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*r St,.,*' 5 I -,J Sr^- W^ SrogrMs. X. H. BEAUL1EU, Editor.v WHITE EARTH. -.Kn5ft,i, intra* Epitome of the Week. INTERESTING NEWS COMPILATION.* DOMESTIC. THS State oS Wisconsin was on the 8th by -direction of President Harrison transferred .from the Military Department of the East to the Department of Dakota. AT Port Jefferson, L. L, on the 9th Lewis Oonklin (colored), aged forty-five years, was murdered by his wife during a quarrel. JPEBK destroyed Arkwright's cotton fac *oryat Savannah, Ga., on the 9th. Loss, $100,000. FiRE-Buas at Columbus, Ind., on the 9th -destroyed seven barns and stables with .their contents. MEMOKIAIJ exercises in honor of the late General P. H. Sheridan were held by the .Kew York Legislature on the 9th at Albany. AFTER a shut down of a week's duration, .the Monongahela river coal works near Pittsburgh, Pa., resumed work on the 9th, ^giving employment to nix thousand men. R. P. SCHOB, book-keeper of the First Na tional Bank of Evansville, Ind., committed -suicide on the 9th by hanging. Unsuccess ful speculation was said to have been the cause. A LOSS of #100,000 was caused at Louis ville, Ky., on the 9th by the destruction of the Louisville Bridge & Iron Company's shops. Miss MAGGIE MAT, a prominent society lady of Cannellton, Ind., was found dead in bed on the 9th. CAPTAIN COXTCH, the Oklahoma leader, stated at Winfleld, Kan., on the 9th that about everybody without authority to re main had been driven out by the troops. Two MEN employed in calking a vat at the mineral bath-house at Port Huron, Mich., were overcome by gas on the 9th and killed. THE report on the 9th of the State Board of Agriculture of Massachusetts noted the great growth of the butter business in the .State, and spoke particularly of the devel opment of the co-operative system, twenty six such institutions having made during the year two million pounds. ADVICES of the 9th say that the recent -storm which raged in Baltimore swept over the lower Chesapeake bay, causing great disaster to shipping. Over a dozen seamen lost their lives and thirty or forty vessels were wrecked. Two STRANGERS visited Daniel Keller's residence near ShamoMn, Pa, on the 9th, and robbed him of $4,700. THE infant daughter of George W. Sheck els, a farmer near Shelbyville, Ind., set her clothes on fire on the 9th and was burned to death. Her mother was fatally burned while trying to extinguish the flames. THOMAS ANGUS, seventy years old, a shoe maker of Norwalk, O., was convicted on the 9th of hiring' boys to commit burglaries. Several other indictments were hanging over him. CONSTABLE ALBERT EEIMEB, who was taken to jail in Chicago on the 9th on a charge of embezzlement, was found dead in his cell an hour after his incarceration. He poisoned himself. THBEE masked men on the 9th entered the house of Lewis Patterson, a wealthy farmer living near Centerville, Pa, and demanded his gold. On being told that he had none they tortured him by holding his feet and his face to the stove, and after securing $43 and a gold watch they left. TBEASUBEB GEOBGE P. KBEWOLF, of Hoyt & Thomas, partners in various plays, disap peared from Boston on the 9th, leaving a shortage of $5,000. THE Missouri Eiver, North Platte & Den ver Kailroad Company was incorporated at Lincoln, Neb., on the 9th. "Buffalo Bill" was one of the incorporators. A PBIVATE car containing a party of seven Boston people returning from a tour of California was wrecked in a collision on the Santa Pe road near Joliet, 111., on the 10th, and Miss Winslow, Henry Hartfc, Harry, the porter, and Smith, the cook, were instantly killed, and the othera were dangerously wounded. IT was announced on the 10th that when Miss Bessie Bockefeller was married a short time ago to Charles A. Strong, son of Eev. Dr. A. H. Strong, president of the Rochester Theological Seminary, her father, John D. Rockefeller, made her a present of 81,000,- 000. ST. PETEB'S Catholic Church at Mansfield, O., was destroyed by fire on the Qth. Loss, $60,000. WILLIAM J. IBVING, Jr., twenty years old and married, was arrested on the 10th at Hartford, Conn, charged