonded b'ar, but lhat yaller bee scared me out. I didn't dare to go arter that b'ar till next day " Hornets build their nests high up in the branches of trees, or fasten them to rocks out of the reach of harm. But, cunning as these insects are, they are no match for the bear. A bear discovers a hornet's nest far out on a limb too small to b?ar his weight, or high up on the breast of a rock. If the iormer, ae climbs the tree, breaks off the longest branch he can get, and, holding it in his Jorepaws, thrashes the nest unni 11 urupa i<j luu ^uuuu, uumttimes he dances or stamps on the limb until the nest is shaken off. If the nest is on a rock, the be ir goes up to the top of the ledge above it. Then hegaihers large st ncs and pieces of wood and rolls them down the side of t he rock until one striKes the nest and sends it tumbling to the ground below. The hornets know what has caused their ruin, and notoneof them deserts the fallen nest, but ali seem to wait for tljp appearance of the bear, when they attack him at once. "A hornet sting,'' said the hunter, "is equal to a blow from a sledgo-hammer every time, an-i one hornet '11 knock a buil down . But I heir bite won't raise a lump as big as a buckshot on a b'ar, and the shaggy critter seems to think it's | heaps o' fun. He'll stand ud on his) hind lea's and sauare off with his fore- i paws at the hornets jest as if he was boxin' with somebody, only lie's careful to keep his (yes sliet. Then he'll lay dov n and roll all over the re3t, as if he wanted to show the hornets how lie didn't care no more for 'em than as if they was gnats. Once I see a big she b'ar, wh:ch had knocked a hornet's nest as big as a peck measure otf'n a tree, take it under her arm ami walk off with it as cool as if it was one *o her cubs." The Consumption or Paper. "IfLiebig, in his day, gauged the civilization of a country by the quantity of soap consumed, we are more fully justified, in cur age, in using paper as a measure of culture. This is most plainly demonstrated by the total production ol each separate country, and the consumption of paper per head of its pomil?;tion. The United States stands first on the list, producing 460,OOO (1(10 nnnnHs n.nd imnnrtinL' besides about 4,000,000 more: next follow Germany with 452,000,000, England with 402,000,000, France with 2<J6,000,000, Austria with 216.000,000, Italy with 112 000,000, Russia with 72 COO,000, Spain with 68,000.000, little Belgium with 54,000,000, Switzerland with 32,000,000, Sweden with 30,000,000, the Netherlands and Portugal each with 16,000,000. Denmark with 10,000,000 pounds.? Greece, Roumania and Turkey manufacture almost no paper, and import together about 26,000,000. Asia, Africa, Australia, Brazil with South i America, Mexico, Central America and Canada, together produce only 26,000,000 pounds, but import 48,000,000 besides. Consequently, the total quantity of paper manufactured by the European process is 2,280.000 000 pounds, which is j u>ed by only 364 009,000 of souls of a \ total population of 1,423,000,000. The j remaining two-thirds of humanity ! either use no paper or use paper made in Asiatic fashion. As regards the consumption of paper per 'icad of population F,n*rl?ind Rtid the United States art r>n the same leve'. each country using twelve pounds for e.-uh inhabitant. In Germany the proportion is ten and a lia.lt pounds per head, in Switzerland ten, France and Belgium eight, the Netherlands six, Austria five and onethird, in Italy, Portugal and Sweden, respectively, four pounds per head. The :otal value of the 2.280,000,000 pounds af paperproduced may be rouchly estimated at from S 150,000 000 to $200,000,>00. Half of tLiat sura is expended for printing paper.?London Printing Trade Journal. Philosophy of the Cradle. The mother that rocks and sing3 her i 2hild to sleep is unconsciously illustrat- 1 ing a scientific principle. The heart and 1 the sjstem of circulation are popularly : thought never to rr?t. But heience ' 3hows that under usual and lair condi- ' Lions their rest is ptrpetual. In other 1 svords by their rhythmic < r measured ! motion in health, the organs of (circulation rest between each i uls< ?that is to , say, eight hours out of 11itwenty-four,as I lias been calculated by computing the i pauses between the heating oi the puis-.! riie monotonous rhythm of a simple cradle sone, and the gentle motion of the rocking chair or cruile, are in harmony with the rhythm of the heart, and the brain being disengaged, sleep follows. The brain may be said to be the part of the animal < conomy which sleeps entirely. During healthy sleep the brain is to a great degrtc bloodless, and this is shown indire tly by the greater circulation of ttie blood in the skin and extremities during sleep. Healthy digestion, after a fairly full but not excessive meal, promotes sleep by ;he calling off ot the blood of the brain ;o the stomach. A curious but familiar llustration of Ihe accord between the ieart's movements and external rneaslred sounds or motion is shown when he nurse stops "humming" and the roublesome baby wake3 straight up md provokingly opens its s>ta ins eyes. I'he "concert" is interrupted, und the ileepy accord A the heart with Ihesucsessive cadences of the lullaby is broken. Hiis is why the cessation of usual souncs viU wake an aduit sleeper. It is even itaied that soldiers who have fallen isletp during a cmt^aade have awakined when the noi^t. addon cqjvsed.? Ptofadilphia. Lei'i'tr. NEWS EPITOME. Eastern and Middle States. Over 1.000 boats are blocked tip by t'le foe on the Eric and Champlain canals. On the 1 Erie canal alone 900 bouts, '500 ot them loaded with grain, aro ice-bound. The Lehigh and Schuylkill coal companies j have decilcd to make no ohi.nge in prices during Deeom!>er. One workman was killed and three otheis j were injured by a falling iprdor which was - ? .?:? ?v,? i being put into position on uiu vamiudiuii inij elevated railroad in Now York. Francis Murphy, the well-known temperance lecturer recently visited Pittsbuig, tho scene ot his early labors in the temperanco cause and was received with great enthusiasm. A New York theatrical manager having an- ' nounced that he would prodace tho " Passion Ploy," or story of (JuristVi crucifixion, tho pre-s and pulpit raised a storm ot indignation J against what whs pretty generally termed a ! sacrilege; and the manager has been compelled ' by the force ol public opinion to announce that : ho would not produce the play. Lucius Ilotchki-s, a retired banker ot New \ Haven, Conn., died suddenly tho othor morning. A tew minutes betore his death his wile, ' who badftono in to see him, on being informed that ho was dying, lell dead on the bed on 1 which he was lying. lie was seventy-eight 1 years of ago, and his wito was seventy-two. 1 The ice-hound bouts in tho New York canals , have been released to a great extent by the , recent thawing weather. The