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iiriii^iiini i miii Looking Forward. Why turn, faint spirit, to the vanished past ? Why grieve that some vain longing might have been? Why brood o'er broken hours no longer thine, Or sigli for conquests thou may'st never win ? Leave tho poor faded hope and trust long dead, And nurse the heart's unfolding bloom instead! I Fling ycur misgivings to tho idle wind! Fruition is the patient soul's reward? Thy path through trouble to the good mau'? ! goal Let not these petty weaknesses retardTread with unfaltering step the rugged way Tiiat leads this trial to the perfect day! Press not thy bosom, like the imprisoned bird, In repinings 'gainst the bars of fate: What though tho skies are sometimes hung in cloud, Docni not, therefore, thy whole life desolate; Make thy ova destiny, though dangers throng? Feailess advance, with every step grow strong ! Turn not thy mind's eye inward, where a waate 'mao + K onirif'a alfV ftf f^nnbtflll u^;iuau3 uvaiu iuv o^/u?b ? w?j w gloom, Uat look thou rather to the ecenea without, Whore nil God's fairest, holieat treasured bloom: Forget thynelf?cast each dull clog aside? Atd look in trust above, whate'er betide! Fold not thy hands in weary, dull despair, Whatever shadows thy fair hopes enshroud? j Sleep not thv life away in idle dreams ; Nerve thee for God's own work?nor heed the cloud That breaks above thee ; toil will bring release, Tare fade away and struggle end in peace! NO ONE TO LOVE. There had been a summer shower; ; roof, window, garden, were washed to dazzliDg polish, and the wonderful liquid couleur de rose of the moment poured over all an air of enchantment, j The slender young woman in deep I mourning whom the stalwart proprietor : of the vehicle lifted down like a feather | accepted her dreaded destination with a j smile. " How lovely !" were the first words that escaped ner lips; and they were | appropriated as a fitting compliment by i a rastily clad man, who seized the little I gloved hand vigorously in his horny I palm, and "hoped he saw Miss Thatcher j quite well." " Supper's bin ready this half hour," I was the laconic and not amiable saluta-> tion of Mr. Seaman's spouse, who re- i ceived Louisa in the porch. " An' the boys is gone fishin', you j see," said the host. " When Solon's to hum from grammar school, Ezri's sure to jine him, an' take a day off." After tea, served in a narrow, whitewashed anteroom to the stiff, funereal | jwrlor, whero Miss Thatcher was bid j " take off her things," the young lady ! begged to be shown to her own room, ! and was led up stairs to a low-windowed : bedroom, carpeted with braided rags, and furnished with reddened pine and calico counterpanes. The luggage had been pushed in with a mental ejacula- j tion: " What on earth can a distric' | schoolma'am want with two big trunks?" | and the audible information: " I've j filled your pitcher. Here's a candle, i The git-up "bell '11 ring at six." With as slight preparation as might be, the overwearied girl?homesick to lit-r heart's core?crept into bed. She awoke with a start. The room was quite dark; a cool, damp mountain wind rushed through the open windows. Sbo lighted a match and glanced at her watch. Only nine o'clock, and the world still wide awake. A burst of hilarious laughter arose from the kitchen below, where the returned fishermen Wv-re scaling their fish. From the house beyond the orchard came the tinkling of a piano, and a thin, sharp female voice nrnnb>pfl cineorlv 11 sou/? iust then come r ? o?q tf w into vogue: "No one to love, none to c irese, Traveling aloue through life's wilderneub.'' | "My serenade," thought Louise, as i she tried in vain to recompose herself to j deep. "Could any words express rue , better ? An orphan, without brother or i sister, penniless, nearly friendless, the ! one being that I loved and adored gone from me forever. ' No one to love, none to caress.' Could anything be truer of : me than that ?" * ? * * * The village schoolchildren were en-1 chanted with their new teaoher. She ; was gentle and firm, interesting and j companionable. There was not a sunny day all summer when some of them did | not come after school to take her with ; them to lied Cedar pond, the holiday rendezvous of the country round. If the afternoon proved rainy, and this juvenile escort failed, Miss Thatch- j er, wrapping herself in waterproof, and taking a book with her, would go down the orchard's steep bank to the old mill. She made friends with Tim, the miller's boy, and Bill Bowles, the miller, and "the old deacon," the prehistoric pro- [ prietor of the premises, who had not I failed a day these fifty years to look in, | rain or shine, to see " if things was to | rights." She found a love of a corner where, ; through the cracks under the great ! beams, she could see the water wildly rushing, and where she could hear, in its grand excitement, the grind and whirl, the boom and splash, of the mad flood whose sound up on the hill yonder assumed such a drowsy monotone. " You be so fond of readin', miss," said Tim, the miller's boy, "mebbe you'd take a shine to a curus book we've got 'ere. There wus a time when all the visitors to Red Cedar pond cum down to rate a iook at 11; dui ir b grown rusty like. A hand-writ book, miss? a manrcrip Bnm folks "alls it. It b'loDgs, yon might pay, to Bowles' mill, for it wus left ?vith'the old deacon,'to be kept till called fur, an' wus writ by the curusest spesmin of a human cretur; but he died afore my time. I'm a stranger in these parts. I wus reared twelve miles bank. " And no one has called for the book ?" " Not yit," said Tim, mysteriously? "not yit. Folks is too sup'stitious. There be sum who say it never will be called fur till ' the old deacon' lies aside o' the cretur who writ it. He died suddin, an' wus buri'd up in the deacon's buri'l lot. An' sum say he wusn't buri'd, but is gone a sea v'yage, an' '11 come back ; an' sum say he's been seed round Bowles' mill moonlight nights. But you needn't be scared, miss. The book is nat'ral harmless. An' if you Bay so, I'll git it fur you this minit, an' when you're through readin' on't, I'll put it back." Up to the rafters he climbed nimbly by certain footholds not very visible, and brought do.vn, with a flying leap that startled Misii Thatcher to her feet in nervous apprehension for his safety, a dusty volume, which he gallantly wiped upon his coat sleeve and offered. An autobiography, not so very old, for its closing date was 1847. Four hundred pages of yellow letter paper stitched together by the dozen sheets, and finally bound in a wrap of black leather. Written in a fine, pointed hand, difficult to read at first, but once mastered in its idiosyncrasies, legible at ease. And hn.ving this peculiarity : on almost every page, mixed in the text. were maps carefully drawn and dotted, inclosed in neatly ruled parallelograms, but without any figures or marginal references to show connection with the writing. w " I am one of two brothers," the narrative commenced, "in all points as unlike, from the moment of birth, as Jaoob and Esau." Then followed, interspersed with the incomprehensible maps, a brief history of an unhappy childhood, unloved as childhood could be, an adolesoenoe utterly unblessed and dissatisfied ; and after a page of atheistical triade against the inequality of fortune and thebitter tyranny of fate, the personal history developed into a descriptive diary of travels and Jjusinese connections in Sooth America, whither the writer had immigrated in his twenty-sixth year. So far, and little farther, the manuscript bore marks of having been read; pages were dog-eared, and there was an oocasional thumb print. Bat the style wte so dull and monotonous, and the detail so lacking in adventure, that not one of "the visitors at Red Cedar pond" had been inspired with snffioient curiosity to read the volume to its close. Not one?exoept Miss Thatcher. She read every page carefully, even with avidity. One Saturday morning?a beautiful sunny morning, for rainy days could no longer be waited for, the interest of the j diary had become so absorbing?Miss | Thatcher was early in her favorite place at tho old mill, when Tim, with a surprisingly long face, accosted her in a startling whisper: "Tne manscrip's bin called fur." Miss Thatcher turned quite pale. "Is I it gone?" she asked, faintly. "No, miss, not gone," said Tim, radiantly, well satisfied with "tho start" he had given her ; "not tuk away when you was a-read'n' on't. Catch me! Says I: 'Sir, you must bring a written order. ' So he went up the hill to the old deacon's?that wns yesterday. He'll be here fur certain to-day. But you've got the manUHcrip, miss, to look at once agin, anyhow. Catch me a-givin' on't up till I had ter." " Tim, you are a very good, kind fellow, "said Miss Thatcher. She took the manuscript, and it was then that, before she read a word, she wrote in fine pencil mark upon the margin of one of the sallow pages?a page she turned over leaf after leaf especially to find : "No one to love, uone to caress." TTotyIIv liad elm wntfar ftiia rrVion flia sound of a crutch was heard on the mill bridge, and voioss, and in another moment the sunny doorway of the mill was darkened by two figures. There was no escape for Louisa. She arose from her love of a corner, with the manuscript in her hands. "I am sure you have come for this," , she said to the old deacon. Then she glanced at his companion. She caught the impression in her rapid glance of a scholarly looking young man, with a pale forehead and a dark mustache, who wore ; eyeglasses. " I believe I am the owner of the record