Scamlal-Monirers.
Do you hear the seamlal-monger!}
Passing l.y,
Breathing poison in a whisper,
In a sigh?
Moving cautiously ami slow,
Smiling jtwcftiV tln-v go.
h Never noisy glitllni; Miioo'hly like a Miake,
Slip]ling li'-rc- :ii 1 Milling there
Through the me:ol(>\vs freMi im l tail-,
Leaving subtle si imp au 1 poi-on in their wake?
Saw you not tho scandal-monger
As she sat,
Beaming brightly "in atli tlu rosos
On her lia! ?
In her dainty gloves an 1 <11 - ss,
Angel-like ami u<>t!iit<g lc>s,
Seemed she?casting smiKs and pleasant words
about,
Onco she .-hrugged and shook hei head,
> Raised her eyes and nothing sail,
Then you spoke of friends, and yet it left a
doubt.
Did you watch tin- scandal-monger
^ At the ball,
^ Through the ir. .-i . rythm, beauty.
Light and all
Moving hero, and moving there,
With a whisper as air.
Casting shadows on a woman's tame?
Just a whispered word or ghnee ?
As she floated through the danee,
And a doubt for ever hangs upon a name.
You will find the scandal-mongers
Everywhere;
Sometimes men, but often wome n,
Young and fair;
Yet their tongues dip foulest slime,
And they spend their leisure time
Casting mad on those who elimb by woik and
worth t
Shun them, shtiu.them as you go?
Shun them, win ther high ?>> low;
They are but the cursed serpents of the earth
TTT-R f!AVP nv TVE A TTT.
In the early days of the French Involution
the prisons of Lyons were tilled
with thousands of unhappy victims.
'Seventy-two prisoners who wore con.
downed were thrown into the Cave of
Death on tho ninth of December, there
to await the execution of their sentence.
This could not be tho next day, because
it was the Peeadr.
One' oi' the prisoners by the name of
Porral. only twenty-one years of ape, of
a bold and' ardent spirit, profiled by
this interval to devise a plan of escape.
His siste rs having, by weans of a very
large bribe, obtained access to this
abode of horror, began to weep around
him.
"It is not now a time to weep," said
he; " it is'a moment to arm ourselves
with resolution and activity, and endeavor
to find some way by which we
cau elude out- menaced fate. Bring me
tiles, a chisi 1, a turn-screw and other in
strameuts; bring wine in abundance;
bring a pon ard, that if minced to extremity,
wo may not perish without tlte
means of defense. Uy this grate, which
looks into the Hue Lafond. you can
give me these things. I will be in waiting
there the whole clay to receive
them."
The sifters retired ; and in the course
of the day. at different visits, brought a
variety of tools, twelve fowls, and about
sixty bottles of v?ii;e. Porral communicated
his project to four others, bold and
active as himself, tirid the whole business
was arranged to his complete satisfaction.
The evening arrived ; a general supper
was proposed?the lust, they .thought,
that they should ever eat. The prisoners
supped well, and exhorted each
other to meet their fate the next mora
ing with heroism and fortitude.
At 11 o'clock the associates began
their labors ; one of them was placed as
a sentinel next the door of the cave,
armed with a poniard, ready to dispatch
. the turnkey if, at his visit at 2 o'clock
^ in the morning, lie should appear to
. . suspect anything; wie orners, piunng oh
?- their coats, begau lo make their researches.
?*. At the extremity of the second cave
they found a iftge door, ami on this
they began their operations. It "was of
oak, ami double-bai red ; by degrees the
c hinges gave way to tho files, and tin?'
door wa-< 110 longer held by thepj.bnt
still they could not force itppfn it was
^ held by something other side,
A hole was madp-jTTit with a chisel,
and, loohiugtlvfmigh, they perceived it
was tieji4^avery strong rope to a post
n^J^rfstancc.