New York polics have begun a ornsade ' acainsl the many Gambling houses which flour- ' ish in tho metropolis. A party ol. thirty-one socialists, consisting ! of laborers, printer and newspaper men, have ' arrived in New York from Hamburg, whence 1 they had been banished by the German government. Their baggage was conveyed through the streets in a wagon with a red flag flying over it. 1 The following wore tho earnings of the New Jforfe canals (or the last live years: In 1876, ?1,340,004; 1877, 8880,890; 1878, $993,348; 1879, $941,573.97; 1880, ?1,155,001.68. Four more bodies?the last ol the twenty victims oi tho disaster at the Jersey City end ol the Hudson river tunnel?have been recovered. Congressman Evarts W. Farr, member of the present and the next House of Representatives, died at his homo in Littleton, N. H., a tew days since, aged forty years. Western and Southern States. Tho ofllcinl vnte ot Illinois is as follows: Garfield, 318,032; Hancock, 277,635; Weaver, 26,053. A fresh invasion ol the Indian Territory by whito settlers has begun. Twenty* one intruders have been arrested in tho Oklahoma country, and troops have been sent from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to establish a camp in tho district. At a wedding reception in Col Dail, Tenn., .1 I arsenic was u-c i oy unsitiKciui ouun. j.nD..vjr- . seven guests were poisono'', of whom six (lied and three more were reported in a dying condition. 1 The Alabama lpgisia'ii'O has unanimously elcctod James L. Pugti United States Senator. ' Chicago is afflicted by ;ui epidemic Ot diph- 1 tlieria, whole lamilie3 in fotno cases being stricken down with tho terrible disease. An encounter in the Indian Territory letween cow-boys and fifteen Indians resulted in the killing of seven persons. Marcus do Lalayette Hawley was hanged nl ' Salem, Va., lor the murder of Zacitariab Hayes in June, 1879. The minister read a ] paper containing Hawley's dying words to the j efl'ect that ho shot Hayos under the belief that ; if he did not do no he would himself be shot. Hawley was mcrried in prison on the day 1 previous to his execution to a woman who ha i borne him two children. j Demetrio Domingues, aged 17, was hanged ] at l'henix, Arizona, lor committing murder. This is tho first legal hanging in the Territory, 1 though lour men have been lynched and eleven others have suddenly disappeared and are supposed to have been hanged. Sixty laborers were buried in a snow slide ' on an extension of tho Denver and 11 o Grande ' A hunt- 11a v thpu nnlinnrl ' the pine trees trembling, and in ar. instant a | ! elide catuo with a loud roar, tearing up the j track lor a distarce of a quarter of a mile and burying sixty men. Jobn Dine was killed, ninieen men weie badly injured find eleven ' others slightly hurt. A boiler explosion in a fonndry at: St. Char- ' lotto, Rlich., killed George Moore, his son and 1 another man, eeverely scalded lour moro men, and entirely demolished the building. L% utenant-Governor-elect George B. Rcb- ' inson, of Colorado, was shot and probably fatally wounded during a disturbance with some miners about the possession ot a mine located near Leadville. Two deaths at a very old ago are reportedone from Logan^part, Ind., where Mrs. Mary Dillon, succumbed at the age ot 112 years, and .'ho other lrom Bronson, Ohio, where Mrs. Agnes Brown, a colored woman, died at the extraordinary age ot 120 years. A flro at, West Point, Va., destroyed the wharves ot the Richmond, York River and 1 UIlOaaptllKO XVlliruu'i uuiufiaiiy, mm mo wiipany's steamer Shirley and the telegraph an.! freight ofllcea. Tho loss is estimated at S250,- 1 000. A railroad train broke in half near Macon, Ga., and was run into twice by freight trains 1 within halt' an hour. Two engineers were killed and several other poisons badly injured. A military scout has been sent to Sitting Bull's camp in British America to convey to ' him our government's last terms of peace, \ which are, substantially: Submission to the ' government authorities; voluntary surrender 1 ol his arms and ponies?the latter to Le sold > and the protseds irve9ted in cattle for the ( benefit ol the Indians; the Indians themselves 1 to go in the future to whichever of the Sioux ' agencies the government may assign them. ? From Washington. ' Treasurer Gilfillan's annual report, to Secretary Sherman shows an increase in tho cus- * toms, internal revenue aud sales of public . lands ol ?59 881,505.78, and a docrease ia >i those from miscellaneous sources ol only } CM 1 O 07O Thn /vrnnn/lifntAQ ohooj nn in. . crease of ?095,074.25 in the aggregate, as com- l pared with the previous year, caused by an j increase ol ?22.395,C40.0G in the payments on account of the interior department, but show adicreaso ol ?21,699,905.81 in the expendi tureB lor interest and premium on tho public debt, on civil and miscellaneous accounts, and 1 lor the war and navy departments. The amount of public money on doposit June 30, j 1879, was ?417,223 787 08. The receipts lrom all sources during tho year were ?194.587,- V 241.30, and tho dralts paid ?708,190 9J0.7G j Fifty-eight national banks were organized I during the year; five (ailed, aud twenty-one [ wont into voluntary bankruptcy. Tho report I embodies a statement ot tho liabilities and j assets ol the treasury lor tho years 1877, 1878, 1879 and 1880, from which it appears tliat the ' Hold and silver coin and bullion ranged from { ?114,404 982.79 in 1877, to ?103.909 444.70 in i 1878, to ?222 807,308,01 in 1879, and <o ?214,- ' 303 15 38 in 1880. The decrease ol ?S,o00,- j 100 between 1879 and 1880 is represented by a reduction in ttie gold balance ol ?31,000,000 and an increase in the silver coin an bullion on hand. The total coinage ol standard silver dollars under tho act ol February 28, 1878. has been ?72,847,750. Ol this amount ?47,588,- f li 0 are in the treasury and in tho mints, and ?25,259 044, being moro than 34? per cent, ol j the coinage, are in circulation. The amount in circulation November 1, 1878, was ?4 922,023. or 26 9-10 per cont. ol 318.282,500 coined. Tho censofl bureau is gathering irppntftut 8'atiatics on the fishery interests ol tho United 2 States. The incomplete returns made to tho y bureau of statistics showed that in tho year * ending Juno 30,1879 tho value ot the products c taken by American vessels and fishermen and J] bi ought into tho United States waa nbaut , S6 soo.foo Postmaster-General Maynard, in his annual report, recommends that pensions bo paid to railway postal employees who may bo dis- ^ ablod by accident?, or to thoir families in case of death; tho subsidizing of steamship l;nes carry ng Mexican and South American mails; a reduction to five cents of the fee charged for money orders not exceeding #5, and an extension ol tho limit ol orders from ?50 to $100. v Thoio has bo^n a largo increase in loieign ,( mnn/itf rtf.1oi.ti nnH Mr Mnr.nnr.1 Ja