left here so many years ago," the ; young man explained. " But I have no { reason to carry it away at this moment, j I shall be in the village over the Sab-; bath, perhaps through the week. If i you have not finished reading it, I shall; leave the book with you gladly." " Oh, no," said Miss Thatcher, quickly ?too quickly she afterward thought; but embarrassment, or perhaps fate, urged her to decline the strangers' I politeness. She was going, and as she went an uncontrollable impulse caused her to turn back and say : "If you are kindred to the man who wrote the book, 'twill make you very sad. I hope?I hope you will feel a little love for him." ** + ? * * ? * At church on Sunday the claimant of the Bowles' mill manuscript appeared in a conspicuous pew, and Louisa Thatcher i felt, even when he was not looking at her, that his thoughts were studying her through and through. On Monday morning, as she trudged aloug the highroad to the schoolhouse, i she met him, and he evidently expocted ! a recognition; but intent upon the neces-; sity of absolute dignity in a "district! schooLna'am," she vouchsafed him, none. "She blusheu, though," the younf^ man reflected, consolingly. That evening he called at Mr. Seaman's with one of the village dignitaries, but the desire of his eyes was " up stairs correcting compositions," and he did not gain a j glimpse of he-. At noon the next day the mother of I flaxen-haired Nettie, pet of tho baby class, came with Nettie's luncheon, ac-1 companied by the indefatigable young man, who was then formally presented j to Miss Thatcher. From that time they met daily on the I way to school and the way from school, \ walking slowly along the highroad and j the pretty wood path that closed it, and j giving each other gradually, with all the j trustful facility of youth and irresistible attraction, the confidential histories of j their young lifetimes. At evening he came to see hor. .| One evening the young couple were sitting in Mr. Seaman's parlor by the j dim lamp, dignified by the mercenary ! gonios of Mrs. Seamen into " an extra," i looking together over the mill mann- j script. "I find it so dull," said Leonard Mansfield. "Were it not for one consideration and one conviction, I should never be able to finish. The consideration is for your sake, because you like it, Louisa; the conviction was [he foundation of my coming to claim the record. When my uncle's will was read seven years ago, one clause struck my imagi- j nation. " 'If any of my heirs feel sufficiently interested in mo to inquire into my per- J sonal history, they will find my diary in j the old mill where it was written, at Red j Cedar pond. Personal application to | be made to Deacon Treat or Squire i Wells.' The heirs noted this direction 1 with indifference. " My share of the legacies took mo through college?as my father, one of the dearest and noblest of men, but never fortunate in money making, could ! not afford?and furnished me with a small capital to commence law practice. I I had more than one compunctious thought about my benefactor. It seemed to me a shame to accept such benefits from a man in whom I had not even sufficient interest to acquaint myself with his personal history. This year, wnen 1 Decame ior ine nrsc ume en- | couragingly established in my profes- : sion, I determined to commence my j vacation by looking np tbe neglected 1 diary. I oonfess I do not find myself in- j spired by its revelation. What did you I find, dear Louisa, to kindle yon into the request that has haunted me: 'I hope yon will love him a little.' " " I found worlds in it," said Miss Thatcher, sighing so sorrowfully, as she had not done since she had entered her new world of love and loving. 41 Worlds of what, my dearo6t ?" asked the light hearted young lawyer. I He was clasping her hand in one of his i ae he spoke, and with the other he > turned absently the leaves of the timestained book that lay on the table. A | little bit of handwriting that he knew ; struck his vision; it was the line on the margin: "No one to love, none to carets." Miss Thatcher saw .it too. " Yes, I j know/' she said, softly. " I wrote it there. I could not help it. 'Twas the tribute of my sympathy." He turned to her very earnestly. Something in the tremulous sensitiveness of her face smote his heart painfully. Tears started to his eyes. He! folded his strong arm around her with j a sense of infinite tenderness. " Let me tell you," she said, disengaging herself from .his embraces, " what a strange thing I found, or thought I found, in that diary. First of all, you know, I was drawn sinffu larly into rapport with the writer by my own Bad loneliness. I felt the depth of meaning in his complaint. Yes," she said, trembling, " I must confess, and I do repent, even in his oomplaint against Heaven. Alone in the- world. Sometimes that happens." And here let it be explained to the reader that by an accident in the cradle the writer of the diary had been made physically repellant, and his sensitive soul exaggerated bis misfortune into a barrier between himself and the loving sympathies of all mankind. As for womankind, he knew not?for his mother died at his birth?even its maternal tenderness. "Leonard, dear," Miss Thatcher went on, "you will think me, perhaps, the; most superstitious being ; but 1 think | ?and the idea has gathered some reasonable pleas?I cannot help thinking that this book is framed as a mode of bequest. I believe the writer, your father's brother, stung with the bitter j thought that his hard earned fortune would be spent by those who never knew or cared for him, devised a method by which a part at least should be the reward of affectionate gratitude." She explained to then her theory of the maps, and her instinctive construction of one particular map which she had studied at tbe very last reading in the old milL Leonard Mansfield's cheek flushed as he listened. At the close he said; " Your I reasoning is sufficiently plausible to deserve to be tested, and so it shall be. But first promise me one thing ; promise me that if this mil acle of intuition proves true, you will be my wife to-morrow. My darling, you Bhall not say ?No.'" Ho prevented her, indeed, in a j lover-like way from saying anything. I And silence is " yes " to love. * * * ? * The last day of August the whole village was thrown into a torment of excited ouriosity. The excitement began in one of the twin houses on the " Meeting house hill" at five o'clock in the j morning. Miss Tabitha Butts stood in j her nightdress peeping through the i blinds of a dormer window. She never could tell, as she declared afterward, what made her peep. She saw the back door of " Dick Seaman's " open, and Louisa Thatcher look mysteriously out. Then she saw Tim, the miller's boy, creep stealthily around the porch with a pickax_and a spade, which he gave to Miss Thatcher, wno | j disappeared with them into the house. Then Tim, stealing back again as far as ! the lilac bushes, and cautiously survey ! ing all approaches, put his hand over | his mouth and gave a low whistle. Im: mediately from the horse shed by the j church a man came very quickly, and, j nodding to Tim as he passed, hastened I to the highroad. Miss Tabitha was | sure, although his cap was drawn over his face, that this man was the ycung stranger to the village who had been so infatuated with Miss Thatcher. Then Miss Thatcher came to the door again aud beckoned to Tim, and whis1 percd; and he went, around by way of the church, down the plum orchard, to tho mill. A pickax and a spade! Miss Tabitha had cold shivers; she could think of nothing but a grave. "When, two hours afterward, the coast being clear, she sped across the garden patch to the "meetin' house shed," hor fancy lost "if-a liorrnra for f.jiAm in fill A UUUD VA IV" UV44V4W, I noitheast corner, was a spacn of fresh | turned mold. Miss Tabitha went home, put on he* 1 sunbonnet, and was "down to the vil-1 lage in no time." The next excitement was at the som-, nolent dwelling of old Squire Wells. ! Mr. Mansfield had been closeted with him an hour. And when the squire roappeared he nearly upset his ancient wife in the hallway in haste to get his hat and coat, and choked till he was scarlet, screaming into her wrong ear tbat he was going to U. " on bizniss 1" j Off he went at such a novel pace tbat I the poor dame's feeble faculties aroused themselves to concentrate upon one fatal remembrance: "When an old horse that has allers walked takes to runnin' away, there's no ind o' damage." Excitement third was a sealed letter dropped by Mr. Seaman's Ezri into the post-office at ten o'clock, the hour of general delivery, directed to the trustees of the district school, which body, being in quorum on the spot, opened at once the resignation of Miss Thatcher in favor of the highly recommended candidate for the winter term, to whom they had kindly given her the preference. Excitement fourth attacked flaxen j haired Nettie's mother, a pleasant faced ' little widow, to whom Tim, who had ridden to U. and back again at breakneck speed, brought a note from tho j minister of U., saying he wonld sup j with her that evening, "if agreeable, I as he was coming to Red Cedar Pond ! "in virtue of his office," a sentence! underlined like a pleasantry, that so up- ; set the good widow's brain as to spoil' the count of her one-two-three-four cake. 1 Last of all, and the grand excitement! of the day, was the ringing, at four j o'clock in tho afternoon, of tbe meet- j ing house bell. " Who is dead ?" every one asked, as the first few slow strokes i mama Vk-nt nn/iA loivlw Qof woinff WDJLD UUUUIIOU j MUV VUW wv? qwamqj