% > *rhis was a terrible rnonieut! They
endeavored in vain to cut the rope with
[ the cliisc-1 or file, but they could not
+ roach it. A piece of wax caudle, how
ever, was procured ; and being lighted
and tied to the end of a stick, they
thrust it through the hole in rhe door
- and burnt the cord asm. dor. The door
was thon opened and the adventurers
; proceeded forward.
.. % * This door they found led only to
r another vault, which served as a depot
* for confiscated effects and merchandise.
Among other things was a large truuk
filled with shirts. They profited by
this discovery to make a change of linen;
and, instead of the clean ones which
they took, they left their own, which
they had worn for many weeks. Two
doors besides that at which they had
entered now offered themselves to their
r choice. .! ti*\v began to utiacit one; oui
they had scaiv.?Iy t he file when
tlioy were by the barking of a
dog behind.
A general consternation seized the
party ; the work was stopped in an inv
. .stunt; perhaps tin> door led into the
* - apartments of the jailor. Tho idea recalled
to their minds tliat it was now
near on to 2 o'clock, the time of his
visit. One of the party returned tol
ward the Cave of Death to see whether
all was safe, and it was agreed to suspend
their labors till his return.
When the scout returned be said that
on his arrival ut the Cave of Death he
- *. shuddered with horror to lind the turnkey
there already. The n an, however,
who had been left as a .sentinel had en\
" gaged him to diinL with him ; and the
if Kcout joining the piny, they Iiati
i > Lim so well that he at l.;.a reeled oil
without examining the cave much, and
was in all prov ability luid hi<t asleep
for the rest of the night. This was
t* very consolatory news.
Quitting the door at which they had
i " heard the dog barking, they applied
themselves to the other. They found
pH-' here folding doors, one of which they
opened and found themselves in a lonjr,
dark passage. At the end they perceived
still another door , but, listening
very intently, they heard the sound of
f. . voices: it, in fact, led to the guardhouse,
where several soldiers in their
national uniform were assembled. This
- v?a&, indeed, a terribly stroke. Hud
r * they the:i go ne so fur only to meet with
a worso obstacle than any they had yet
j| encountered ? Must all their labors
W prove, then, at length fruitless?
r Only one resource then remained,
and this was a door v> Jiich they liad
> passed on the side of the passage, and
fef"5. -r- whJfili they conceived rnu-t lead to the
great court of the Hotel de Yille.
In fact, having forced the door, it appeared
that they were not mistaken;
that they were at the bottom of the
staircase which led into the court. It
' was now half-past 4 o'clock; the morning
was dark and cold, while rain and
. snow were falling in abundance. The
associates embraced each other with
transport, and were preparing to mount
the staircase when i'orral cried out:
"What are you about? If we atempt
to po out at present all is over
- * with us. The gate is now shut, and if
any one should be perceived in the
court the alarm would instantly he given,
and all would be discovered. After having
had the courage to penetrate thus
far let us have resolution to wait awhile.
At 8 o'clock the gate will be opened and
the passage through the court free.
We can then steal out by degrees, and
mingling: with the numbers, we can go
away without being perceived. It is
not till 10 o'clock the prisoners are summoned
to execution; between 8 ai d 10
there will be time enough for all of us
to get away. We will return to the
cave, and when the time of departure
arrives each of us live wi'l inform two
'i, others of the means of escape offered.
We shall then be fifteen, and goin^ out
three at a time, we shall pass unobserved.
Let the last three as they set
off inform fifteen others, and thus in
succession we may all make our escape.
This plan appeared Judicious and safe;
it wfts unanimously agreed to, and the
associates returning to the cave, made
choice of those who should first be informed
of what they had done.
llontellier, a notary, and Baron de
Challo to whom the means of escape
were ofibred, refused to avail themselves
of them, the former from a confidence of
. a pardon, as he had been mistaken foi
his brother; and the latter, though in
1," the flower oUtis age, declared that all
jfc hii lies to this world were broken, an<"
|9k \liat life had nothing now to offer whicl
L .