of tho 'I opinion tt.ut hard times in Europo have caused a a dralt on emigrants in America. Mr. Maynard asks lor legislative authority to adopt * regulations providing lor the delivery by mail f to tue addresses at tho offices ol destination in '! tho United States subject to payment oi cus- v< torns duties ot any packet ot dutiable mail P mutter received in the mails from lorei^n il1 countries, and recommend' the establishment c< o$ a "postal savings." system and postal teio- 81 Graphs. Fically bo thinks that postmasters ';l should bo protected against levy on their privatu property under judgment lor acts done in g' heir ofUcial capacity, aud asks lor a new de- li purtmontal building. Tho comptroller of the curretcy in his an- t> nual report says that the amount ol' nat oual " bonk and legal tender notes outstanding on tc November 1, 1880, was SGS8.744.467, of hi which the bank notos amounted to ?342.063 - rt 451, and tdo legal tonders to ?340,631,016. hi The aggregate amount ol both kin '.s ol not- s ei in 1879 was ?681 815,52). aud in 1878, ?666,- pi 333,137. Three national b.inks have laded w during tho year. Tho dirtctorsol tho mint cc estimate that from tho clo-o ol the fiscal year m to Novemher 1 there has been addeltotho coin ?16 494 528 ol gold, and $9,630,940 ol v silver, making the stock ot coin in the country fc at the latter date $<327)631, 179, cons sting ol vi ?375,453,219 of goid coin and ?152 227,960 ol cl silver coin. The returns received from the P< State authorities embrace 630 Slate banks and trust oompanie3 and G29 savings bunks. From ai these, returns it appears that, tho resources ol i" the 658 State bauks amount to ?481,771,150 s< The capital stock amounts to ?109.318,451, 8l and the deposits to $.293,759,619. Tho 629 hi livings bunks have resources amounting to iv 881.677,350, and deposits amounting to?819,- f 106,973. The increaso in the net deposits ol ('i the national banks during tho year was ?187,- w 335,075; ol the savings banks <<34,508,295; ol the private bauker.s, ?42 949 684; and ol the It Stale banks and tru -t companies, ?61 713,761, making a total increaso in the bank deposits u' oi tho country oft ?326 356.815. The total HS number ot national hanks, S'.ato banks, sav- t,|J ings banks,*piivato bankers, eto , in the coun- ai try on June 11, 1880, was C 532, with a total 118 banking capital ol ?6)0,019,39), and total A. deposits of $2,219,833,290* to * . '; * :; . From flRurcB prepared in the oensua b iroan t apj ears that 01 tho ?698.381,750 ol roistered I ami <IJ per cent, bonds ia.iueu, $270 773 950 w ire owned by individual mains, $72,672,800 by ndividu.il lemalea, $166 937 300 by State nuka ond truat oonvwnies. $175,988,650 by mtiomU banks and $12,019,000 abroad. Tho National Grange, lor some daya in tl icasion. at Washington, has adjourned alter d< tedding to hold the noxt annual meeting in ho national capital in November, 1S8L The Preaident hail issued a proclamation aj leclaring that wheroaa aatialactory evidence ma been giv?n by tho Emperor of China that u. io discriminating duties ot tonuage or im- 2". iost8 s.re imposed in the porta ot that nation . jpon American vesisols, theretore tho dis- ie uiminating dutie? of tonnage and impost ^ igainst Chinese vessols are discontinued. St While the estimates ot internal rovenie re- n ;eipt s l'or the last fiscal year wore only :J116,- fl )00,000. they actually reached S123,982,')U0. r( Chid English, ot tae bureau ot recruiting in xi] .he navy department, reports that there w<>re h J,322 men and boy? in the naval service on jj Tune 30, 1880. Tho enlistments durirg the ( ear to repiaco men discharged trom service fa were 6,272. At the close ol the fiscal year j Lhtire were 1,168 boys in the service, 51C ot whom -were on training ships and 652 on * jruiMiig ships. The annual report ot the navy depattment v shows that tho United States navy is uoi.de up tl is lollowe: In commission?Steamers, 29; sailiagships, 4, monitors, 8; torpedo boits, 2; S( total, 43. In ordinary?Steamers, 18; railing fc vessels, 8; moniiore, 7. Receiving ships? g( Steamers, 3; sailing ships. 3; monitor, 1. Storenhips?Steamer, 1, sailing ships, X On ? vU_ R. antlinty ohin 1- V llliU CIIAJV/RO"- WIVUUtVitBf V | U M. 2' J A I monitors, 4; ironclads, 3. Repairing?Jlteamers, 9. At the Naval acailemy?Sailing ships, 3; monitor, 1. Public marine school?Sailing ^ ship, I. Tugs of all kinds at yards arid sta- " { tions, 25. Total number oi vessels, 13S. ti Chief Brooks, of the secret service, nays in 0 bis annual report that daring the year his department made 403 arrests, of which 20 J were p for dealing in counterfeit money. Theamount tl of couutetleit money captur. d wa^ ??7,788. ft Among the counterfeits discovered during the ^ year were a So note on the National State ^ bank of Troy; a $10 note on the United States treasury, issue of 1875; a $100 note on the Pittsburg National Bank of Commerce; a ?5 C1 note on the Montpelier National bank; i $100 note on the National Exchange bank ol Balti- b moro; a $100 United States txeasury note; a $1,000 Unit d States bond. a Superintendent of the Census Walker re- tl ports that all but soven of the 31,265 enumer- u ators have reported, and that the work ia sub- q stantially complete. v a unmmnrv nf t he onorations of the Datent ~ offlco during the last fiscal year shows that in " the twelve monihs ended June 30, 1880, the . office received 20,990 applications for patents fj ior inventions, and granted 12,584, besides 496 " " reissues " and 569 patents lor designs, l'he a receipts of the patent office trom lees of various a kinds amounted to $730,547, and the total ex- 13 ppn9cs for salaries and all other objects were Si .$538,926, showinc a net revonue to tl e gov- o imminent of ?191.621. C t< Foreign News. ^ The Tnrks and Albanians have been fighting c before Dulcigno, the former losing 3 )0 and J the latter 400 men. T The bodies of throe men frozen to death ii were seen a lew days ago floating do'vn the S St. Lawrence river on blooke ol ioj, near c Montreal. ll It is announced that Mia. Langtry, the cele- c brated English beauty, is coming to America. 