with the embezzle ment of $20,000 from the Hammond Dressed Beef Company, for which he was local man. ager. JEBBT SULLIVAN, aged seventeen years, was steamed to death on the 10th in a large keir at the print works at Dover, N. H. MOUNTAIN fires were raging on the 10th near Edgemont, Md., and great damage had been done. THE National convention of the Sons of Veterans held in Albany, N. an the 10th, decided to consolidate the "post" and "camp" systems. THE police judge and sheriff at Leaven worth, Kan., received letters on the 10th signed "White Caps" warning them to ex tend no leniency to persons accused of vio lating the prohibitory laws. IT was reported on the 10th from the lumber woods of Upper Michigan that over one billion logs were banked and ready to be floated to the mills, but could not be moved owing to the lack of water in the Streams. THE propeller Oswego left Buffalo on the 10th for Chicago. This was thefirstde parture of the season from that port "FABMEB" MCCLAUGHBEY, one of the Dook County (HL) boodlers, was released from the penitentiary on the 10th, his sen tence of two years having beenreduced one month by the Governor. He went direct to bis home atPalos. ALMOST the entire business portion of Damden, a small town in Jay County, Ind., was destroyed by fire on the 10th. CAPTAIN STUBBS, of the American schooner Bucknam, which arrived in New York on the 10th, reported that he was chased and fired upon by a Dominican man-of-war on WarchSl. The American flag wasflyingat Qie schooner's peak at the time. The Buck nam soon distanced the steamer and the latter gave up the chase. A CALL was issued on theJOth for a Na tional convention of barbers to be held at Pittsburgh, Pa, the first Tuesday in Sep tember to form a National trades union. AN agreement was on the 10th said to have been reached between the United States, England and Germany by. the terms of which each of the three countries named would keep but one war-ship in Samoan waters, pending the results of the forth coming conference at Berlin. TWENTV-THBEE horses and cows were burned on the 11th in afire which destroyed the barn of W. H. Emmons at Eden, HL The fire was of incendiary origin.^ A TEBBIFIC gale struck Tama City,"la., on the 11th, unroofing and raising many,huild Jnjrs. No 6ne was iniured. r^fMMk THE united States Consul General at Rio de Janeiro reported to the Secretary of State on the 11th that yellow fever was prevalent there to an alarming extent. HENRY EOAN, a farmer living near Mount Vernon, Ind., was called to the door of his house on the 11th and fatally shot by Joseph Maynard, a neighbor with whom he was at variance. ABEL LODGE, the village and township treasurer of New Lisbon, 0., was on the llth discovered to be $9,000 short in his ac counts. THE New York Yacht Club on the llth ac cepted the Earl of Dunraven's challenge to race next fall for the America's cup. A MAN named Hurlbut, charged with mal treating his invalid 'wife, was whipped nearly to death on the llth by a crowd of women at Allegan, Mich. BILLINGS & EATON, wholesale leather dealers at Boston, failed on the llth for $700,000. THE storehouse and contents of the Chel sea Cordage Company at Boston was burned on the llth, causing a loss of $150,000. EDGAB SWAN, ex-cashier of the First Na tional Bank of Lynn, Mass., was sentenced on the llth to five years in jail for the em bezzlement of $33,000. MOST of the street-car employes of Min neapolis went on strike on the llth as a re sult of the companies' announcing a reduc tion of wages. THE house of W. P. Wood, a carpenter living in Robin County, Ga, was burned on the llth, and his entire family, consisting of a wife and five children, perished. Mr. Wood was away from home. JOHN G. WHITTIEB, the poet, wrote a let ter on the llth protesting, in the name of humanity and Christianity, against the en forced idleness of convicts in prisons, whioh, he said, could only result in filling the pen itentiaries with maniacs. AT St Louis, Mo., on the llth Judge Thayer decided that stealing papers from the top of a mail box was no more an of ense against the mall laws than taking a package