! could make him desirous of prolonging
| it. They were both guillotined in the
j morning.
| The fate of the fifteen who fled was
j very dissimilar, and the escape of th<
i rest was prevented by the imprudence o
! one of them. The last of the lifteer
who, in quitting the cave, was according
to the plan arranged, privately to apprise
I fifteen others, instead of doing so, criei
; aloud:
"The passage is open ; let every on(
: that cau, escape."
This excited a great movement among
the prisoners. inoy arose 111 uu m
1 stunt, doubting whether what they hear*;
! could be true, or whether ho who ut
1 tercd these words was not mad. Tin
noise they made alarmed the sentine.
i without; he called to the turnkey; tliej
; hastened immediately to the cave, per
; ceived what had been done, and closing
ii}) the doors by which the prisoner
!iad escaped, placed a strong gnarc
' before it. Xesple, who had excited this
movement, was, with three others, taker
and executed. Another of the fugitive.'
took refuge in the house of a friend, in
j au obscure street; but. he was diseov
j ered, brought back and guillotined.
It was not thus with Porral, the orig:
inal author of the plan. He was the
first that came forth from the cave. At
he passed the sentinel in the court, he
' said:
" My good friend, it rains and sue
| very hard; werel in your place I would
j not remain out of doors such weather,
but would go to the tire in the guard
j room."
The sentinel thanked him, and, following
his advice, the coast was left
more clear for the prisoners. Terra]
took refuge in the house of one whe
was considered a good patriot, and esI
caped the observation of a party of
| commissioners who entered the house,
As soon as they were gone, lie began
to think of making his way out of the
city as fast as possible. AVhen he arrived
at the Palace Belle-Courhe fouiul
parties of the gendarmerie dispersed
every where. Torral went into a house,
l.-i'iiT l.-Tinwr! tvlm he was. en
treated an asylum.
The inhabitants wore women, timid
<o excess, but the desire of saving an
innocent person rendered them courageous.
They conducted him into n
garret and concealed him behind some
planks standing up in a coiner.
The gendarmes arrived; they searched
the house; they came iuto the garret
where Porral was concealed. Hero
they found a large cask, the top oi
which was fastened down by a padlock.
They asked for the key; the
women went downstairs for it. While
they wero gone the gendarmes leaned
against the planks, while a second one
said:
" Twouhl be droll enough if we were
[ to find one of the fugitives concealed in
this cask."
" More likely plate or money," says a
third, " for it seems very heavy."
The key at length arrived; the cask
was unlocked and was found to be full
of salt. The gendarmes swore at this
disappointment, visited the roof of the
house and then retired. In tiie evening
Porral, dressed in women's clothes,
with a basket on his head and anothei
o.i his arm, passed the bridge of La
Guilletiere and quitted the eity.
Gabriel, another of the fugitives, concoaled
himself among the bushes in the
i marshes of the Trevauxe Perracli, where
ho was nearly frozen to death, but he
got away to a place of safety.
One young Couclioux, who was one of
the live that had opened the way of
escape, made choice of his father, who
I was nearly eighty years of age, as one
of the fifteen, but the poor old man's
logs were swollen, and ho was scarcely
able to walk.
' Fly, fly, my son ! " he said; "if thou
hast the opportunity fly this instant! I
command it as an act of duty, but it is
impossible that I should flv with thee.
T lived loner enoucli?my troubles
will soon be finished, and death will
be deprived of its sting if I know
thou art in safety." -'
The son assured him- tiiat he would
not quit the prison' without him, and
that his persj>4ing in his refusal woidd
onlyenvl-'in the destruction of both.
4 Tli^father, overcome by his dutiful
"'afiVctiou,yielded, and, supported by liis
son, made his way to the bottom of the
staircase, but to ascend it was out of his
piwor; he could just drag his legs along
he ground, but to lift them up was impossible.
Ins son, though low in stature
and not strong, took him up in his
arms. The desire of saving his father
gave him renewed strength, and he
carried him to the top of the stairs. His
filial piety was rewarded, aud both
father and sou escaped.
The Feet.