6 Tho Duke ol Medina, brother-in-law af Don ^ Car!o?, the claimant of tho Spanish .hrono, , i bas been peremptorily ordered to leave Spain. There ia a general revolt in Albania against s' the Turks. r A Styi ian soda water manufacturer writes to Ihe Vienna (Austria) JVcw Free Press that he p is ioady to enter into a competition with Dr. c ranner with beer against water. Ho asserts that he can last on beer lorty-four daye. 91 A rowing match on tho Thames between S| Tnckett, tho Australian, and Wallace lioss, of Canada, resulted in an easy victory :or tho lormer; but as a loul occurred, lor whicli neither man was to blame, the reteree lecided [hat the race must be rowed over agv.in. A match has also been arranged between Han- ? lan, the ohampion, and Laycock, ot Australia, ? to tako place within a lew weeks. The people ol St. Paul's Bay, Canadn, have T Seen shaken up by an earLl quake. Si At an immense land meeting held the other a lay in L'uighrea, Ireland, many agitators \ carried nak- (1 flwoKK ? A dispatch from Paris s*ys the promotion ol v M. Do Loffleps' Panama canal scheme boa Lcen resumed with extraordinary vigor. A d:S| utcii dated Owen Sound, Ontario, say a ? that the propeller Simcoe, Iroin Chicago, laden wil h 19,000 bushels ol corn and general freight, " foundered ofT Providence bay during a snow & atoim, and lhatot tho seventeen peisons ou 8! board only five succeeded in reaching land 8< The English admiralty have reotivsd a tel- n egram confirming tho report of the murder of g| the commander and six of tho crew of the n Btilish schooner Sandfly at the Solomon n islands, in the South Pacific. Tho party was ^ attacked wh'le some ol the men were bathing. A party from tho schooner, under a i ub-lieutenant, landed, recovered the bodies and de- a Btroyed the village, losing ono seam in, who ?j was killed; another was wounded. Tnecom- 9' modore at the South Pacific station vrill send o another man-of-war to the islands. V Government Estimates. ft Thebook ot estimates. containing the amount P, 3t the appropriations required t< r the public ervice during the fiscal year ending J une 30, a 1882, has just been completed. The total luiount estimated lor legislative expenses ia D ;>3 038,643 2G. The amount appr >pria'cd ei iurrag the fiscal year ending June ?0, 1381, y was ?2 971,897 02. The estimites lor the st ixecutive proper are ?98,064, against $97,464 s! ippropriated last year. The tollowing are the tl jstimates lor the several executive depart- qmints during the fiscal year ending Juno 30. C] 1882 and'he appropriations lor tue fiscal year u mding June 30, 1881: Departments. 1RSJ. 1881. i Department nf Mute 9 103,410 00 $ 159,040 Preasury Uepartmeut <>,356.364 23 8,7l6,2i0 iVar Department ],2.'>7,'.>S<.'00 l,224,t<60 <uvy Department 165,420 00 173,160 department tif ttie Interior 2,325,2?4 00 2,065,9.^4 ?os cilice Department <>117,792 00 Col,4?0 Department of Agriculture 334,720 00 2-14,300 to department of Justice 137,420 00 125,180 . The total umount estimated lor all the ex- .. icutive departments is ?14,536,404 23. The j l[>|>rU|iriUUUU3 UlUUC 1U1 uio. um/i-ji?iiimiuw a 1881 amounted to ?>13,408,G08 50. If The miscellaneous estimates ior 1882, com- ti >ared with the appropriation ior 1881, are as je ollows: oi ruJIcial $ I 399.300 0" $ 359,3-10 00 m 'orelgn intercourse i,!W7,o35oo l.irj.suco u n Hilary establishment 8o,ani,7!w 04 27,t32,53i 28 ,J (aval estab.lstuent 15,o*J2.331 nl li.2iil.5til 41 1c nillun affairs 4,8,Vi,^W S<i 4,535.5;M76 l, 'elisions Av.UUU.UU0 Utt 32,lu4 two 00 *t 'ulillc woiks 15.059,5356S 13,7Mi,597 70 fo ,'ostal service 3,ti30.757 'JO 3,8&S,120 00 a : 'ub.lc printing, paper, bind- 1,1 lug ami lithographing 2,003,15641 1,CO ,000 00 ei 'avnient Judges-t.of 01'his 4oo,noouo is5,?i3 54 Jre-Savlng stations Gi9,9uuuu 657,#CU 00 81 {evcuue-cuiier service 1,100,000 00. 85U.U00UU m Cngraving ami printing 42T>,uOOOO 375.UUUU0 .nihthouse istaollsbments 2,0911,000 uo 2019.100 00 .oast utnl Geodetic survey 6a0,90UUU 6il,<00 00 a ilalntenance of llsh-cntching vessels, construction of W tUmlaM weights ami mea- irj sures, suppressing counterfeit.ng at:'l other crimes, CC I "MurnMUiiamu objects uuiler Treasury Department 1,493.2*) 00 1,291,370 00 ? >lmal (service 45o,oojoo 4jo,ouuuo ju liseePnnco'js objects under War Department 2,43::,2:15 00 2,271,181 00 "S liseeiUiu-uus objects "lU'ler In ermr Department 2,217,175 00 1,480,100 00 j! liscelluiicus objects uniltr Department uf Justice 3,205,000 01) 2,850,000 00 of The gran 1 totals of the items given in the rc bovo tables are: Estimates tor 1882, ?298,- ag !02,722 28; appropriations lor 18111, ?278,097,- 0r 164 39. Iho appropriation? lor 1881 wore, aj owever, increase l by the deficiency bills to > 298,055,097 12. Tho estimated amount reluired for postal service fur 1882 is ?42,475,. 32. The estimated am-.unt which will be irovided by tho department from its own evenue acciuing lrom postages and other oiuces is ?38,845,174 10, leaving a deficiency to 0 bo provided lor out of tho general treasury n; 1 ?3,630,767 90. _ w: The Aprrlcnltnral Deparlment. pi Commissioner Le Due, in his annual report, /ill strongly recommend that a now building W( >rtho department of agriculture be erecto .. mi 'ho pinna of the proposed structure have (j(. lready bocn finished. . Commissioner Le Dnc will o.^poso the ffoits ol ttook raisers and cattle dealers to f,. et an appropriation from Congress lor thn *-/1 ivestigation ol diseases ol ntninals. This ork, the commissioner says, has been in rogress under the auspices ol his department nd nearly finished, and all that the proposed i>mml sion could do would ba to go over the ime ground u^ain. A bill is now pending [ fore trio Senate committeo on agriculture i0( oibo'lying the remedial suggestions ol the antlemon who have conducted the investiga- ^ on. .i Commissioner Le Due says the investigaons ol the agents ol the department have . suited in the discovery ol ihe present terrijjial lim'td of the plcuro-pneumonia, and pri ivo practically proved that the diseaso is not. ev< iintdiablo. It is slowly extending South, Yo aing communicated from farm to (arm. Its radication, ho believes, can only bo uccomlished by killing all diseased animals and all ho have been exposed to the dist ase. A R' jmparativdy small sum will be aulQciout to pf :complish i his now. 'il: Among the later remilta ol tho work of the Qe jterinary Burgeons ol the department aro tho I'Cl llowing: Dr. D. E. Salmon has made some on iluable discoveries in regard to chicken lolera. Prolessor James Law has been ex- r siimenting to see ii a diluted preparation ol a 10 virus oi tlio swine plague will not give the 0n iminl a slight attack ol tiio diseaso, rosnlting jjj i tliu exemption ol tho animal Irom tho more fe(! jrious attiick. He has met with only partial lccess. I)r. H. J. Delmers, on tho othor ind, has been experimenting with prevent- ? es, and believes ho has m?t with tuccoss. hero is no remedy lor tho disease, but tho Iscovery ol a preventive, il it i i effective, g ill save many millions annually. jn A now disease has also been discovered. ;.f .3 presence was not suspected un il it was 3iicod that tho English government " schedled " American cattle and sneep. It is known cu i Apttious tovor, or tho loot and mouth dis- ,I1( ise. Stioep, cattle, hogs, hor>es and poultry p e all liable to the attacks ol this disease, and ' i long as it exists animals shipped from " merican ports are liable to be at a disarivan- La ?ci in theEuropean market*, gal ABOUT MODELS. rhere They Come From and How They \rr> Paid?An Occupation Full ol Danger to Health. "Please, sir, Mr. Is engaged." Baid le servant as a visitor