from the steps of the post-office. THE village of Cannonsburg, Mich., was almost entirely destroyed by fire on the llth. THE evictions of Des Moines river land settlers in Iowa were stopped on the llth by a court order, pending an investigation instituted by the Secretary of the Interior. BUCHANAN & LYELL'S jute mills at Brook lyn, N. Y., were burned on the llth, the loss reaching $400,000. THE dead bodies of Wilhelmina Seiderick and Jacob Schaler were found in the form er's farm-house near Bramin Hill, Kan., on the llth. It was thought to have been a case of murder and suicide. THBEE children of Sebastian Merdam, a Bavarian farmer at St. Joseph, Minn., were poisoned on the llth by eating wild parsnip roots which their father had plowed up, and all died in a few hours. THE stable of MoArthur Bros., contractors at Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., was destroyed by fire on the llth and seventeen mules burned. SAMUEL W. MYEBS, business manager for the Booth Packing Company at Indianapo lis, was on the llth said to be $10,000 short in his accounts. He had fled. FOBEST fires had on the llth destroyed many acres of fine pine timber land be tween Pittston and Wilkesbarre, Pa. HENEY DAMMON, aged twenty-two years, of Scituate, Mass., died from hydrophobia on the 12th. THE cargo of the steamer Chilian was burned on the 12th at New Orleans, causing a loss of $100,000.-' A HEAVY thunder, wind and hail-storm visited portions of Eastern Ohio and Mary land on the 12th, doing great damage. John Wetzell and two horses,were struck by lightning and killed at Elk Garden, Md. MEBEDITH STANLEY, an athlete, jumped from the high bridge on the Cincinnati Southern road into the Kentucky river on the 12th, the distance being 285 feet. When taken from the water blood oozed from his mouth, but he soon recovered. The bridge, with one exception, is the highest in the world. THE Minneapolis (Minn.) street-car strike extended to St. Paul on the 12th, all the men in the latter city except those on the cable line going out. THE total value of exports of beef and hog products from the United States for the month of March was $8,125,068, and for the five months ended March 31, $41,571,715. THE British steamer Wylo, which arrived at Hampton Roads, Ya, on the ISth, ex perienced a very rough voyage, having drifted several days at the mercy of the waves. A CENSUS completed on the 12th gave Baltimore, Md., a population of five hun dred thousand. DURING the seven days ended on the 12th there were 186 business failures in the United States, against 141 the previous seven days. The total of failures in the United States from January 1 to date was 3,873, against 3,36a in 1888. PBINCE LAW, a negro living on a planta tion near Savannah, Ga., killed his four year-old child on the 12th as a sacrifice to the devil. MBS. ROSE, of Wilkesbarre, Pa, attempted to light a fire on the 12th with kerosene oil, and was burned to death. MBS. BECKY KING, an invalid living near Shelbyville, Ind., was burned to death in her bed on the 12th. IN Chicago on the 12th Augusta Schue, aged forty-five years, and Axel Friedstrom, both committed suicide by shooting. No cause was assigned for either act MRS. GALLABY, of Chicago, while trying on the 12th to take a revolver from the hand of her eleven-year-old son, Edward, accidentally put her finger on the trigger and the gun was discharged, killing the boy almost immediately. The mother was near ly distracted. MB. BEDDISGEB, a prairie-fire victim, died in Valley township, D. T., on the 12th, mak ing the sixth death in Hyde County from prairie fires. THE moonshiners' stronghold at Carr's creek, near Hindman, Ky., was taken by United States officers on the 12th, five il licit distilleries were destroyed and five men were captured. ADVICES of the 12th say that in a recent gale and rain-storm at Portsmouth, N. C, high water drowned many cattle, sheep and hogs. The water rose many feet in the houses and there was great destruction of property. The inhabitants took to the house topslor safety. RICH gold discoveries were made on tne 12th near Georgetown, in Brown County, Ind. THE United