Corns- that common bane of mankind?are
sure to result from the wearing
of any boots that do not fit comforti
ably and allow ample space for the
proper movements of the joints of the
feet and the toes; bunions, which are
painful tumors formed by an actual
' inflammation of a small sac or bursa
situated over the joint of each great toe;
weak ankles, which are very commonly
produced by wearing the fashionably
made boots with high heels,-together
with a relaxed condition of the muscles
1 * 1 - "cntfJnr* 4-/-\r\
ami tenuous ox iuh icy , lu-^iumug cnails,
which are not only most painful,
but also take some time to be thoroughly
I cured, and necessitate actual operative
| interference; chilblains, which, although
they may and do take place in
those who do not wear tight boots, are
still invariably the outcomes of them,
from interrupted circulation ; cold feet,
from the sjuue cause; and last, but by
| far the worst of all, an actual diseased
condition of one or more joints either
of the toes or of the foot itself. All
these, then, may be the wages wo have
to p'iv for the comparatively small
pleasure of being considered possessed
of "a pretty foot."
But because you are not to wear
tight-fitting boots, it is no reason that
you should go to the other extreme and
wear the hideous unshaped things that
are often seen ; all I wish to insist on is
that you should be satisfied with the
size and shane of the foot Providence
way have ordained you to lie the possessor
of, and do your liest to maintain
it in its natural and healthy condition.
I How, then, can this be done but bv
having your boots made exactly and
comfortably to lit yon ; by never allowing
yonr bootmaker to measure youi
foot while raised from the ground, remembering
that the foot expands quite
one-twelfth of its length, and laterally
still more, when the weight of the bod\
is upon it ; by having a last made ol
the exact shape of your foot, and ahvay>
having your boots made upon it; bj
never wearing those abominable higl
and narrow-pointed lieels, which arc
positively dangerous, ungainly, and cer
tain to lead to bad results ; and, finally
bv having the soles of your boots mad<
of fairly substantial thickness, and o
not too soft or porous leather.
By these means, then, you will beena
bled to take the exercise absolutely
necessary for your bodily health, t(
venture upon the longest walks with n<
dreaded prospect of discomfort, ami t<
I retain f^r your feet in your old age tliei
normal shape awl condition ; and tin
price you will have to pay for this much
! coveted end is the were loss of tin
1 whispered compliment, dropped fron
the lips of thoughtless men or ignoian
fools, " What a prettv fuot!"'?II<rrper\
Weekly '
Liked Asparagus.
The Emperor William, of Germany,
has a very sensitive palate, and is verj
fond of asparagus. At one of the din
ners at the royal castle at the time ol
his grandson's marriage the emperoi
' remarked: "It is very strange; even
time I eaf, aspaiagus at the castle il
tastes of soap, which it never does al
| the palace." The most searching in
quiries were instituted, but nothing
1 suspicious could be discovered. Htil]
i the empc-ior had been so positive thai
another council of war was held, thistime
comprising the treatment of tin
| vegetable from the entrance into tin
castle to the time of its being served al
table. The result was a complete vin
; dication of the emperor's acute sense ol
: taste. The castle kitchen is so un
J favorably situate ! as to necessitate tin
i j carrying of the dishes to be servei
across the cattle yard, during whicl
i transit they are placed in covered bas
kets. In order to kco the asparagus
i hot the asparagus dishes are coverei
with an extra supply of hot napkins
These napkins, like all other table linen
are washed in soap, and asparagus
i being more tlmn ordinarily sensitive, i:
11 but too apt, to acquire a soapy tast<
from the l>rief contact with the napkins
' i The dish being first handed to the em
! peror, he could hardly help taking ji'.s
i the very one most impregnated wi'l
I J tho offending taste. Henceforth hi
[ | favorite dish is not to be covered wit!
t i * Qtkpod" napkins.
... - . i- a f- ...uttaO.'. . .1 k*:
" v
f
MaaBnaBBaaBiBMqraaaaBai
r THE FARM AM) HOUSEHOLD.
Flavor in l'oitltry.