knocked at the aor of a sculptor's studio. What is he doing?" "I think he has a model with him, i.? Ju3t then the sculptor appeared, his ands covered with clay. " I'm all irough," he said, "come in." A door ading to another room closed quickly j the visitor entered the studio. Busts, atuettes. torsos and medallions were inged about on shelves and on the oor. On a stand in the middle, of the >om was a nude female figure, half lodeled in clay. The sculptor taking is ebauchoir, a sharp pointed iror istrument, began daintly trimming and noothing the clay limbs ot the statute, equently stepping back to note the feet and to study the reflection in s lass hung opposite. A faint rustline as f a woman's drapery caused th< isitor's eyes to turn interrogatively t( le closed door. "Yes, that's the model," said the mlptor. " She ha3 just finished posinf >r two hours, and is getting ready te 0." " How do you find models," asked th( i3itor. "Well, this one I beard of fron aother artist. There's no systematizec ray of getting them, but one hears o: lem in different studios. Then some mes girls come and offer to pose ant ne occasionally runs across men am romen himself wtioare adapted to th< nrpose and willing to earn money ir lis way. There are, perhaps, no pro!33ional models here, but in Pari! rhole families are brought up to th< usiness, which is followed as a regula: ailing. We depend on anything w< in find that is suitable." " I suppose it is not a very profitabl< usiness." "Models receive from fifty cents to$ K/miw nv*/1 fV*ziTT ooMAm r\ \Qfo mnn U iiUUl J auu VLIMJ OW1UVU y 'bw v? < ban three hours at a time; usuall; mch less. They are very often re uired to assume constrained attitudes rhich can only be maintained for a fev linutes without a rest. Then evei tanding naturally for an hour or tw< ecomes very wearisome. But this i tie least of their evils. There are prob bly few occupations more dangerou nd injurious to health than posing as i lodel. In the majority of cases the; ooner or later contract eolefs whici ften result fatally in consumption. O ourse we heat the studios to a higl smperaiure when models are present ut being without any clothing they ar ompletely exposed to any changes, an< ery slight chills aflect them seriously n Paris a model's rough has come to b lmost proverbial. Some of the saddes riAatitnfi unH anfforiticr ?ro 11 LVSllCS KJl UWtnuui JIM *. iub ^ ?. onnectioa with models suffering fron jng troubles begun in studios. The; ontinue to pose "until they become toi maciated to be available, and too feebl ) go to the studios, and then perhap ;iey die in the hospitals. Of cours< iany are not injured by the life, but in lances such as I have spoken of d< eally occur.'1 Just then the door opened and : lump, rosy-cheeked brunette appeared lad in street costume. " Come to-morrow at the same time,' lid the sculptor, and the model left ttu :udio. ' Yes, she looks well," said the sculp >r, " but she is an amatuer, and this i ew for her." "There mu3t be some curious inci ents connected with models?" sug natfl tl.n IU^ V10101/& " Well, there are some odd things 'here was a woman who posed for th Ludents at the Academy of Design wh lways wore a black velvet mask (Then she had finished and dressed sh lways concealed her face by a heav; eil, so that her identity was never as crtained. At la3t the curiosity of som f the students was excited, i'.nd the; :ied to follow her home one night. Sh iscovered that she was being followed nd ieluded them. The next day, in tead of coming to the academy, sh 3nt a note saying that on account o rL*at had happened the night befor lie would never come again, and sh ever did. At the Art League one of th lodels was always accomranied b; er husband. "SJnmnlimoa thnro oro o-mt-OTorrl Bl1.11 tions?for instance, if lady visitor ome while a. model is posing. Thei tie is hastily pushed off into a close r another room " Very tine specimens of muscular de elopment are occasionally fount mong men, though it very rarely liar ens that any one is found who is full: nd harmoniously developed. Then re plenty of interesting things tha light be told about models, in fact i ook might he writien of their experi aces, and I have only been able to gi/i ou a few suggestions." Then thi ;ulptor sprayed the classic face of hi! ;atue with water until little stream! ickled down the rounded form loistenlng the clay. The statue wai irefully wrapped in cloths, a huge tii ox placed over it, and the last re lainder of the model Disappeared.? revj York Tribute. IToan (ha f.lfa Pnro. Once upon a time an Arabian princes! us presented by her teacher, with ar rory casket, exquisitely wrought, witt le injunction not to open it until a yeai ad roiled round. Many were the specu ,tions as> to what it contained, and the me impatiently waited for when the weled key should disclose the mysterius contents. It came at last, and the laiden went away alone, and with treni' ling haste unlocked the treasure: and >! reposing on delicate satin linings, iy nothing but a shroud of rust; the irm of something beautiful could be iscerned, and the beauty had cone former. Teariul with disappointment, le did not at first see a slip of parchcnt containing these words: " Dear pupil: May you learn from this lesson for your life. This trinket, hen inclosed, had upon it only a sinespot of rust; by neglect it has beime the useless thing you now behold, oly a blot on its pure surrounding. So little stain on your character will, by attention and neglect, mar a bright and ;eful life, and in time will leave only le dark record of what might have 2en. If you now place within a jewe eold, and after many years seek the suit, you will find it still as sparkling ever. So with yourself; treasure up ily the pure, the good, and you will ways be an ornament to society, and a iurceof true pleasure to yourseif and >ur friends."?Religious Herald. . His Face Lengthened. On i he Atlantic train for Bradford yesrday, a very well-known joker Jrom II WrtlAIUa I#utvugu C* *,?**, hon lie suddenly stooped down and eked up something. " Who's lost half a dollar?" said he. At once a dozen persons in the ear ere searching their pockets, and one -favored man responded that half a >llar wa.3 missing from h's pocket, and Id out his hand. "Was it dated 1860?" said the Oil ty man. " Yes. I'm pretty sure it was.'' " And nicked on one side?" "Yes, that's mine." " You are sure?" " Certainly I am, so hand it over." lie handed it over, and when the man Dked at the button which had been it in his hand, his face lengthened so ddenly it almost drove his head rough his hat.?Oil City Derrick. "The liberty of the press must be J3erved "?doesn't refer to hugging ery nretty woman in the land.?New >rk Ncios. [Daily Chicago Times. ] Mr. George Barnes, of Bagna.l & irnes, South Water street, said that i wife had been a severe sufferer with urulgia for years and has tried many iiedies in vain. Sc. Jacobs Oil is the iy thing that brought her relief. I'he largest hog in the United States is Poland-China, four years old, lately exhibition at Junction City, Kansas, s length Is 7 feet; girth of neck, 64 t; girth ol chest, 7? feet; girth of iter, 8 feet; width across the hips, 30 :hes, and weight, 1,532 pounds. Humbugged Attain. I saw so much said u?out the metiis of Hoj ittera. and my wile, who was Hlwnyj doctor g :md never well, teased me so urgently it her some, I concluilod to he htirnbuucot* I'lin; and I am ilitd I did, for in Jess tha\ 'o months'use ol the hitlers my wile wa?, iredandsho has remained so lor eighteei onths since. 