States grand jury at Port Townsend, W. on the 12th found twenty five indictments against William Harned, ex-Special Deputy Collector eleven against Herbert F. Beecher, ex-Treasury Agent, and twelve against Quincy A Brooks, for stealing from the Government. Beecher is a son of the late Henry Ward Beecher. A CYCLONE struck the mining town of Beidler, 0., on the 12th, destroying six houses and killing the twelve-year-old daughter of William Lewis. PERSONAL AND POLITIOAL. MBS. THEBON BEACH died on the Sth at her home in Litchfield, Conn., in her one hundred and first year. During more than a century of life she had livedin one house. That house her grandfather built in 1785, and there she was born and there she died. AT Cheyenne on the 9th Francis E.:airf ren was inaugurated Governor War- off-Wyoming """v with military and civic honors.. ADAM O. TANNEB, of Canton, O., was on the 9th appointed Chief of the Appointment Division of the Interior Department at Washington. BY the elections held in Rhode Island on the 9th the General Assembly was assured to the Republicans, who .would gleet the State officers. ^V,f. j.' THE funeral of Philo Remington, inventor of the rifle that bears his name, was held on the 9th at IUon, N. Y. REAB-ADMIBAL T. BL PATTBBSON (retired) died on the 10th at his-home in Washington, aged sixty-nine yeara NATHAN F. DIXON (Rep.) was elected United States Senator on the 10th by the Rhode Island Legislature in joint assembly at Providence. A LICENSE was issued at Pittsburgh, Pa, on the llth for the marriage of Samuel B. Welser? aged Beveuty-two years,"to Edith Wilson, a girl fifteen years old. EX-CONGBESSMAN WILLIAM P. CUTLEB died on the llth at his home in Marietta, O., at the age of seventy-seven years. MBS. M. J. CHASE, of Philadelphia, was on the llth elected president of the McAIl Mis sion in this country. GENERAL EDWABD HATCH, Colonel of the Ninth United States Cavalry, died at Fort Robinson, Neb., on the llth. He entered the volunteer service in 1861, and was ap. pointed Colonel in the regular army in 1866. A CALL was issued by Governor Fifer on the llth for an election in the Nineteenth Illinois district on the 21st of May of a suc cessor to Congressman Townshend. L. J. FABWELL, an ex-Governor of Wis consin, died on the llth at Grant City, Mo., aged seventy years. He was a noted politi cian of the Northwest forty years ago. PRESIDENT HARBISON on the 12th appoint ed Lyman E. Knapp, of Middlebury, Vt, to be Governor of Alaska THE elections for members of the Rhode Island Legislature were ended on the 12th, and the complexion of that body stands on jointballot: Republicans, 59 Democrats, 49. MBS. LYDIA WATSON, of Leicester, Mass., died on the 12th, aged one hundred and two years and three months. She had been re. markably well and vigorous up to her final illness. FOREIGN. FOUR Russian officers made a wager on the 9th that they could ride on horseback from St. Petersburg to Paris in forty-five days. They will start in May. A DISPATCH of the 9th from Western India announced the failure of the pearl fisheries owing to the prevalence of cholera DISPATCHES of the 10th from Spain an nounced heavy gales off the coast, inter rupting telegraphic communication, delay ing malls and steamers, and doing a greal deal of damage. A number of wrecks were reported. AN explosion on the 10th in the Erin colliery at Castrop, Australia, caused the death of twenty-five persons. LONDON advices of the 10th say that the spring emigration to the United States had assumed large proportions. All the avail able steerage space on the several steamers at Liverpool and at continental ports had been taken up for intending emigrants. The movement was more voluntary in char acter and less the work of agents than hitherto, and the people were of the better class. MICHOL EUGENE OHEVBEUL, the distin guished French chemist, died in Paris on the 9th. He was born in Angiers, August 1, 1786, and was therefore nearly one hundred and three years of age. FIFTY-THREE HUNDBED emigrants sailed from Bremen and Hamburg on the llth fo* New York. THE trial of General Boulanger, Count Dillon and Henri Bochefort