> I A writer in the Country Gentleman I
* j discusses the subject of flavor in fowl's
f 1 flesh. Among other remarks he says:
' That breed has something to do with it
> : may not bo denied, bnt that food lias
} I more can safely be credited. Food not
I only affects the flavor, bnt the quality
I I V/\n-1u +l,of o,-n Cot.
; aim quaimt^ ui^w. iUi?? t*?w ?>?v .
> i toned on corn alone produce not only a j
| sweet-flavored flesh and plenty of it, but |
> the fat is apt to bo oily, and possess a I
- strong, unpleasant odor. This is iu a j
I ! groat measure governed by the brood.
j The small fowls will take an enormous J
> ! weight of fat in comparison with the
I I size. That small fowls are superior j
where quality is desired is a decided {
, fact; but where quantity is the desidor- j
' j atum, irrespective of other qualities,
5 | the larger fowls may bo cultivated, cs- j
I peciallv the Asiatics.
J I T>,.?l.,i.l,?n4 n.nlv.e wlllfo flpsli.
i ' but nothing flavors it like ground corn j
; j and oats intermixed equally, and scald- j
i , od or mixed with either milk or water, I
i but not enough for the milk to run. !
! This should be given fresh each day, I
and not allowed to sour or ferment, i
| Fowls require good, sweet food. Musty
j meal or moldy grain are always unsuit- j
, able. For table use, where a line ilavor
! is desired, fowls should be confined in i
! clean quarters, and be fed oil wholesome j
1 food for at least one week before
slaughter. Where fowls are confined in j
small compass, some absorbent should :
bo used to neutralize tlTe droppings, j
otherwise the flesh will become tainted j
; from the disagreeable odor arising!
. therefrom. For this purpose there is
? , nothing better than air-slack lime or j
unleached wood ashes, where there is
f sufiicient ventilation.
t Farm nmt ( ut'ilrn Note*.
1 j Lime applied to the compost heap
| will effectually destroy the seeds of
' i woods.
' ! No man will ever got a first-rate, even, j
j or profitable flock of sheep, who does
' I not make a practice of yearly culling.
We found last year that the Beauty of
! Hebron was subject to scab more tban
. I the Snowflake or Early Hose, both of I
l I which were planted under the same j
, | conditions. IJmbank's Seedling is said ;
to be especially free from this disease, j
All soils are improved by mixing.
; The physical properties of the soil have j
. j an important influence upon its average j
' fertility. The admixture of pure sand
i with clay soil produces an alteration
i | which is often beneficial, and which is j
. I almost wholly mechanical. The sand j
I opens the pores of the clay and makes ,
j | it more permeable to the air.
There is no one special fertilizer that !
1 1 will meet all the needs of grass. A good !
I mixed compost is the best. Such a one j
could be made of swam}) muck, rotten j
i leaves or manure, or oven earth for the
! basis, and gypsum, salt, bone flour, or |
I super-phosphate of lime and fish guano !
i 01 nitrate of soda. Ten loads of the j
i ! coarse material ami 100 pounds each of i
| the others would make an effective top- j
i dressing for an acre; or the artificials |
[ might be mixed with one load, and this |
' ( applied to an acre, if the coarse stuff is \
. j scarce.
The cheapest meat for the farmer is '
j mutton. It may safely be said to cost
! ! nothing, as the fleece from a sheep of a
! | pood breed will pay for its keeping. I
1 Then, for additional profit there is a
, j lamb or two, the pelt of the animal if
;J killed at home, the excellent manure !
from its droppings, aud the riddance of.
the pasture from weeds,, to which sheep j
! are destructive foes. With the exception i
I of poultry, muttor is also the most con- i
I venient meat for the farmer. A sheep j
j is easily killed anil dressed bv a single \
| iiand in an hour, and in the warmest |.
; weather it can he readily dispprfcu "of
| before it spoils. Scienqe^tnd experience !
j both declai-Qjt-Hie healthiest kind of
meat/- .-j
-^An exchange says : We had a calf ,
i which refused to take milk or water, j
In a pailful of water we put a handful
' of bran and a bit of sugar. The calf I
drank the "cocktail" a'ul licked the
j pail. It grew very fast.