1 1 k? mch humbugging.?H , St. Paul- ?Pio'icrr Pres. rhe early bird catches the worm, ter in the day the leisurely sportsman ihers in the bird. "Are you a good viderP" asked the liveryman. "Iam," replied the cus' tomer, and just then the horse snorted, r stood on its hands, came d own and bucked, and the customer went on, from [ his hieh seat in the hay mow, "See , how easily I get off?"? Burlington Eawkcye. [Kalamazoo (Mich.) Daily Gazette.] Th is an nnnrecpdented success said Mr. Chas. S. D'Arcambal, the wel 1 known Burdick House druggist, when asked for his views in regard to the Sl. Jacobs Oil; it is highly extolled, and is giving general satisfaction. The Wheeling Leader's editor was Btanding on a bank ol the Ohio river when a girl came down, and, looking at ' a beautiful sunset, exclaimed: "My! ; but that looks like circus lemonade." The human voice in its sweetness and parity is delicionsly musical; with throat i affection and coughs it loses all attractions. ' Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup restores it when lailj ing throughcounhs, colds, etc. > It has been found necessary to order > 150 additional pens built at the Indianapolis stock-yards. There'are 600 now, > but they are daily overcrowded. ' The remedy that will cure the many diseases peculiar to women, is Warner s Sale s Kidney and Liver Cure.?Alotktrs' Magazine. The trotting horse St. Julienmadea i profit of $ 28,000 for his owner last sea1 son. [ GREAT HORSE MEDICEWE. 1 DR. TOBIAS' VI'.NT.TIA N' HOUSE LINIMENT In , pint bottled at HO i wits: :fc! years est ihMsheil. It U the 1 best In the worlil for the m:e of G'o!i<\ Ohl Sores, Sprains. > Bruises. Sore Throats, etc. TOBIAS' CONDITION POW"KHS are warrluteil to cure Distemper, Fever 1 Worms, It .ts; slve a tine mat: IneriMse the appetite ami _ rieansK the urinary o-^aiH. Certified to by C?l. I). McDanlel, owner of come of the fastest running horses 3 In the worlil, and l,00ti others. 25 cent*. Sohl Uy Jriii^.. gists. Depot?43 Murray Street, New York. i THE MARKETS. NEW YOBK a Beei Cattle?Med. Natives, live wt.. 09%@ 10.^ Galvea?Good to Prime Veals OS @ 08 Sheep.... 04 @ 05% 1 Limbs... 05 @ 00 04%? 05% Drease'jp..... 05 @ 07% ? Floor?Ex. BtSte, good to fancy.... 6 15 @ 6 60 Western, good to fancy 5 25 @ 8 50 Wheat-No. 2 Red 1 21%@1 31 % ' No. 1 White, 1 19^@ 1 19% ' Rye?State.... 1 06%@ 1 06% 1 Barley?Two-Rowed Stato 1 05 @ 1 05 rv Corn?Ungraded Western Mixed.... 57 @ 01 Southern Yellow 65%@ 62% 3 Oats?White Stato 46 @ 49^ Mixed Western.. 42 @ 44 Hay?Prime 1 00 @ 1 15 Straw?Long Rye. per cwt.......... 1 00 @106 * Hops?State, 1880 18 @ 25 7 Pork?Mo38 14 50 @15 00 1 Lard?City Bte&m 8 90 @ 8 90 r Petroleum?Crude ....... (">l.f307i, Re&ued 09% Batter?State Creamery 20 @ 1)4 2 Dairy 22 @ 28 Western Imitation Creamery 23 @ 28 ' Factory 13 @ 20 j Obeese?State Factory 10,}tf@ 13^ J Skima 05 @ 08 Western 10 @ 12# a Eggs?State anil Penn 30 @ 31 ? Potatoes?State, bbl Karly Koso.... 1 50 @ 200' t BUFFALO. 3 Steers Extra f5 10 @$5 50 3 Lamba Western.... 4 0J @ 4 75 Sbcep Western. 3 75 @4 15 F Hogs, Good to Cholw "Yorkers 4 45 -3 4 55 D Flour?City Ground,No. 1 Spring.. 5 0J <?5 75 P Wheat?>*o. 1 Hard Duluth 1 23 @125 Oorn?Ho. 2 Weatern 64 (4 51 9 Oats?State 37 @ 38 e Barley?Two-ro##fi State 76 @ 80 % v BOSTON. , Beef?Western Me8B 9 50 @10 00 5 Hogs?Live 05}?@ Oil Hogs?City Dressed 07 @ 07^ a Pork?Extra Prime per bbl ,...10 00 @1375 Floor?Wisconsin and Minn.Pat.... 7 25 @ 8 60 Corn?Mixed and STeUow 05 @ 66 Oats?Extra White SO @ 52 1 Bye?SUte 1 07 @ 1 07 n Wool?Washed Combing b Delaine.. 4<J @ 50 B Unwaahed. " " 35 @ 36 WATRBTOWN (MA8B ) CATTL* MXBKET i- Beef Oattle?lite weight 03#? 04M ? Sheep 03>?<? 04* s Lamba 03#? OS Hoc? 05V? 05^ PHILADELPHIA. . Flour?Penn. good *nd fancy S 50 ?5 75 Wheat?No. 2 Bed 1 20#? 1 20Jtf Bje?dtate 98 ?1 0i I. Corn?State Yellow 02 @ 62 p Oata?Mixed 40 @ 42 Butter?Ore&mcry Extra 34 @ 31 O Cheese?New York Full Cream 13 (? 13# ;. Petroleum?G rude 0G)$<aO7# Beflned O'j.m 1 l.-Vi;4Maf ; Deafness, Ear Diseases, Catarrh. Dr. C. K. SIIOEMAJtEU. tin- w.-ll-r-:nnvm expej rii'iicfil Aural Surgeon, Author, ami Writer on the above ' Dlwases, may be consulted by nui<l <>r personally at his 5 olUco.No. <110 Walnut (st.. Jti-uuiiipr. Pa. IIis i. smail book sent free. JIU lar^-c au>l complete work of pases oil Deafness, Dis.-ases of the Kar anil Tonsils. 1 and C atarrh, and their proper treatment; price 94 bv mall. NOTK.?No one will question Dr Shoemaker's stand2 ins or skill. e AGENTS I AGENTS I AGENTS! ' JOSIAH ALLEY'S WIFE i Sa NEW BOOK. "My Wayward Pardner." ACKN'TS 'VANTKI) In every Town. Dnn't miss It. but lend fur CI cular at once, ami secure territory. Address AM KlttCAN" PUl'.I.ISIUNi; CD- H.tnrionp. Coss. , CELLULOID | EYE-CLASSES. r Representing the choicest selected Tortoise. Shell and Amber. Tlio lightest, handsomest, and strongest known. So d by Opticians and , jowelers. Made by SPENCER OPTICAL M'FG. CO., 13 Maiden Lane, New York. SAPONIFIER ! Is the "Original " Coticenlralel I.ye and Reliable Family i Soup Maker. Directions a-ci iiijany each Can fur inakinz Hard. ?Joft and Toilet ho?p <i'll<-kly. It Is full weight and strength. As!; your grocer fur SIAI'UiVIFI Kit, act take no otlierr. PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila. ThU Claim-House Established Is)05. PENSIONS. New J^aw. Thousands of soldiers and heirs entitled Pensions date back to discharge ov death Time limileU , Address, with stamp, 1 GEOKGE E. P. 0. Drawer Washington, I>. C. DANIEL P. BEATTY'8 OKGANSI 14 STOPS, SUB BASS & OCT. COCPLEB ISIiONLY $65. Sent on Trial Warranted. Catalogue Free. Address DANIEL ! '. UEAXTY, Washington, X. J. m mTmfl Make Iiulfk sales and the best AfiFWTR -: tln>rs. Illustrated. PI.ms s ewjbody. S'i M. Also. >.inki Cudo-lt ies of tin IJibic," 81.7.J. Mailed on receipt i'f price. ! :. li. 'fitKat. Publisher. 757 Broadwav. X. 1. ASTHMA.?Karnhani's old Ksfal.lisli.-l A?tlhia Itemed v -iv in * in-tan! relief ill all I" - atld wbtri 1? Indorvd by i;i..ii- hi"t Mtn.-re". ir..tn lbs 'li?tre?lrt disease, is niaiiiifa. Iur, .| :in I - -Id b> ' 'h.iv Shilter lit III Original I>< } . !. Sparta. \Vi?c<>nsin. and h iiI Iter iui to any address oil receipt "f i Hie l><>il.-ir per li"\. /?\ ASTROLOGY 5 licctit-i Wanted for tin* llati l!