i the old bell tripped up all calcula-' tions : fifty, eighty, a hundred; still on;! quickly, jubilantly?ringing not for the j dead, but for the living ; ringing for a I wedding I Such as campering as there was up the j Mill bridge road! There wasjno lack of j witnesses to the simple, solemn service, j and of the coming down the aisle, on the arm of her proud young husband, of : a delicate little bride, with mourning I laid aside for purest white, and day : lilies on her bosom. Not married in haste to repent at leisure were the two loving people who look the evening train at U. for a far commercial city, preceded by their good fortune in shape of a strong box filled with Spanish doubloons and English banknotes ingeniously bequeathed by an eccentric misanthrope, and discovered in its hiding place by a woman's wit, kindled by a woman's sympathy. Careful Mother and Model Boy. The two didn't belong to each other; and this very good boy may have been a little too smart and sancy. Little Mary was prettily dressed, and standing in front of the house waiting for her mother to go out to ride. A tidy boy, dressed in coarse clothes, was passing, when the little girl said: ' 'Como here, boy, and s'ake hands wi' me. I dot a boy due' like you named Joey." The bov lauerhed. shook hands with her, i and said : " I've got a little girl justlike I you, only she hasn't any little cloak with | pussy fur on it 1" Here a lady came out of the door, and i said : " Mary, you must not talk with bad boys on the street. I hope you haven't taken anything from her. Go right along, and never stop here again, boy I" That evening the lady was called down to speak with a boy in the hall, j He was very neatly dressed, and stood | with his cap in his hand. It was the | enemy of the morning. "I came to I tell you that I am not a bad boy." he said. " I go to Sunday-school, and help my mother all I can. I never tell lies, nor quarrel, nor say bad words ; and I don't like a lady to call mo names, and ask me if I've stolen her little girl's clothes off her I" " I'm very glad you're so good," said the lady, laughing at the boy's earnestness. "Here's a quarter of a dollar for you," " I don't want that," said Ben, holding his head up very high. "My father works in a foundry, and has lots of money. You got a boy bigger than ! I, haven't you ?" " Yes, whv ?" " Does | he know the commandments?" " I'm i afraid not very well." " Uan ne say tne j sermon on the mount, and the twentythird psalm, and the golden rule?" "I'm very much afraid lio canuc^," said the lady, laughing at the boy's bravery. " Doesn't he ride on his pony on Sunday, instead of going to church ?" " I'm afraid he does, but be ought not," said 1 the lady, blushing a little. "Mother don't kno* I camohere,"' said the little rogne, but I thought I j would just come round and see whnt! kind of folks you were, and?and?I j guess mother would rather your boy! wouldn't come round onv doors, because she don't like Suean to talk to bad boys in the street. Good evening." And the boy was gone. Ingratitude. While much that is good can be con-1 fldently expected in Detroit boys, there ; are, alas ! a few who have no memory I for deeds of kindness. Snoh a one was | seated in the shade of the post-office the | other day, devouring a banana, when a j boy acquaintance came along ami wanted ' a taste. " Hain't 'nuff for only me," was the reply. " Come, now, Jack, gin a feller a small bite. Yon know I've alius bin good to yon." " Ton never done nuthin' for rne zi knows on," replied the eater. " I hain't, eh ! Hain't I saved ye from lickings ? Hain't I lied for ye ?" " That was yer doofcy," mumbled the boy with the banana. " See here, Jack," continued the other, rising to his feet, " d'ye 'member the time when you was small and sick, and had a sore heel; I was going by the house one day, an' you looked so Bad and poor that I let yon wet me all over with the penstook hose to cheer you up. Was that my dooty ? Is thera any other bov in Detroit who would do that fur ye ?'r It was a powerful appeal, but just as it was finished the last of the banana ; was orowded into the ungrateful boy's I hroat. a y / CENTENNIAL CORRESPONDENCE. The Exhibition Complete?ExcImIt* Natlont?State Buildings? Buildings for Separate Interest*?New England Kitchen. Some of the departments that were in chaos a month ago, notably Russia, Tarkey and China, have unpacked their goods and put them in order in the Main building, as well as in Agricultural hall. The goods in the Main building are now nearly all in place, and only some minor touches are needed, in a few sections, to give completeness to the whole. Three-fifths of the whole display in this Exposition is by foreign exhibitors, which shows how deep an interest in this display of human industry and skill is felt by the nations abroad. China, though on the opposite side of the globe, has a larere display of China ware, carved furniture, very elaborate and costly, illustrating their mythology, two canopied bedsteads respectively being valued at $1,600 and 848,000; silk, enamels, lacquered screens, ivory and ivory work, silk embroidery, embroidered screens, medicines for the trade, tea, cotton from sixteen ports, wine, rice in various forms, etc. Japan has a still larger display of similar goods, more skill and more enterprise being exhibited in the manufacture of their goods, if possible, than in those of China, though there is great similarity of design. Considering the fact that the policy of China and Japan, until within a few years, has been one of exclusion, and non-intercourse with the civilized world, their magnificent display at this Exposition is very significant. The Japanese have a separate building near the Main building, for the sale of their fancy ware. Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Indiana^Illinois, Michigan, New Hampshire, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, Connecticut, California, Arkansas, Delaware, West Virginia, Kansas and Colorado, have special buildings for the accommodation of their citizens. The characteristics of the different sections are nowhere more strikingly observed than in the reception accorded to visitors in these State bnildings. In those of the New England and Middle States, the visitor is treated politely and formally, but with an air that says: " I shot id like an introduction from some prudent, responsible person, accustomed to good society, before I give you my confldonce." In those of the Western and Southwestern States, the introductory greeting is: "Come in, and welcome. We are glad to see youand the visitor straightway feels at home. Separate interests, too, have separate buildings for the display of the wares peculiar to each. There is one for the exhibition and illustration of photography, and one for the Bible society. The shoe and leather manufacturers have a large buildiDg in which not only their goods and the processes of their work are exhibited, but also the different kindg of machinery used in their busi !1V i-1 iitJbb, Wll/Il llltJ ItttDHL iLUpiUVDiiiDUlO, The show here is very large and instructive. Then there is a large building for wagons and carriages, in addition to those in the main building ; another for the brewers, who show all the apparatus for mashing, cooling and brewing beer; in fact, everything of interest to outsiders except the beer itself. I did not see auy of the product there. The milk dairy association have a building, and there are buildings for the exhibition of the various schools of the United States and Sweden. The kindergarten, close by the Women's building, and a part of their exhibition, shows the system of object teaching for children under six or seven years of age. It is held at eleven a. m., and attracts much attention. There is another.exhibit, which I intended long ago to notice, which is thronged from morning to night. It is the New England kitchen, a log structure illustrating the early life and domestic economy of the Pilgrim fathers and mothers two centuries ago. The collection is chiefly from Massachusetts. Here is a dock supposed to be 400 years old, as it was very old when it was 11?l i I.L i.? 11. i-u?l UlUUfiUl ku UUIO uuuulijt uiiuvucx one 180 years olfrand Btill ticking. All the old fashioned or culinary tools, most of which have gone oat of ase, and are unknown to the present generation, are here in great abundance The old firelock hangs above the open fireplace, as do strings of dried apples, pumpkins and red peppers. The crook-necked gourd performs the office of the tin dipper, a pewter service supplies tho place of china and queensware, the distaff, the spinning wheel and the hand loom provide homespun garments for every-day use. The flint and tinder box makes the housekeeper to dispense with matches. Orufet coffee and good rich milk with maple sugar and molasses makes one wonder if we have not made progress backward. And the attendants, dressed in the stylo of the olden time, with visage and accent like the veritable pBalm sieging Yankees of Plymouth Bock. And all the surroundings of ornamental literature, or household use, not merely likenesses, but the things themselves, which were used two hundred years ago, preserved as mementoes, and here displayed in apartments such as they formerly occupied. All these things take us back to the life that onoe was, but never will be used again in New England. Adjoining this old log kitchen is tho modern kitchen, with the modern improvements for producing a "square meal," in full operation, and I notice that a good many visitors are in a mood for enjoying tbo new dispensation after they have got through with