was com menced before the French Senate on the 12th. ADVICES of tne 12th from Mexico say that four of the men arrested on a charge of be ing implicated in the derailment of Presi dent Diaz's train had been shot THE Inman steamer CJty of Chester on reaching Queenstown on the 12th reported having sighted the steamer D'anmark, oi the Thingvalla line, on April 8 in a disabled and sinking condition, having apparently been abandoned in mid-ocean. The Dan* mark, when she sailed from Christiania, Norway, for New York, had about seven hiindred persons on board, and the infer ence was that these had either been lostoi were at sea in the ship's boata LATEST NEWS. THE street car strike in St. Paul and Mineapolis still continues. On the 13th President Lowcy issued a notice to the strikers that they could return to work on the loth at the reduced scale of wages and if they would not accept the proposi tion they could consider themselves dis charged. Several disturbances occurred in Minneapolis but none in St. Paul. The cable car men are not involved in the strike. Mr. Lowery refused to arbitrate the difficulties as proposed by a committee of citizens. ON the morning of the 13th at St Louis, Mo., Louis Napoleon, the janitor of the St Louis grain elevator office found John Jackson, president of the elevator com pany, hanging to a post of the connter railing, dead and the body cold. Letters were found showing it was suicide. THE steamer Rio Grande was damaged 125,000 by fire at the dock at New York, the 14th, CHABLES HODGES and Evan Madden were passing through an abandoned mine at Wilkesbarre, Pa., the 14th when their lights ignited a large amount of accumu lated gas and both men were blown to pieces. MASKED men at Hemstead, Tex., the 14th took George Griggs colored, who was charged with attempted rape on a white i woman, and hanged him to ajtree. THE striking switchman on the Erie railroad Buffalo, N. Y., became obstrep. erous the 14th. Several conflicts occurred and the crowds had to be dispersed by the police. AT Sibley, Iowa, on the 13th nearly 150 farmers met at the court house and or ganized against the twine trust OLE NELSON employed in the stone quarry of L. A. Carlson, Red Wing, Minn., was killed the 13th by being participated over a ledge of rock. Hon. John P. Usher who was secretary of the interior under President Lincoln died in Philadelphia on the 13th. JOHN A. KASSON, of Iowa, William Wal ter Phelps, of New Jersey and Geo. Bates of Deleware, the commissioners to represent the United States at the Berlin conference on the Samoan question, sailed from New York on the 13th. THE London, Eng., Weekly Dispatch says that William O'Brien has entered a libel action against Lord Salisbury for certain remarks made by the latter in a recent speech at Wetf ord. AMONG the latest items from the Okla homa country is one that a bloody tragedy occurred a few days ago in the western part between two men from Kansas and two from Texas for the possession of a claim. Guns were freely used and one of the Kansas men was killed and a Texan fatally wounded. The other two called a truce and started with their wounded com rades for a neighboring ranch. Before they reached there the fight was renewed and later the whole party was discovered stretched out on the prairie. KNOWLEDGE OF SOILS. How to Rescue Agrlcultere from Mere Routine of Mechanical Drudgery. All intelligent agriculturalists will acknowledge that the first step in the improvement of the soil consists in learning its composition, so as to be able to compare it with other soils re markable for their fertility or for the production of peculiar crops. After obtaining such information, it is evi dent that we may, by proper applica tions of the required ingredients, bring the soil to the standard of any other variety, the only question being whether it can be done economically by means of the resources within our reach. It will be seen that the changes which are to be effected in the compo sition of comparatively barren soils, in order to render them fertile, are gen erally attainable, and by skilled and scientific methods we may always feel Bure