>"iii?-st aii'l cheapest bibles fcusfttfrt ro"ls el cash premium YOUNG MEN pra<11 n t< ^iiarantrcd a paving situation. .\ Mr"?s V.M.K.NTINK lilitis.. Managers.Jaiir-Mtlir. W s. (?70 A WEEK. $12 a (I.it tit home r.Ki'y marie. Crut'y <*>'? Outtlt free. AUdr?a? Tituitt (; ., Augusta. Maine^ (CR tft Q9ft pef rtav at 1 0:: e. Sample* worth $A fr?? $9 10 3>&U AJOi-eii Si.ft, >n k Co.. 1'ortlauJ. Me. Sl'PKRB DHAWIN'tr ROOM STVI.KS. $200 to ; SCIIOOI.S, KTC'., $N | to $2(tO, an. 1 upward; I'Ol'I quarter, or $5 per month and upward. ILI.l'STItATEI THESE ORGANS ARE CERTAIN I MUCH HIGHER ' MASON & 154 Tremottt St., BOSTON i 46 Ea? Y" '* %*,*?* ' ?-r'r ">**" ./ " ?vys, *':W V- ... , sry-^'S ' -. -- ' ? ' 7? '* * -v* v ' , , A World of Good. One ol the moat popular medicines now before the American publis is Hop Bitters. Ton see it everywhere. People take it with good effect. It builds them up. It is not as pleasant to the taate as some other bitters as it is not a whisky drink. It is more like the old>lashioned boneset tea that has done a world of good. If you don't feel just right try Hop Bitten.?JVunda JVews. Buckshot is the chief article of manufacture j ust now at the Woolwich arsena], the British government havine ordered its use in all case3 of possible rioting where crowds are to be stampeded by police or military. Truat Thaw Who Have Tried. W. L. Hawkins, (huggiit, Princeton, N. J. The past year i9 the flrat oi many that i fiav^ been tree lrom Catarrh, which I attribnti to the use oi Ely's Cream Balm. I havj recommended it to many lriends, and every case it bus worked like a cbarm. Jare* D. Wolle, insurance agent. October 22. 1880 Messrs. Ely Bros., druggists, Owego, N. Y.. I have had Catarrh for a number oi years il its worst form. Belore I had used one bottlt ol yonr Cream Balna droppings into my tlnoa' had entirely ceased, pain and soreness in raj head was removed, as well as deatness. J have used ?. great many remedies, but nothini that equals yours. I1, also gives immediate reliet tor cold in the head. Mrs J. D. Hag& dorn. Union, N. Y., December 7, 1878. Price, 50 cents. Ely's Cream Btlm Co Owego, N. Y. Will mail it for 60 cents. Malarial levers can be prevented, also other miasmatic disease3, by occasionally using Dr. Sai\ford?? Liver Iiivigorutor, the old eat general Family Meiicire, which is recommended as a cure for all di-eases caused by a disordered liver. Eiglitv-pngo book sent lree. Address Dr. Sanlord, 1C2 Broadway, N. Y. Vegetine is nourishing and strengthening; purines me Diooa; regulates me ooweis; quiets the nervous ay stem; acts directly upon the secretions, and arouses the whole system to action. The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., Will send their Electro-Voltaic Belts to the afflicted upon 30 days' trial. See their advertisement in this paper headed, "On 30 Days' Tiia'." Get Lyon's Patent Heel Stiffentr* applied to those new boots belora you run them over. Vegetine. Kidney Complaints. DISEASE OF THE KIDNEYS. The symptoms of an acute attack of inflammation of the klduer# are as follows: Fever, pain In the small of the back, and thence shooting downward; numbnew of the thigh, vomiting, usually at first a deep red color of the urine, which becomes pale and colorless as the disease increases, and la discharged very often with pain and difficulty; costiveness and eorae d< gree of colic. Id chronic diseases of the kidneys the symptoms are pain in the back and limbs, dryness of the skin, frequent urination (especially at night), general dropsy, headache, dizziness of sight, indigestion, and palpitation of the heart, gradual loss of strength, paleness and pufflnesa of the face, cough, and shortness of breath. In diseases of the kidneys the VEOETnnc gives Immediate relief. It has never failed to cure when it is taken regularly and directions followed. In many cases it may tike several bottles, especially cases of long >-tnndlng. It acts directly upon the accretions, cleansing and strengthening, removing all obstructions and Impurities. A great many can testify to eases of long standing having been perfectly cured by the Veoitine, even after trying many of the known remedies which are said to be expressly for this dlbeate. Kidney Complaints. Cincinnati, 0., March 19,1877. H. B. Stevens : Dear Sir?i have used your Veqxtin* for some time, and can truthfully say it has been a great benefit to me; and to those suffering from disease of the kidneys I cheerfully recommend it. Respectfully, O. H. SMITH. Attested to by K, B. Ashfield, druggist, comer Eighth and Central avenues. Cincinnati, 0., April 19,1877. Mb. h. b. Stevens : I have Buffered several years with the kidnap complaint, and wad Induced to try Veoetink. I have taken several bottles of your preparation, and am conviuccd it in a Yaluablo remedy. It has done me more good than auy other medicine. I can heartily recommend it to all Buffering from kidney complaints. Yours respectfully, J. 8. McMILLEN, First bookkeeper for Htwhall, Gale & Co., Floor Merchants, No. 86 West Front St., Cincinnati, O. Veoetine has restored thousands to health who bad been long and painful sufferers. Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. I AGENTS mm n Best and Fastest Selling PICTORIAL BOOKS ill BIBLES ? Prirrft mJtirp<l33 |<t-r cent. Address NATIONAl A ?OMPA?lf, Philadelphia, Pa, ( lucaff. ill., or ht. Louis, Mo. NATRGNA "iP Is the best to the World. It Is abaolutely pure. It Is the best for Medicinal Purposes. It Is the best for linking and all Family Uses. Sold by all Druggists and Gracer?. .PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phlta. PETROLEUM ft AflTlT TlTfl JELLY GrarnlMeilal If U\Ul I 1 14 Silver Me-lal at Plillj-lclphla II fl Bl H || 1 |U ll at Parti Exposition. IWUIUWII Exposition. This wonderful substance Is acknowledged by physicians tlircupliout the wor'd to be the best remedy ?ltscovcred far the cure of Wounds. Hums, Kheumatlsm, Skin Diseases, Piles, Cat irrli. Chllb'ains, Ac. In order that every one may t v it. it Is put up In 15 and 35 cent bottles for houselmM u<e. Obtain it from your druggist, and you will tlnd It superior to anything yoo have ever used. IMIVTEN'SB SALES I THE ORIGINAL HOPS BITTERS. ESTABLISHED IN 1803. Tito Great Blootl Purlflci'. In packages to make two quarts, with directions, at One I>o'lar, postage free. Liberal discount to the trade. Prepared only by >1. J \VILLIAMS, DlsnriiHinsr Chemist. uaiiKU'm, ttiavwuBiitISiVOO Per J>ny Made Selling OurXew PLATFORM FAMILY SCALE Weighs accurately up to J5 lb*. Its handsome appearance sell- It at sight. Retail price. ether Family Scalo welghlug -') ll?. iv.-1 A Kr)fllln 1 BOOM F03 AGENTS. Exclusive territory given free. Terms and rapli! sales surprise ?M Agenti. DOMhhTlt SCALE CO., No. 187 W. KK1I1 St.. Cincinnati. (). H Rfiutlfol rn|T>T!ii( of lh< uelrat FfTPtUn obrllak ig.