inspecting the old. 8. M. JB. A targe Poultry Yard, The following account of the largest poultry yard in New York State is given : It is at Greene, Chenango county, and is kept by Mr. A. B. Robeson. He has six thousand ducks, four thousand turkeys and twelve hundred hens. They consume daily sixty bushels of oorn, two barrels of meal, two barrels of potatoes, and a quantity of charcoal. The meal, potatoes and charcoal are boiled together and form a pudding, which is fed warm. He employs two men to cook the feed and feed them. He has twelve buildings for Iub fowls, from one hundred to two hundred feet long, fourteen feet wide and seven feet under the eaveH, with a door in each end of them. Mr. Robeson bought most of his duckB in the West, and had them shipped in crates?three dozen in a crate. He also has an egg house, thirty-five by fifty feet, and four stories high. The outside is eighteen inches thick, and built of cut ftone, laid in mortar, boarded up on the inside and filled in between the outcirJo on/1 itinirlo nrfill wifVi naxr/inpt. if. taking three thonsand bushels. Mr. Robeson claims that he can keep eggs any length of time in this building. He also keeps the poultry that he is now dressing until next May or June, which he sells for eighteen to twenty-five cents per pound, and it capuat be told from fresh dressed poultry. He gets ten cents per pound for turkey's feathers, twelve for hen's and sixty-five for duck's. He says there is money in poultry, and he thinks he can make out of his six thousand ducks enough to pay for his egg house, which cost $7,000*. He intends to keep a great many more next srason, and has agents ont all over the country buying up poultry and eggs. How He Felt, "I've got it to go through and I might jist as well brace up agin it as not," said Harry Johnson, a murderer, on the night before he was hanged in Paris, 111., "but it's an awful thing?awful. You nor no one else can have any idee uv it. To jit here as I'm sittin' to-night, lookin' out through theso bars, knowiu' that In Tirill hviTIO fhfi PDfl 11Y if, all tn me, is kinder benumbin' to me. I can't jist realize how it is. It seems to me all the time I wnz going to try some experyment to morrer. To-night I am breathin', that's wot I call bein'; to-morrer, while the world is Btill agoin' on around me, the air free 'b ever, the people laughin* aud joyous's ever, the whole course of natur' ogoin' on, I'm to stop, like a machine ; when my weight gits to the end o' the rope I'll stop like a rundown clock. It seems kinder strange to me, an' I feel like I'd gone over it so long in my mind that I'd orter know all about it. SUMMARf OP NEWS. Iitirntlu Imm from Btmi mad Abroad. The President asked for and received the resignation of Postmaster-General Jewell, and appointed Assistant Tyner to the position j Mr. Pratt, commissioner of internal revenue, has resigned The surrogate of New York has dismissed the petition to set aside the will of A. T. Stewart.... The oommittee appointed for the purpose formally tendered the candidaoy for the Presidency to Gov. Tilden, who accepted in a brief speeoh, putting speoial stress on the necessity for political reform.... A terrific thunderstorm extended over the Middle and New England States, the lightning striking in numerous plaoes, killing several persons and doing considerable damage to property The king of Italy has sent a congratulatory letter to this government on its centennial. ? The mercantile agenoy of B. G. Dun & Co., in their statement for the first six months of 1876,give the number of failures for thia period in the United States as 4,600, wiu ^'abilities amounting to $108,415,429. In the _rat six moaths of 1875 the failares were 3,563, with liabilities amounting to $76,000,000. In Canada the failures for first six months of 1876 were 858, with $12,604,236 liabilities. In the flrat quarter of the year the failures in the United State* were 2,806 ; in the second quarter, 1,791. The agency saya : " The marked decline in failures for the past quarter affords some encouragement to the belief, now very generally entertained, that we have seen the worst effects of the present depression, so far as casualties of this character are concerned. It is true that business continues in a very depressed condition ; that the results of trade, with rare exceptions, have been exceedingly unsatisfactory ; that values continue to decline, and that uncertainty and anxiety exist in all quarters. Yet, in the face of all this, there is comfort in the reflection that the causes which produced this conditio* of things have been almost completely reversed. In the place of reckless over-trading, we have now lessened sales guided by caution, and also prudenoe in purchasing." A fire in the Gosmoe oil refinery on th* Alle. gheny river, near Pittsburgh, destroyed three warehouses, three thousand barrels and eight carloads of raflned oil. Loss, $25,000 The House passed the resolutions declaring Gen. Schenck's action in the Emma mine affairs "ill-advised, unfortunate, and incompatible with the duties of his position." Theodore Deaohner, a Praeei&u gunsmith, at Ithaca, N. I., shot and killed Andrew Smith, a cartman, for alleged improper iDtimacy with his wife A special dispatoh states that the Sioux committed terrible atrocities on the bodies of Caster's command., Rain-in-theFaoe cnt oat Ouster's heart, and erecting it on a pole held a grand war d&noe aroand it W. 0. Handy, a farmer of Somerset oonuty, M'd., was tied by four masked robbers and his safe rebbod of $4,000, mostly in gold coin. He was robbed of $3,000 in a Bimilar manner ten years ago O. Adams Stevens, vicepresident of the Albany and Oreenbnsh (N. Y.) Bridge Co., has been arrested on a charge of embezzling $200,000 worth of the bonds of the oompany James S. Wilson, treasurer of the District of Columbia, is a defaulter to the ! amount of $7,000. Ihree brothers, named Charles, Albert and | 1 Adiff Thielhausen, residing in Newark, N. J., were formerly employed in Dawson's tannery, from whioh they were diecharged by the foreman, whom they have threatened with violence ever Binoe, until he finally sued out a warrant for their arreBt, which was put in the hands of Policemen Elsden and Diokerson to serve. No sooner had the officers appeared at the house and made known their errand to the brothers than each armed himself with a huge navy revolver, shooting Elsden dead on the spot and wounding Dickereon so that he expired in j a few hours. They then ran from the honse ! toward the tannery,on the way seriously shootj ing a Mr, Cahili. Arrived at the tannery they | askod for the foreman, and net finding him i shot and killed an inoffensive workman named ' Fisoher. At this time the foreman's son-inI law, John Albers, went into the room to find ] out what the firing was for, when he instantly i *r-*a ilfram ?n<l flvB h?l]? flrart into hfm. | ? | from the effects of which be died. Tbe work| men bad now recovered from the stupor into ! which they were thrown by the horror of the | scene, and closed in on the murderers with tbe j long knives with whioh they work; one of the I brothers having the right hand nearly severed at the wrist. By threatening with their revol| vers tbe desperadoes made their way to tbe I street, followed by tbe crowd, whioh now ; numbered hundreds. Tbe brothers ran toward i the river, and finding tbe crowd pressed them, Jamped into the water and endeavored to oscape by swimming. The crowd of enraged men meanwhile arrived at the bank of the river and began throwing missiles at the heads of the mnrderers in the water, who were exhausted by their long rnn and soon sunk from sight under the waters. The crowd stayed abont until oertain tbe men were drowned, and there was no need to inflict the lynoh law so froely threatened. While tbe British ironchd Thunderer was making a trial trip of a measured mile in Stokes bay, her forward boiler exploded, killing twenty-five of the crew and injuring sixty others, many fatally The Turks burned the 8erviro town of Kenterdeman Haywoed Grant, convicted of arson, was bung at Rome, Ga. He confessed to having killed 0ur men, one of whom was Gen. Hindman, of the Oonfederato army, at Helena, Ark The chief Bear-Stand-Up has arrived from Sitting Bull's camp, and says that Sitting Bull will fight until the Blaok Hills question is settled The grand total of the Texas oattle drive to July 6 is 305,290 head. Of this num Vinr Wl.finft h&vn bfifin held in northern lexas. while the remainder, 254,652 bead, have been driven north. BeveraJ thousand head which were wintered in northern Texas last season have also been driven north, which probably will swell the total to between 260,000 and 270,000 head A. heavy rainstorm swelled the Crow's Rnn creek, near Freedom, Fa., so that many houses on its banks were flooded, and that of ThomaB Llghthill was washed away. Mrs. Lighthlll and her foar children were carried off by the water and drowned. The stallion raoe for $2,000, between Judge Follerton and Smuggler, at Philadelphia, was wou by the latter, the fastest time for stallions in this oountry being made. There were four heats, the seoond being a dead heat. Time, I 2.173^, 2.18, 2.17, 2.20 DuriDg a galo | recently the covered bridge at Turner's Center, j Me., six hundred feet long, was blown into the river, and several barns were unroofed The fast mail trainn are to be withdrawn, as the government will not pay sufficient for them AJf. Bush, treasurer of the Intercolonial railway at Halifax, is a defaulter in many thousands Thirty four of the crew of tne ironclad Thunderer have died from the effects of the explosion In the United