of a favorable result. It is too generally true that our ag riculturalists have experimented blind fold, and but little true scientific knowledge results from such opera tions. Hence we find the most con tradictory accounts of nearly every mode of improvement If we consult the experience of others, as recorded in books and agri cultural newspapers, the information is by no means to be relied upon un less all the conditions of the problem are fully stated and, above all, it is essential^ that we should know the composition of the soil on which the operations were performed, so as to be able to institute a comparison with that on which the experiments are to be repeated. In order to illustrate this remark, let us suppose that one of our farmers had read that adding copperas or sulphate of iron was an improvement to the soil. It is a subs tancQ, that re acts continually on a calcareous soil, liberating carbonic acid gas and form ing sulphate of lime or gypsum, both of which serve to render vegetation luxuriant, the carbonic acid gas being absorbed by the foliage, while the gypsum stimulates the plant to its rapid absorption and assimilation. The fact being published without any chemical explanation, and the re suiting crop being stated, it is perfect ly natural to suppose that an enter prising farmer would be disposed to try such a promising experiment on his soil if he could obtain the sub stance mentioned. Now, it is absolutely certain that the very substance that will confer fertili ty on calcareous soils would render any New England soil utterly barren, so as to be irreclaimable without chemical skill and large expenditure. Sulphuric acid and copperas are used in England for the purpose oi decomposing fiber in composts, and such a compost is found to be very proper for calcareous soils but it would actually destroy every vestige of vegetation on our silicious soils. We are in constant danger from such errors unless we know the compo sitions of the soils where the experi ments were made, and also the nature of the soil where it is to be repeated. Such knowledge is not only useful by teaching us how to avoid erroneous practices but is also a sure uide to ag ricultural improvements, and must be made the basis of the art Empiricism ought not to be the only means of improvement with an intelli gent farmer. Mere experience without scientific light is at best uncertain, and we con sider the union of theory and practice as the grand desideratum in the art. Every American farmer who prides himself on his freedom and intelligence should exert himself to rescue agricult ure from a mere routine of mechan. ical drudgery, and should endeavor to instruct his children in the scientific principles of the art. Besides increasing the agricultural produce of the country, such means will surely aid in the advancement of civilization, and will afford a constant source of rational enjoyment to the in telligent, educated farmer.Boston Globe. Her Artistic Sense Revolted. Pale, but self-possessed, the young man rose to his feet and stood before her. "So this is the end, is it, Victoria Washabaugh?" he exclaimed, in a me tallic voice. "Evans Gambit, it Is," she replied, coldly. "I have been deceived in re gard to the strength of my attachment for you." -.V'It could not stand the strain of my inability to furnish you a green-stone front on Michigan avenue for a home, I presume?'' he rejoined, bitterly. "It is not that, sir!" sha answered, with flashing eye. "I beg you to be lieve that I am superior to considera tions of a sordid character, Mr. Gam bit. But you do not satisfy my artistic nature." "In what respect, Miss Washabaugh, may 1 ask?" '._ "If you must know," replied the fair young girl, with a pained look, i"your hair does not match that of my lovely little Fido by at least three shades!"Chicago Tribune. V? 3xf,'.