| A\ the M???nle rmblimi found aadtr II. S?nt to F. *. M. ?. tf ftMlttf. Or-it rulottlon la prlc?? of Minnie bccka, fi>od<. j/r m ni. i?opur ouuis. ??od ror illuatratcu rai?k>(ue. \ RKOMNO 4r CO , Mtionlr Pabiiahm, 7Sl Bro*iw?f, / \ ?<cw York. Dewir? of portoaa worfc?. * rTlSk liriBA*n KLIXIa? T>.*tO pill MM *) c * ? r k.?*7 UWfki *>4 C**r< fr??? r MiCl^aj?i7rEw>lr*rri'*4M4*#nAj*,*#<T*ri' '* _mwV\_ J-T- ,*,4. W]'?>yA?un?? dMlTMAPOK. ( fj,ia J'yuM4 %? MtlutH*.' Rlil> ? OX", Skunk. Raccoon, Muskrat, bought for rns.ii; lll^hi.-~t Prices. S. ii'l for <"ir? i:lar. full |?:irticii.ars. K. C. 1501 tillTON. f> Howard St., New Yoik. AAPAA ^TO.\'TII! AGENTS WANTED! 3k 4>%ll "5 I'W Sjllinz Articles Id the world, a www V suupie/r.y. Jav I'.uoxsom, Uettoit^Mtch. $?w "f A YEAR and expenws to agcn:?. Mat outtlt Frci*. Addiess * M M p. o vicKKRV. Au^u-ta, Main.'. ,4 I>l>r\''S Itrnln rooil-r.i^s Vervous Dchllltj /.V Sc. Wf-ikni'M <>f (iiM.iTiitivc orpins. SI *:! ilinnlM Sfii'l f-r Cir'l'f tuAi!-n - I'li.irma. y. :tl;S_Ki: Ave.,N Y FItEK. A .Musical Journal. Add's F. Urchin. Erl.-, Pa. jpi8Q'8 ouRggKraasg | Cfifi A WEEK In vr.ur.nwn town. Terms and $5 Outfit v w free. Adln-s-Jl Hui>:[t.t (' ?Portland. Maine. 5510 and upward; FOR LARGE CIU'RCTIES. f t I.AK STYI.KS in great variety, S'J'J to $JOO and upwar ) CATALOOIES and PRICE LISTS, free. j\ unrivaled in excellence, THAN THOSE OF VERY INFERIOR ; HAMLIN OR1 it. i%.th St. (Union Square) NEW YOB swp EERiiM FOB RHEUMATISM. Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, 7 Backache, Soreness of the 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. Ho Preparation on earth eqoali Sr. Ji.C0M OH a* a ?a/?, sure, simple and cheap External Remedy. A trial entails bat the compaxmtlTely trifling outlay of 60 Cent*, and erery on* suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of Its claims. Direction* In Keren Language*. BOLD BY ALL DEUGGI8TS AND DEALEBS 15 MEDIOHTE. A. VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, 3fd., XT. 8. A* A 8 E. FOB DALK 111 AIIIJ DKALICOSI Awarded the MEDAL OF HONOR at the Ontamial amI Purlu Krt otitloiu. Chicago. FRAZER LUBRICATOR CO. NewYork. WW <?h 3# po?B wpisiup xq pio* nr -ranofttwi 9Ka||P1ts ooovqoi 'umjao jo am 'watnrojpnunJoj ' | (una aigBqtajj] pnva}nioaqvn??rOTO W^m -n?^ ?notro* ?l pttwqs jo uotrad on ptm aUOH P?* > asauu oqj:?p?niJ8.i8?upTP?X issg p n "unujson nOTpuup po?jaip *8pATkP? *1 *?Hlg dog UttjiwwH a dOH otnoil ktnain oajnptriom jnq'jjjjna I puafjjjnof j#Uom,8SM *o? ?C "*t?qjotta toa in* X?qj a?|*3 * joj prrct ?q m* OOflt Mt&* vpajpnnq p84?glsirmi-9ji|joftf?AWXwim ^ ] wno j? mstjj etnl'aWTUOcrui jo p?q p?j Xpio ??>X i j jnq jpji wlino^nnraif*jn,noa *?? 113 <f0H ?n ?J snoa\n* ? ??a?rp ?1? ??qji?? rmojataXg jo -nio.f r*q* jainrai otf *auuBO| -XO;u| ^0iniM'e^nV?4=ie""?nKI<,<>H 'jOTinmnSPrnnpw spioi^^Mnsddy trnaijnb " '3 oj oqji jo 'stra&io XJvnjJn%'K>*P*0<l?'OJ?^l . .-* ./: (J .[xqa8ojjj osmasjasoilotdam* woq* n?QI y mFl pepi3? ty, c}tf2np? c;%K &w ad J > ; Jiaro m? toajjad ptre jw^xba oe*peV?n m?Mtg _dou wqa )S]Z3 3aoi i(qjssodMNIJPog TlVwa T0?3y 3uijfvw?jj mn?H pun jjn pt? 'JO?B%1 n xti 'i.-J J8/n aouiJnd pooiav?rraj3(>n?%??^?n JgjM 'tuoum -Kilo tr? jo MqjadoJdaAHwnmajioai >*rj ptnnsoq.Tn[imnj*4UO||OpllBO p?J??ll|8Jp - UEiAi 'nqona 'SdOH jo uouvuiqtn|00y MBBBMileMiadrKillMJT. *A B Literary Revolution. 3rCfilTC each, formerly $1.00 to *l-2ft eadi: V C ll I 9 I. Mucaulay's Life of Frederick the Great. II. f arlyle's Life of Robert Burns. III. Lamartlne's Life o Mary Queeu of Scots. IV. Thoc. Hughes' Manliness e ^C fkl'TC each, formerly $U0 of Christ. O Vbll I Orach: I. Arnold's Light of Asia. II. Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefleld. II (. Baron Munchansen's Tro? ols ami Surprlslne Adventures. For MX CENTH: Uuuyan's Pilgrim'sProgress. Illustrated cataiosne sent rrec. am&kiuan kihjiv. ?,AunAmi?, John B. A Id en, Manager. Tribune Building. New Vorfc. J^STEY &^S^^flJTLEB0R0 Vs Halrl>ye Is the SAFEST eiuiii i>r.o i j ii acu uiai&uuriwusly.produclDif the most natural shades of Black or Brown: docs NoT STAIN the SKIN, and Is easily SiV nneveiy well appointed toilet ror Lady or Gentleman. Sold by Dru cuts and applied by Hair IlrcMeia. Ucpot.O:tWII larnStjff.Y. C. X. CKITTENTOK, Agt Tun^iTrn The Great Remedy For THE LIVER * THE BOWEL8,andtheKIDREY8. These great organs are the Natural cleanaersof theSyrtera. If they work well, health will be perfect, If they become clogced, dreadful dlscawi ore developed because the blood la poisoned with tho humors that should have been expelled naturally. KIDNEY-WORT wlU restore the natural action, and throw off the disease. Thousand have been cured, and all may be. For sale by all Druggists. B. W. PAYNE & SONS, CORNING, N. Y? Jm. 1UTABLTHHKD 1MO, raBwLJ Patent Spark-Arresting En< >agvM iT gines,mounted and on skids. iiWa hp vertical Engines with wrol B^ttl Jk boilers. Eureka Safety powEwgff M ers with Sectional borier?Hean't be exploded. Ail M iwlth Automatic Cut-Offs. ?Mk98S&1 From $160 t<i $2*000. Send for Circular. State wherayoa saw this. wilt positively euro Female Weakness, such as Fall" tn^C of tho Woml), Whites, riirontc Inflammation or Ulceration of the Womb, Incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful, Suppressed and Irregular Men* truatlou, Ac. An old and reliable remedy. Send po? tal card for a pamphlet, with treatment, cures and certificates from pnyslclaas and patients, to Hownrth A Rillard. Utlca. X. V. Sold oy all DrUfifrtaU? Iti.SOptr bottla- " BOOK AGENTS WANTED fob . sunlight ano shadow The Fasttst Selling Book tvtr issued. An entirely A'em Worthy John B. Gouah. % This prand work -now tor the first time jnHi*her1? U over- : flowing with tender pathos, spier humor, and ^orvl thlogtfor IL It n outfu>Llin^ all ??tli?*r books three to one. Minister* say "God *j>ral tt.' Th'Mi.nnds are waiting for It, and Reports from ' ' Agent* sfc ? Tl -J y^'m'yor rint weel-'n work'; one sold AC in 1 >' days. .V)? n rent-. wante?! o Spretal 7Address A. D. WURTHl.VGTOX a CO . r ihlisVrs. HAETKoao. Cons- > on 30 days'trial. i Wc will seiii". our KIcciro-VoHalo Belts arnJ other Klectri.: Appliance* upon trial for 3D <lays to those nrtllcteit with ServiAU Mihtp anI ilistitrsif u jxraumil futurf. A'so of the Liver. Ki>lr;->s. ithuuwatlsni, Paralyse, etc. Attire curt i/uarunt<i*i or .,v> AilUreaa Voltaic Belt Co.. Marilmll, Mich. nginp fPIA Agents Wanted eve yirh; e UIIUL 8 m A\ toselitof.imilie5.boteU.ini gUllli I LnVI:ir;? cuiiMjtneis: Urge>t ? m-k in tlie count y: n'.iality anl terms 'he liest. Cout trv storek-eprrssliou <1 call or writ'' THE WELLS TEA ('(I.M PA X V. a01 KUiton St.. X. Y. P. O. I'.QX <-W). ABIIISfl Morphine Habit Cared in 10 UrllBm NO pay Ull Cared. US I iff IVI iJJt- J- sti;i'ue.n?, Lebanon Otala. SO. JllfiO an-1 I'OK SMALLER CnrRCHES, I .1. ORllAXS FOR EASY PAY5TEXTS, $6.38 pet ^ WHILE THE PRICES ARE NOl INSTRUMENTS. *.*- ?* g-an co., Ki 140 WalIwsfa Arc,, CHICAGO/ ?. .1 i* '