States House of Representatives, Mr. Williams (Dem.), of Michigan, introduced a bill granting a pension of $50 per jaoonth 13 Mrs. Elizabeth CnBter, widow of the late Gen. Custer. It also passed a bill giving the father and mother of the deceased officer $80 a month a pensions. All the families of officers and soldiers under Carter were aldo voted pensions on the basis of the $50 per month to Mrs. CuBter. Ex-Postmaster-Ceneral Jewell received ovations all along his trip through Connecticut on his way to Hartford Tho two committeoB in ohargo of subscriptions for the Old South .u i ; M | Guurcu, jdubiuu, waving r.nntju nu rxiuuBiuu 01 I the timo for the purchase of tho property until I January 1, and the same having been refused i by the sooiety, have abandoned all hope of saving the building, and tho work of demolition will be begun at onoe Vienna, Austria, has experienced an earthquake shook sufficiently strong to shake buildings and ring the ohnrch bells. No damage is reported Kansas reports that she will harvest the largest orops ever known in the State The excessive and continuous warm weather has caused an ice famine in New York oity and the prioe has advanced fifty per cent. In Algeria there is a river of genuine ink. It is formed by the union of two streams, one comiDg from a region of ferruginous soil, and the other draining a peat swamp. The water of the former is strongly impregnated with iron, that of the other with gallio acid. When the two waters mingle the acid of the one unites with the iron of the other, forming a true ink. Nobody is more like an honest man than a thorough rogue. / FORTY-FOURTH CONGRESS. Th* Business of General Interest Transacted. SHUTS. Mr. Frelinghujsen (Rep.),of New Jersey,from the conference committee on the Consular and Diplomatic Appropriation bill, reported that the committee riad been unable to agree, and moved that tho new conference asked for by the Hoose of Representatives be granted. So ordered. Mr. Allison (Rep.), of Iowa, moved that the Senate proceed to the consideration of the River and Harbor Appropriation bill. Agreed to. Mr. Allison said that the bill as it came from the Hoose appropriated $5,872,650. As reported to the Senate by the oommittee on appropriations the sum had been increased to the extent of $36 314. Mr. Windom called up the Honse bill to provide for the constraotion of military posts on the Yellowstone and Mussel rivers, and it was passed. Mr. Maxey (Dem.), of Texas, presented the joint resolutions of the Legislature of Texas asking for soch legislation by Congress as will protect tho frontier of that State against Indians and Mexicans. And also an appropriation to reimbnrse the 8tate for money expended in defending the frontier. The Chair laid before tbe Senate the unfinished bnBiness, being the River and Harbor Appropriation bill, the pending qaestion being on the motion of Mr. Thurman to recommit the bill, with instiuotioas to report a bill reducing the appropriation to $4,000,000. HOUSE. Mr. Payne (Dem.), of Ohio, from the con ference committee on the Silver bill, made . their report, and proceeded to explain it. The House recedes from its disagreement to the ( first Amendment of the Senate, and agrees thereto, which is to strike out the word "now" and insert the words "at any time'1 (the 1 meaning of which is that the silver coin which iB in the treasury at any time may ba issued to \ the amount of ten millions). Th?. Senate also . recedes from its disagreement to the House amendment to the eeotnd amendment of the Senate, and both Houses agree to the following substitute: i Sec. S. In addition to the amount of subst diary silver coin authorized by law to be issued in redemption of fractional currsncy, it shall ( be lawful to manufacture at the several mints, and to issue through the treasury and its 1 several offices, such coin to an amount whioh i (including the amount of subsidiary silver coin ( and fractional currency outstanding) shall in the aggregate not exceed at any time fifty mil- j lions of dollars. , 1 Sec. 4. That the silver bullion required for ] tho purposes of this act shall be purchased < from time to time at the market rate by the , secretary of the treasury with any money In the treasury not otherwise appropriated, bat no purchase of bnllion shall be made under this 1 act when the market rate for the same shall be j each as will not admit of the coinage and issue ; as herein provided without Iohj to tne treasury, 1 and aDy gain or seigniorage arising from this , coinage enall be accounted for and paid into the treasury as provided under existing laws 1 relative to the subsidiary coinage, provided 1 that the amount of money at any one time invested in such silver bullion (exclusive of such , circulating ooin)ehall not exceed $200,000. After farther debate the report was adopted ?yeas, 129 ; nays, 75. Mr. Sparks (Dem.), of Illinois, from the ; conference committee on the Indian Appropriation bill, reported that the committee had been unable to agree. The same committee (Messrs. Randall, Sparks and fiurlburt) was reappointed, the Senate conference being also the same. Under the call of States, bills were introduced and referred as follows: Mr. Hopkins (Dem.), of Pennsylvania, appropriating $100, uOO for the oompletion of the Washington monument. Mr. Puillips (Rep.), of Kansas, authorizing the President to accept the services of volunteers from Kansas. Nebraska, Minnesota, Wyoming, Colorado, Dakota and Utah against the Sionx Indians. Mr. Waddoll (Dem.), of North Carolina, for the erection of an equestrian statue to Gen. Coster in Washington. Mr. Landers (Dem.), of Indiana, for the immediate utinzatici of gold and silver bullion (by certificate of value) to encourage the coinage tnereoi, ana 10 aiiKe cue mtuuvu suvor dollar a fall legal tender. Referred to the committee of the whole. Mr. Eames (Rep.), of Rhode Island, in addition to the bill for the resumption of specie payment, requiring six per cent, of the amount of outstanding legal tender notes to be set aside in ooin every year until the legal tenders . are of equal value with gold. The resolution offered by Mr. Piper (Dem.), of California, for the appointment of a select committee of throe to proceed to California, after the adjournment or Congress, to investigate (conjoiutly with the Senate committee or otherwise) the extent and effect of Chinese immigration, waa adopted?yeas, 185; nays, 14. Mr. McDougall (Rep.), of New York, introduced a bill granting pensions to the heirs of officers and men killed in Gen. Coster's recent battle with the Sioux at increased ra es proportionate to that of $50 a mouth to the legal pension of a lieutenant-coloneL Pc'prrca. Mr. Stringer (Dem.), of ll..uvie, moved to suspend the ruled and adopt a resolution instructing the oommittee on banking and currency to report a bill .to repeal the act for the resumption of specie payment. Negatived? I yeas, 102; nave, 92?not the necessary twotbirdd in the affirmative. Inside a Fighting Turret Ship. I once heard an old sailor who fought in a monitor, describe the sound of the shots beating against the vessel's plates. Yon know what it is to be in a long railway tunnel,?how intensely dark it is, far darker than a starless night, and how yellow and feeble the lights look. Well, it is much the same in the bowels of a turret ship, when all the hatohways are olosed. Oil lamps swing from the beams, but they give no luster, and each flame seems like a little bit of yellow floating in the air. The men grope about and knock against each other, some bearing ammunition to the elevator connecting with the turrets,. others carrying coal from the bunkers to the furnaces underneath the boilers. The engines groan and rattle, and at times the captain's bell rings a sharp order to slacken or increase die speed. Meanwhile, if there has been a lull in the firing, the men move about feeling like a timid boy who is alone in a country lane after dark?not that they are afraid. The boy looks at every shadow, thinking there is a robber or a kidnapper behind it. The men anxiously await each moment, not knowing what deadly surprise it may bring forth. And as the battle goes on, it is not long before there is a ringing sound that is calculated to fill the bravest and strongest of nervo with a momentary terror. It is as though the inner deck and walls wero falling in upon tnem, and for a little while they are unable to realize what has happened?uncertain that they are not on their way to the bottom. Every ear is stung with the awful sound, and every nerve is thrilled. The great mass of iron seems to tumble over on one side and moan with pain before the vessel rights herself again and steadies herself for fresh exertions. Then she returns the compliments paid her with a vengeance, and her bull dogs in the turrets bark and spit Are at the enemy until we pity that unfortunate, and wish she would retire from the field. . The turrets are ranged along the deck. Tliey are about ton feet in diameter, fifteen feet high, and each one is fastened to a massive upright pillar of iron passing through the center and working in a socket on the lower detfk. The pillar is connected by a series of cogwheels with a steam engine, which causes it to turn the turret in the direction the captain requires. Two small portholes are cut in the plates of the turret, and furnished with solid iron doors. When the guns are to be fired, they are worked on slides to the portholes, which remind us of the month of a dogs' kennel, and their noses are pointed at the enemy. A second after they have uttered their bark, they are dragged in, and the doors are