\&V?v Male Parent (sternly)"Now, sir, young man, I have caught you stuck in the jam, as usual, when your mother is away." Culprit "I'll bet a quarter ma is stuck in the jam, too." Male Parent"Where?" Cul prit"Down at the millinery open* ing."Burlington Free Press. j& The best time to hunt for borers is in May. Coal ashes are said to be ex cellent as a Preventive of borera. mrJuia uneuiBflMvaM stlmnlates the torpid liver, strength' ens the digestive organs, regulates th bowels, and are unequaled as an ANTI-B3LIOU3 MEDICINE. In malarial districts their virtues are Widely recognized, as they possess pec uliar properties iu. freeing thesystem from that poison. Elegantly sugar coated. Dose small. Price, 25cts. Sold Everywhere, Office, 44: Murray St., New York. INTERRUPTED. "Ah, Genevieve, have you divined, That as this silken skein you wind, You wind around my heart as well, The thread of love's entangling spell? Those smooth, soft hands, so dainty white I wash them morning, noon and night,. As you do yours, young man, I hope, In lather made of IVORY SOAP." A WORD OF WARNING. There are many white soaps, each represented to be "just as good as thef they ARE NOT, but like all counterfeits, lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for Ivory Soap and insist upon getting it. Copyright 1886, by Procter A Gamble. JOSEPH H. HUNTER, LATEST STYLES IN L'Art De La Mode. & COLORED PLATES. AH THE LATEST PARIS AND NEW YORK FASHIONS. tWOr&er it of your News-deal er or send 8 5 cents for latest number to W. J. HORSE, Publisher, Easjou19th.St., New York. S3TNAME THIS PAPER OV8 7 time writs i AN HONEST DOCTOR, vvv finding his patient suffering from that most common of American maladiesJ Bilious Dyspepsia, or, in other words, from Torpid Liver, associated with indi-: gestion, advised him to go to the drug store and get Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical- Discovery the world-famed remedy for such ailments. Golden Medical Discovery acts powerfully upon the Liver, and through that great blood-purifying organ, cleanses the system of all blood-taints and impuri- ties, from whatever cause arising. It is equally efficacious in acting upon the Kidneys, and other excretory organs, cleansing and strengthening them and healing their diseases. As an appetizing restorative tonic, it promotes digestion-" and nutrition, thereby building up both flesh and strength. It is the only,' medicine of its class, guaranteed to benefit or cure, in all diseases for whichf." it is recommended, or money paid for it will be promptly refunded. '*g\~y^ Copyright, M88, by WORLD'S DBPBNSABY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Proprietors. deafnew,'difficulty ofr By its mild, soothing, antiseptic, clearain, cares the worst cases. Only O cents. Sola Ivory' p. ja,m a. CIXT YovS!TMfJl my. \j* ww wMt1. PENSION without DXrXS EREi by rstnrn msll, tall desorlptiT* circular! of MOODY'S Ig i TAILOR STSTtfc FIIESSCiniH. Xny lsdy of ordi- nary intelligence can easily and quickly learn to cut and make any earment, In any style to any measure for lady or child. Address MOODY & CO.. Cinoinuil, Q. H-hAJlS lilia PAPfH U lion jtamlM. GOLD MEDAL, PAEIS, 1878. BAKER'S Warrantedabsolu tely pure Cocoa, from whioh the excess of Oilhasbeen removed. Ithas more than three times the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrow root or Sugar, and is therefore far more economical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, strengthening, easily digested, and admirably adapted jfor invalids as well as for persons in health. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W.BAKER&COc,BroM8r,l?s! Olfc'Jr'JMEUgl O for an case of TTmmmamm Ceierrhincurable In (he Hee by the proprietors of DR. AGE'8 CATARRH REMEDY. SYMPTOMS CATjjmn.Headache, obstruction of nose, discharges falling into throat, sometimes proruae, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenactouB^mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid eyesfweak,_ clearing"throaVixpectoratkln ofje breathy offensive smell and taste impaired, and general debility. Only a itew ft these symptoms likely to be present at once. Qftousands of cases ^result in consumption^ and eid in the grave. ------B^cttmgjMr, and healbr [properties, Dr. Sage's Bemedy cents, Sow by druggists everywhere. i "v. ""'f,"*?* X'\ is W'-i** "J-'IA Sat. *.Z,3*,i A O-ifc ,T i|^feSf.^.j=feS* -^fA :-:*JT$fr. mMi ringing hi ears re matter