closed, iust in time, perhaps, to avoid two re turn shots which crack like thunder on the plates outside. While the guns are being loaded again, the men are hastened by the whistle and the crash of the shot and shell, which strike the iron walls of the turret. Above one of the turrets there is a little iron clad pilot house, whence the captain directs the movements of bis vessel. It has no window, and the only outlook is through slits, about an inch wide, in the plates. The intrepid man, whose position is tho most dangerous of all, stands there throughout the thick of the fight, controlling the rudder, the engines, and the turrets, by a motion of the hand or the tinkle of a bell. You may remember what I told you in a previous article?I am beginning to look upon you as old friends, by the I way?aDout aatairai women, ine nero of "the Monitor. Ho was watching the Merrimack from the slits in his little lookout boi, when a shell strnok the outside and knocked him senseless. All captains of turret ships are exposed to such dangers as this, anrl oven greater. ones ; indeed, as I have said, their positions are the most perilous.?St. Nicholas. In 1860 the country had 8214,000,000 in paper ourreucy and about $175,000,000 in oom. Now thero is hardly $200,000,000 in ooin to 8700,000,000 in paper. The Indian War. A correspondent with Gen. CJrook's army gives the following sad incidents of the battle at Bosebnd creek, the first fight with the Sioux: Looking behind I saw a dozen $ioux surrounding a group of soldiers who had straggled behind the retreat. Six were killed at one spot. A recruit surrendered his carbine to a pair ted warrior, who firing it to the gronnd, and cleft his head with one stroke of the tomahawk. William W. Allen, a brave old soldier, who had been twenty years in the army, fought with magnificent courage, and was killed. The Sioux rode so olosely to their victims that they shot them in the face with revolvers and the powder blackened the flesh. Captains Burrow's and Burt's companies of infantry by this time were firing well directed volleys from a position half way down the west side of the high bluff, and just after my escape the Snake Indians, gallantly led by their chiefs, Louissant and Cosgrove, dashed with thrilling shouts into the hollow, among the Sioux who were in t.Vio roar nf t.Vio oamltr an/1 drnva tViom back. Captain Henry, weak from the bleeding of hia wound, had been unable to keep up with the retreat and had sunk on the ground. Louiasant put himself astride the body and for five minutes kept the Sioux off, when some soldiers of his company rushed back and rescued him. About the same time a - corporal of F company, of the Third cavalry, made a last charge, with three men, and captured from the enemy the bodies of their comrades, thus saving them from the scalping knife. The Snakes took two scalps from the Sioux whom they killed in the hollow, and swung them, fresh and bleeding, with gleeful triumph above their heads as they returned. The infantry nnder Captains Burrows and* Burt executed their part admirably. Captain Henry's battalion of the Thirl cavalry and Captain Andrews' company of the Second cavalry, with all theii officers, displayed a most honorable degree of fortitude and bravery. They had a more arduous duty and suffered more severely than any other portion of the command. Colonel Royall was circumscribed by orders in every one of his movements, and the disaster attendin a the retreat would have been much greater had it not been bo skillfully directed by him. On the left of his line was a lofty crescent shaped palisade, toward which, early in the morning, he deplojed skirmishers. Had the order to fall back been a little later this wonld have been occupied. It wonld then have been impossible for the Sioux to have circled around to the rear, and a fire could have been turned upon the last high point held by them, whioh would hav* compelled them to hide behind it, while the cavalry could have charged up the hollow and reached them before they could realize th ir predicament. Then the soldiers could have dismounted aud fired such volleys as would have ended the fight and made a chase. Not a Poetical Campaign, The New York Herald says that the two parties have been unfortunate in the aain/>t~;<vn nt fr,r Prflmrlflnt and OCIOVVAVM W* VMUuavMow ? ? ? ? Vice-President, as their names won't rhyme, and thus we shall have no poetry in the campaign. The JSerald adds: We have received two poems already on Tilden and Hendricks, which we publish as terrible examples to warn our poets forever from wrestling with such jawbreaking subjects for verse. One is from a Republican; the other is from a Democrat. They are equally infamous. The Republican monster writes : The fight they'll all get killed in, Tho they dodge about and blend tricks; We'll scalp old Simmy Tilden And likewise Tommy Hendrioka. The Democratic demon utters the following discordant shriek : Oar ticket wants no gildin', In the game we'll take the ten tricks, Hurrah for Sammy Tilden And a tii?er for Tom Hendricks. At our request Cragin L Co., of Philadelphia, Pa., have promised to send any of our readers, gratis (on receipt oi fifteen cents to pay postage,) a sample of Dobbins' Electric Soap to try. Send atonoe. - * Pimples on the face, rough skin chapped hands, saltrheom and all oataneoos iffoctions oared, tho skin made soft and smooth, by the use of JciopzbTab Soap. That made by Caswell, Hazard A Co., New York, is the only kind that can be relied on, as there Jmifationo mnAa from ftnmmnn tar. whioh tie worthless.?Com, One of tbe earliest printers on record is said to have been the Emperor Trajan, who set up a column in Rome. Dr, Sage's Catarrh Remedy is no patent medicine humbug, got ap to dap<) tbe ignorant and credulous, nor is it represented ss being "composed of rare and preoious substances brought frem the four corners of the earth, carried seven times across the great desert of 8aharaon the backs of fourteen camels, and brought across the Atlantic ocean on two ships." it is a simple, mild, soothing remedy,a perfect specific for oatarrh and "cold in the head also for offensive breath, loss or impairment of the sense of smell, taste or hearing, watery or weak eyes, pain or pressure in the head, when caused, as they all not infrequently are, by the violence of catarrh. " A crowd of "horsemen" and others daily throng the stores in country and town for Sheridan's Cavalry Condition P&.vdert. They understand that horses cannot be kept in good condition without them, and with them can be on a much less quantity of grain. * The Vegetine has cured many cases of scrofula of tive.teD and twenty years' standing.* Schznox'b Ska Wxxd Tomc.-In the atmosphere experienced bars daring tbe manner montki, the lethargy produced by tbe beet take* away tbe desire tor wholesome food, and frequent perspirations reduoe bodily energy, particularly thoee rnffering from tbe Sects of debilitating diseases. In order to keep a natural healthful activity of tbe system, we must reeort to artificial means. For this purpose Sohenck's Sea Weed Tonlo is vety effectual. A few dose* will create an appetite and give freih rigor to the enervated body. For dyspepsia. It Is Invaluable. Many eminent pbyst-J?? /IrtnKM wKath?n Afifl hi MfflUe nentlj cured by tha drag* which are generally employed for that purpose. The Sea Weed Tonlo In It* nature ts totally different from suoh drags. It oonUlna no oorro?lve minerals or aolds; In fact, It assists the regular operations of nature, and auppliei her deficiencies. The tonlo In Its nature to muoh reaemblee the gastrlo juloe that It la almost Identical with that fluid. The gastrlo juloe Is the natural solvent whloh. In a health; oondltlon of the bodj, causae the food to be digested; and when this juice Is not lnoressed In sulBolent qnantltl**, Indigestion, with all Its distressing symptoms, follows. The Soa Weed Tonlo performs the duty of the gastric juloe when the latter Is deficient. Schenak'a Sea Weed Tonlo sold by all Druggists. The Markets. KSW TOBX ilC&ttle?Prime to Kxtra Bullocks 08 A 10)4 Common to QooU Vexaa-t...... 093^0 <j9X Milch Cows...... SO 00 070 00 Hogs?Live ? 0 ? Dreosed,00 <S 09JK Sheep 03X0 06* Lambs , 05*0 0?* Cotton?Middlings u*0 HJi Flonr? Extra Wcaiem. 5 06 0 6 78 State Extra 6 16 0 6 80 Wheat?Bed Western....... 65 0 11) No. 2 Spring 1 02 0 1 10 Bye?Stato....,,, 70 0 80 Barley?State. ?....., 56 0 63 Barley MsH 95 0 1 25 Oat?? Mlied WePtoni,. 81 0 87 Corn?Mixpd Western 8 > Hay,perewt (0 0 66 Straw, per ovn 60 0 1 (.6 Hops....76'??1C (<4l7 .. ..olds? 04 0 06 Pork-Mees 30 20 <4:0 20 Lard 11 0 11 Fish?iiacierol, No. I, now 15 00 07<i 00 No.3, n;-w. 10 CO 012 00 Dry God, pev cm ..... 0 00 0 H 00 Herring Sealed, per hox 20 0 W Petroleum?Cru:le 19^ BeOnnd?Vi hi Wool?California F1<m*? 16 0 23 Texas " 19 0 31 11 at ig auotruusu Butter?SUte 20 <$ 38 Western 23 <9 24 Wentern Yellow...... 18 4) 53 Weettwi Ordinary 1J (A 18 Chaeae?8t*t? IT-vctor?.,....,.. 1-7 & 10 i State Skimmed...... ra & os Weatera. C3 '4 f9 Errs?State H.V4 1W FUS7AL<>. Flour 0 2fl #10 CO Wheat?No. 1 Spring 1 27 0 1 17 Corn?MixM 6P}? '4 SI Oata 8'j & P6 Ryo , 73 <9 73 Barley ? <4 ? y ^ILi DELPHXi. Beef Cattle?Extr* 0W? 03* Sheep 04 0 Ot* Horr?I)ref.P"d 10J{ Flour?Vcnasylrcijla Extra 8 78 (II 3Whect?BM V.VHl^rr. 78 <* DO By 70 Q ,1 Onto?Yellow 63 CM f,l eo ft ? Oate? 8i (4 S3 Potrolt-aw?Orn-io 13X</Sl'\ WATSQTOWN, lfAgf. Beef Cattle?Poor to Choice...,..., < so ? T SI i Sheep 1 60 ? 0 60 LemSe 8 00 010 OCX HALf * D0UJU ^Visnd For the Next Half Year. Sulphur and molasses, the old fashioned internal remedy for the itch, is obsolete. That and other obnoxious akin diseases are cored in half the time, without disordering the stomacb, by GleicTs Sulpi.ttb Soap, the great external anti-soorbntic. D^pot, Grittenton>, No. 7 8ixrh avenue, New York. The tints produced by Hill's Instantaneous Hair Dye are like thoce of nature. * The relaxing power of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment is truly wonderful. Oases are already numerous where bent and stiffened limbs iiave heen limbered and straightened by it. When used for this purpose, (he part should be watthed and rubbed thoroughly. Apply the liniment cold, and rub it in with the hand. 8ee advertisement of Jameo' Bitters. OA percent paid to any on*. SunplMfor ]Oc. poet?l\J paid. Jem? Brookwaj, yuan, Beuta. Co.. nTy. 6 VERY dMtrabla KBW ARTICLES for Aawta. Mlr'd by J. Q. Qatmwxll k Qo.. Ob?Mr?70o*n. ILL. OATALOOUR OF ARTICLES FOR A Free. BOSTON NOVELTY CO.. Mu>. Af?0llt6 aOOK AGENTS WANTED THOUSANDS of oanrasneu hsra answered our o>ll to tall this famous new book?and ?et we want 5,0UU wore! It portrays life as It rtclly it In Kcrpt, Torkey, and the Holy Land, and contains 3li0 XayniActnl new Kngrarbg*. 600 Oatfita were 01 dared <? adranc,, and Agents are selling ll> to 20 ? day. 30<h Ihoutand now in prut. Agent*, note it your tin* to makt money uiUk the fattttt filing book tvtr ovblUhed. 0T OUTFIT iREK to all. Large pamphlet, with KXTRA terms, free. Address, A. D. WORTH1NGTON A OO . Hartford. Oona. CI O a day at borne. Agents wanted. Outfit and lenaa <P*'0fre?. Address TBUK A OO.. Angnato, Maine. Q fj Kxira Fine Mixed Car da. with 2fame, 10 UfJ eta., po?t*>ald. L. J0WK8 A OO.. WasaauTW. Y. a day at home. Samples worth 91 *eat | * ? v nw. wmiwa ? w.. roruana, m. "Drone able, rieeeant work 3 hnnaredfi now employed; L hondreds mow wanted. M- W. LOTKtX. grl*. Pa. ibtuma KPKfllFIf! Bwt la tti World. t??i???**? A8THliAoniV'lflv't. pop ham * co.. ug.tuat.. nns..Ps. TEAM? Agents Wanted la this county?Beat pLan erer offered?Exclusive territory glren?App y at once to the Great American Bei>oblloTeaOo..8l Barclay St.. fT.V, jf M WATCH KM. A Great Sensation. Sampu Tk < Watch and Outfit fret to Agtnlt. Better than T** Gold. Addreea A. OOOLTBB k OO.. Chicago. (jb*| A MONTH and traveling expenses paid tor Nalcimrn. Bo peddlers wanted. Addreea. Mokitob Makut'o Pp.. Cincinnati, Ohio. ff OCA A Month.?Agents wanted. 30 beet (ell Ha jC z||| tng article* laths world. On* (ample free IP tfUV Add'sa JAY BROW8QW?Det?iSjtlcfa Agents wanted.?twenty 9*11 m<wnt*d Ohromoe for 81. 2 sample* bjr mall.poet-pcM^Oa UornxiiiiL OHBOMO Oo.. 3T Base*a 6i. HewTork. A FORTUNE oan be Bade without ooet or rlefc. Combination forming. Particulars free. Address J. B. BUBOES, Manager, RawlinsOlty, Wyoming. fix k BTC1 n?Sellable Men, to eelUnew Ml AN JL thU article, every housekeeper will If All bay; beat pay erer offered: L. E. BROWN too, I19W. Sixth St., Cincinnati. O. T ^T^K BEST enniitds to JLI MEN aad LADIES. Address, wtth stamp, X HHKHMAN TEL. CO.. OBBBL1M. O. ii ! ?"* Morphine Habitabeolutelyand fVDlUflf speedily oared. Palnleee; aopcbhctty. UriUIa. A ptvtq siussiissgstfyitssas fl IT Pi Ii In made with It?psitlcoUrs free. O. M. avlilll J.M LufmoTQll M BBO. JTewYorfcA Ohloago. a- a A MONTH ? Agents wanted erery(r'lkll where. Bosbaeea honorable sad lint. THE MARKOE HOUSE, _ . _ philadelphia. 1ST Comfortable Rooms And Excellent Table. H. M. BEIDLtKR, Paoparrrog. TT8E TROPICAL HAIR DEW. If you want v_J luxnrloua, radiant, beantlful hair. It Invigorates, oleanats, promosee growth. Effect! magical. Excel* oil other preparations. Hafel' seat br mail for 8100. Addraw, Oa.EiXTOH,gBB ACo.,64aooondAro..?.r.01iy. \Tlnd ILeadlnc, Psychontury. Fascination, 1U. 8oul Charming, Mesmerism, and Lovers' Golda, snowing bow either aex may fascinate and gain the lor* ! and affection of any person they chooee Instantly. 400 j pages. By mall 50c. Hunt A Clo.. 13? 8. Tta St.Pbtla PENNSYLVANIA MILITARY ACADEMY. Cheater, Penn., Reopens September IS. Tnorongh Instruction In Civil ana Mining Engineering, I the Classics and English Branches. Yot Circulars ; apply to col. THEO. HYATT, Pres.. P. M. A. i raiihihsi&saaetir I D.S. Klorml Addr?u,VI,tUnj, R*w?rt, Motto.Comle, uul TrmaspsrtotCsH,. ISSuunplM,worthAft,MatroirtMldii>rMA?*Bta. ; J. 11. BL'FF0RIVS SONS. BOSTON, MASS. btablfchsd UK. TOUR own Likeness In oil colon, to I bow our work, painted on canvas 654x7*. from * photograph or I tln-tyr? t.ee with the B*m* Journal; ?2.60 y?er Sample of oar work and Paper, terms to agents, etc., 10 | cts. L. T. LUTHER, MjUVUisge. Erie connty. Pa. rpTT* A o ?The obotceet In the werld?Importers ! I nftn. price*?Largest Company la America? I staple aruoie?pleases everybody-Trade oonUnaaily lncrea.insr?Agents wanted everywhere?beet Indaoe! ments?don't waste time?send for circular to ROBT j Vesey tit. N. T. P. Q. Box 1291. anovelty. st'skjssss (Jurdn, containing a scene when held to the light (60 design*), eent post-paid for 2d cents; 6 packs, 6 names, 81. No other card printer has (he same. Agents wanted; outfit 10c. Paid Primer, Lock Boot P. Ashland. Mass. printer's rollers Made from the Patent" Excelsior" Com position, will recast, not affected by the weather; price, 30 oents per pound. I* used In printing this paper. . ? J. R. COLE. Astt.. 9O Ann Ht., N. Y. i f\ AGtftl :i & *i* fED FOR THE GREAT i Centennial history I It sella faater than any other book erer published. ! One Agent sold 61 copies In one dsy. Send for out j extra terms to Agents. natiosi-l Ppbi-ibhtho OomPaMT, Philadelphia, Pa. | i 1?AM1LY. BITTERS. IiroiaimoR Is relieved I JL' with one doae. jjtbpepbh, vxjhbtlfatius, huvxchx, Jaundic* and Biliouincm cored la a.abort time. Nekvoub Ibbitabiutz, khxummiuc, Kidney and Livt.b UOKPLiXNTS cnted In a few daya. Cure* PILTB, EbVBIPXLAB, 8CEQ*0LA,ULCEM, Boils ud all Skin Diseases by purifying the Blood. They will not Intoxicate, bat will cam abnormal thirst for itrong drink. Try them ! M. S. JA5LKS, M. D., Proprietor, Bmolclrn N. Y. For Hal* by Ortifiilate. Price ?I.Qt) A BOOK for the MILLION. MEDICAL ADVICE tffflSffSfiJST&S Catarrh, Bopture. Opium HabU, kc., SENT FREJC on rctaipt "br. BuU?,t&lipen*i7 No. IS N. 8th it, 8t. Lonii, Ma Everett House, ^ North dde Union Bqoare, New York City. 1 Coolest and Moat C'eotial Location In the (Jlty. Kept on the Koropoan flan. 1 KEK.NEK 4 WEAVER. Clarendon Hotel, Fonrth Arenas. oorner Boat 18th Street, New York Ulty. Tabl* <TSot*. O. H. KKRNKR. AGreatOffer S3 of IOU new and accond*hand PIANOS and UBDANM of flret-CliUMi maker* Uctudiag WATKRs', at lower prices thai e?er before offered. New J 1.3 octave Piano* for 8475. Boxed and whipped. Teriua, ?50 caan and 81u monthly ontll paid. New 0 Octave 6 M?p Uriail) Viih book ctOMeu amd r tool, wairaated,/or 9125-9^5 cn?h, and 85 monthly until paid, Hla?ir?ued tjntaloguea mailed. AOMNTa WANTKO. HO RACK WATiiltS <fc BOMS. 481 Hroadway, New York. ! STOMGTON LINE | BETWEEN NEW YOlttL, JuytS'xuiM, .oxmu Mini NEW ENGLAND POINTS. Tha only reliable Line running. Avoiding the daopsri and Sea oloknes* of Point Judith. Not a trip mlsaed In seven years. Finest fleet of hteamerton Long lilacd ; Hound. Leave New York from Pier 33< North j Hlver, Foot of Jay Mtrcet, Dally (exoept tiunI dajs), at d P. itt., arrlvlnff in fioston r.t 0 i o'clock next morning, Inv.rUblj on Una. Leave Boatcu from the Boa too <t Providence R. R. Depot, ! Park bq sua and Golnmbns Avenne, at 6 P. DI., ar It; log on bjara tbe Steamers In time for snppcr and In ' New York at U next morning, ahead of all other line*. Tickets to all polnti via this Line for sale at all prlnolpal Ticket Otfiowi. bacgaga checked through. Aak Xoi Tickets tU Stcnlngton Line. L. W. Jb'ILKINS, Gen. Paas. AgL P. 8. Baboook, Pres't. GLENN'S SULPHUR SOAP, The Most Effective External kejiedy jlveu v*rjc.xuiw tile Public. Glenn's Sulphtr Soap cnres with wondrous rapidity all Local Diseases | and Irrifation of the Skin, remedies and prevents Rheumatism and Gout, ' removes Dandruff, Prevents the Hair from Falling Out mid Turning Gray, and is the best possible protection ! against diseases communicated bj contact. complexional defects are permanently remold by its U6e, and it I exerts a most beautifying influj ence upon the face, neck, arms, and, | indeed, upon the entire cuticle, which it endows with remarkable pubitv, fairness and softness. This inexpensive and convenilnt specific renders unnecessary te t;. outlay attendino Snlphnr Baths. It thoroughly disinfects containi natod clothing and linen. PHYSICIANS ADVISE ITS USE Prices, 35 and 50 f ,,nts per Cake, Per Box, (3 Cart-,/ 60c. and $1.20. N.B. By porchulng the Urge caks* at CO e*oU you get triple the quantity. " Hill's Hair and Dy?. V Black or Brown. 60cC. S, CBITTINTON. Prw'r, 7 SMi h. H.T. ; HALt k DOLUS I .LEMEE^Sr I For theNext HalfYttr. I .<AddrwM,t><rt g^aggggfi^n. I CWABTHMOBK COLLEGE.?Tan Mto tnm I p PhlladaJphla. Under tin cara oi Frlaoda. OtPM i flj thorough OoUrglat* Education to both mim, wtw hn* panne the uim oootm* of etadr, and raoetra tha mm atgnm. ToUl gipanaea Inolndla? Tuition. Board, 9 Wuhiar, U?e of Eookj, etc., 83AO a Year. No Kxtra Obanraa. For Oatalofua. gMng rail pcrUMlan Nto Com? of Stody, etc.. addr?. KCTTAgp H. Ml?TTT. Ptaaldent, Bwgaiw Ooliao, Dalawara Co., rwmt. " FOUTZ'S I HORSE AMD CATTLE POWDERS, fl B onro or preront Plaaaaa H HUFTUHXS 1 DB. J. A. 8HEBHAI respectfollr notiflaaOw Rj afflicted to beware of traveling impoatora who an gotflf *bout tho country Belling Imitation appllancea aoa po:- I sonous mlztnro aa curatfve compound,fraadnlenUjr pre (endlngjofurnLsh his method.and thaiendanprf&rUifl Hehu oo agenU^DorhM^lle ewljutrncrwfSjKffM? fl hla buaineaa# Dr. Sherman It now In Chicago, Where m those Interested majrconaoHhlmlc person. aodntpUM m benefit of hUexperience and remedlea. ^orjgTHdfrgj^ Yoric.' nooks, with Ulraawes of ctita before *aa ***** cnre, mtiled on receipt of 10 cent*. There are Martyrs to hsfedsehs who ?al?fc* be cured by titiag Tarrant*s Seltzer Aperient. Thaftoaaoh^oTMfaMdiaodntttthemuytrttyPgy ?2^^,:sr?ss.*ffi,xss%Ss tail aperient will oari7 off nalurallj, aad absent |?P?; ceptibly, th? offendln# otw. The (ltm? to rssaorsd wd the heed ohmi to aeb*. > " BOLD BY ALL DBUOflim. : mirn ctttit lflh pnWi WITH ITS MILLIONS OF PORES. Ii the fTMt porlfler of the body. Draw the laflama* Uon and Boreneu from the Loan. limi Udain. 8pleen, Bowels, Bladder, Heart and Mom lea tbzoaith the akin with Collins' Valmln Planters, aad health and happlnetf are yoora. They af 'be treat ask ' medical dlteovery of the oeatary, aad utterly impaa i All other oliften. Collins'Voltaic Plasters CoeUet of uhrer and. slno jpiatte, carefully ittiAll, toother and Imbedded In * mmicun ronw nwu. (seeeot) Anarrow stripof cloth,wMcftfewell?lrn. novd. is pltoed over Uie plates. Wmb the plaeter to placed upon the affeoted part, which eaa be done u , quickie and coorenleaUj u with the ordinary wm . plaster, that l?,bjrmerep)eesnre of the hand.the aawrsi trannih and moisten of the skin caaesatfie ?W?i to tbiotf oat a current of electricity so cent}* (oat it H. icarcely possible to fed It otherwise than by tbeeooti*ing and grateful warmth prodooed, je, so fnetnrlac ?s to stop almost laomodiatW/ the mot ezoraeUUa* pain, remove torenee*, l?menese, and draw Inflsmms Uon from the longs, liver, kidneys, ipleen, Bowsto. bladder, heart and moscies. A single Collins' Voltaic Piaster*' roc local uatus. Is menses, soteaee*, wIsml nuujt>nees, an a InflswmMlon ?I the loam. Over. JMaaem, spleen, bowels, bladder, heart, and muMles, 1* equal to an amy ol doctors and acres ol piauta and tarty*- It instantly, banl>has pais and coieaees, (rtree life and ' rigor to the weakened andperniTzed maeeLs and larito, and Is so gratef ol and soo?Jtilki< that ocCe esia ta tfcw above ailments erttj other external application* sack s wires, ointments, tottans, snd llnimeata, will at owe* be discarded. Krea la parslyaU. epilepsy or fits, and nervous snnacnlar aflectiom, this planter, by rallying the nemos foots,has effected cores when rrtr) other known remedy has failed. Sold bt all Drools!*. Price, ?3 tents. Santby mafl on receipt of tS cent* lot oaf, ft, ?5 lot if*, or tar twel*?,! carefully wrapped sad warranted, by WKEKfl A PoTTUtt, rroprietors, Boston, Maea. The Wonders cf Modern Chemiftr*. ' sersepanllian 2oi_ is Associates. ChnnffP* <ta Hern and Pelt mm They Dnllr Orrnr after Usios a FfW RMte'ef-' Dr. Radway's Sarsaparillian : D no nluati^ l\U9UITI>llkj THE GEEAT BLOOD PUEIFIEE.', ;. J 1.- Good spirits, dluppMitaea of wi?>n?. langno* , molancholy; Increase ?iud hsrdnaa* of ilaah ud mk oles.eto. . Strength Increaaea, appetite lnrprore*, reZlsta fori,, fowl, do more soar ?i notations or waterbrash. good <11gMtioa, caim ud undlaturbod deep, awakan fcjph and '< 3. Disappearance of spot*, bk'tehee, pimple*; the ikin look* clear and batltby, the ariae changed from its t?rbid and cloudy appearance to a slew ouerry or aaber oolor; wxtor pviwvi freely fro? the bladder I brocgh the urethra without pain or scalding; HtU*o?nosndfineati,, no pain or weakness. ,. 4. Marked diminution Of quantity and frequency o< Inrolmiutry WMikfrolngdladiMtee (u ?fflletedUu*i*y). with ceitainty of permanent cars. Increased straagtla mhlbltod fa the secretin* stands, and fnaottaoal IllN uiooy reatorrd to til* severalorgan*. , . fi. Yellow tln>fH on the white of the eye*. and (ha nr*r~ thy.siffr.io appearancuof tha skin changed to a dear lively, u.d healthy color. . . Tho-o ?offertnar from wstt or ulcerated lung* ortubercles will reallx*- gnat besetlt 1b xpeotcutiMt freely th* tyuftU pble?ni pr mucons from the longs, air oellj,bn'Qchlor windpipe,tnro*t or head; diflsaunizul of tho freqiu-ncyoLctBgouRunenU'inaraaaaol *Uecgth throughout the ey?tfin slop pi (re of night sweat* and palne and feeling of weakne** around the anklaa, Ufa, ahoalders. eta,; cemtlon.of cold tad chills, sausa of TOtfociitlon; hard brenUilhg and paroxvsms of ooturh on lying down or ar Uingia the moralu*. Jul thaaa diatnaa. tng symptoms krudually and sorely disappear.__ 7. As Asy after <Uy the IXAHMAPAKIIXIAN la taknn, new signs of retaining health will appear; as the . blood improve* in strength and parity, disease vlli diminish, and all foreign and lmpnre deposlta, nodes, tumors, eancers, hard lamps, etc., be reeolred away sad ho nuinnH m.ido aound and healthy; nicer*, linr sores, syphilltio tores, chronic akin lliw gradoauw dlaappsar. 8. la oim where the system bai been Salivated, ?nd! Meroury, Quicksilver, Corrosive Sublimate (the prtneipie const!tuoot In the advertised SarseperUlas, mocUl ed In some case* with Hyd. of Potsua) hare accnnrulaied and become deposited In the bone*, 1 jinta, ate., caoaing cariee of the bones, ticket*, f pinaf curvature*, contortions, white swellings, varicose Twins, eto., tk* SAKS A PA HI I.MAN will resolve away these deposits and exterminate the riras of the dbeaae'from tbo ' system. : ? 9. If those who are takiag these medicines for tbe cars of Chronic, Scrofulous or SrpUIHt'b diseases, however slow ma* be the core, " feel better," and Und their general hoaitb improving, their flesh and weight increasing oreven ke?pingtt* own, it la a sore sign that the enroll ' progressing. In these diseases the yaMeat afchsr get? batter or worse?the vims of the disease Is not I sac tire: If not arrested and driven from the blood, it wSl spread and continue to undermino the constitution. _>*aoon' as Ulb H4Kl>iAPAIilLMAN makes the patinct " feel better," every horr yon will glow better and increase la health, strength acd flesh. ' The great power ot this remedy fai In dlnbtSM that * threaten death?aa ht -Consumption of. the Longs ant Tnbercnloas Phtalsts, Strofola, Syphiloid Disease . Wasting, Degeneration, and Ulceration of the Kidney*. Diabntca, Stoppage of TTatec finstantaneous relief afforded where cat tint* rs have to be u?ed. t btin dolDg awn with the painful operation of toting these tcisuiuaeuft). dissolving stoun ia the bidder, and ;n nil esses of Ji. , flammation ?*f the Bladder and Kldneja, la Chroi.i cases of I*eac>-rbea and Uterine dhsaaea.'v 1 in h-xImj. tiard lamps and tfpbtloid n^cers; i.. l?My- to vna?'wit ?oru thront. olcsti, aBaintoowc r , at tho tan it* ii tent, dt?r?P' t*. rtwnnatjern, rota** , in mercmlAl deposit*?H Is la thoMi tenlbla 'nr '' dl?o?ii.V" ? 'bo tiiimnn body h" ' ?? J tf - ?! * VHIT bOUf Of *?DC* ? #WtU*t . wherein lhi? *?*.t r. me<ly,ca?!l?n^^8U^bmrm and admlt.viou of tue ?tc*. It U1n ?wtteyej,wn? all thH p'.ei?uip* of filit^cp?W^?<wtoa^nit, aafortuD it-, nnd by It# ^ndtrfui. u*bct It ivst/vn* t!i? hop?le? ti a f?w ?"? M ,_ .. JJSJu-uco whew iLto ?iwi rumwiy standi alone la lt? "in^oJ.nl^Wn tbat <>' lew troubled wiMvv ? *?w doM* wl]lla most c*?*. JiLr. fevr bottlM In more.ag*?T*ti*l fonaa, work 4 p*rmTho?X:^ with chronic dl?^^nWp?roh?-' Ue. 8oldby dmfiglats. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF WILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE INFLAMMATION Or THE KIDNEYS. INFLAMMATION OK THE BJ'ADDKR, inflammation ofthkbowkls. CONGESTION OF THB;LUNGS. KflRF TTTROAT DIFFICULT BREATHINtr, B0R PALmAT^ON OF THK HEART\ HYSTERICS, CROUP DIPHTHERIA, CATARRH. INFLUKNZA. HEADACHE. TOOTHACHE, MUMPS. NEURALGIA. RHEUMATISM, COLD cklLLS, AGUE CHILLS. The application of the READY RELIEF to t> ? part or put* where the pain or difficulty eiiiU w. l **T nnfd"p*U *1 ?*? hmhWnf <-*tor wfll. In n f'-r ACH?Ut&AURTBURV^BtCK ' HEADACHE, DIAli . RHEA. DYSKNTERV-, COLIC. WIND IN THti BOWELS, and all INTERNAL PAINS Travelers ^hnotd alHraya carry a bottle of RAT*' WAY'K REM EF with thcra, A few dropeln wate will prevent slcknoM or palm frutn clnn<e of water. IT IS BETTER THAN FRENCH BRANDY O" BITTERS AS A bTlMULANT. Price 60 Cents. Sold by DrncfUts. DR. RADWAY'S REGULATING PILLS Perfectly taetelesa, elctrantly cnetrd with iweet nn. purse, regnle.re, purtiy,cleaiiao aud Itreosthea. RAI WAY'S Pll.LS, forthecureof all d moreen o(Ut Stomach, Lltor, Bowula, Kidney*. Bladder, Nerrot r Diseaacs, Hea.tacho.Cuiutlpation, Cogtlveneo, Indices, tlon, Dyspepsia, llii'imnecB, Billons Ferer. IntUmmv. tlon of th-i BuU eU, 1'uoa, and all Derangements of the Internal Viaceri. Warranted to effect a positive euro. f!e:"??rinu? (true*. 11' 'Jliserro the following lymptomi reuniting froaj Dio.)ra?r?o(the Dl?re?tl?<. Organ*: ' Constipation, Iawjtd Pil??, Fullne?a of the Blood la the Head, Acirtily of tho Stomach, Kiomw, Hpartburr IllsKUJt of l'noil, F'lllneea or Weight to tho Stomach, Soar Ernctat:o:i*. Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit ( ^ I the Stomach, Swimming of the Head-Hurricd andl-' bcalt Uteatbin*;, Fluttering at the Heart, Choklna .? Suflocntin* S?u*Ationa ?rheo la a Lyiat Postura-D'-ii. ceea of Vision. Dot* or Wehe before the Right. Fen f *nd Doll Pain In the Head. Deficiency of PermpliiiloYellownesi of the Skin and Kjrn, Pain In the Bid-* C'heot, Llmba, and Sadden Fhabee ax Heat, Baralur! J the Flo?h. A few doaeaof RADWAT'R JPILT,* will (mC'1 aystem from allthe almve named disorder*. Hrlte ? > Ceuta per Uox. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. Read "FALSE AND TRU2." Send one letur-atamp to RADWAY 4: CO., N... 32 \ynrren Strt-ct, New Y?rk. InfornaU. * worth thona&nda will be gent yon. N Y N V So >i? 1 WUC.ri.KlS TO A DYER TIM Bits I ? " pj?* Jl* :? y th'tl 7??e e*w *b? MiNtl"% | nent In "fc'e PKjor, .