Facts and experiments go to provo ,
j that a cow high in flesh will yield more !
, butter in proportion to the yield of
i milk than one in low flesh.
Corn requires fertility and cultiva- ]
tion, without which, it matters not how
I good your seed, you will never have a i
| good crop, however propitious the sea- j
son may be.
Boiled cabbage and potato skins are
highly relished by laying liens. Onions ,
are a regular delicacy for al' kinds of i
! poultry.
Vines are said to extract from the ;
J soil only about three-fourths the quan-1
; tity of potash and phosphoric O'-id which i
: the cereals take up.
Potash is an excellent fertilizer for the j
grape vine. Fork in around the roots a
few pecks of wood ashes. Cow dung
contains a large portion of potash and
1 but a comparatively small amount of
I nitrogen, consequently it is a better
I fertilizer than horse manrre for the
I grape vine.
A New York farmer writes that lie j
I planted eight acres of low, mucky land i
I witn red kidney beans. Ou the twen- !
j tieth of July, alter cultivating the beans j
i for the last time, purple top strap leaf i
turnips were sown between the rows j
with a hand drill. The beans yielded !
twenty-one bushels to the acre, and the j
turnips were a splendid crop. This, !
being his'first crop of turnips, is a very j
encouraging experience.
To make a complete manure from
swamp muck, says Dr. Stewart, we |
" * n rn .i.^ i
I would proceed as ionows: juuhj m 0 !
honed swamp muck forty bushels, or
; one two-hor?e wagon ]oud; mix \
thoroughly with it five bushels of wood
ashes, 100 pounds of line bone flour,
100 pounds of finely ground plaster and i
throw it into a heap, in which it will j
heat and ferment, and leave it for two j
j or three months. This will be equal to
I twice its bulk of the best cow manure. 1
1 If night soil could be added to it it
' would be increased in value.
I
ltCCilWN.
A Summeu Son\?Tn an article on
"Summer Soups" Mrs. lieeelier gives '
the following as a receipe for a most
^ delicious pea soup: Put half a pound
| of butter into a soup kettle over the fire
1 and add to it a quart of green pear.
Shake them rouml constantly for fifteen !
mirmtns to l.vnvMit their brownincr.
k I--- v,
j Then take out half the peas and set
. i aside; then pour in two quarts of vege- j
j. | talde stock, or some prefer boiling
water. Cut fine about a pint of spinach,
! half a dozen green onions, a little mint
t if agreeable and a head o: celery. Set
, | the kettle wliorc this will stew slowly
^ j two hours till the materials are reduced
| to a jelly, then add the pint of peas re'
served, three tea<-poonfuls of sweet bnt^
| tor rolled in flour, two tablespoonfuls j
j of salt and one of black pepper. Let it
just boil up, then pour into a hot soup J
. tureen and serve immediately.
) Omi-Fakhionkp (iiNom:i;i:KAi).?Two i
j cups l?est New Orleans m<<hisses, one
) i cup hot water, scant half-cup melted
i j butter, a heaping teaspoonful soda, a
3 little ginger and salt. Mix as soft as
. possible and roll out one and a half j
3 inches thick. Bake as quickly as von
! | can without scorching, and eat warm or
t I cold with butter.
.? Flit'it Pies.?Fruit pies in deep
, dishes, such as are made by the English !
) and French, are preferable to ordinary
I fruit pie, because von obtain more juice !
{ and fruit. The best method of making
\ j these is as follows: Take a deep, oval
. [ pie dish, china (not tin), line the edge ,
f ! with paste, also about half its depth iu.
| side. Now place a small cup, an egg
. 1 cup is best, and one that, will stand a
. ; little above the edge of the dish; next
i till your dish with fruit, then add a lit- j
. j tie water if your fruit has not too much
t ' juice. Some fruits, such as currants j
i and raspberries, have enough juice; also
. add sugar to taste Now cover this
, with a crust of short paste, wash it with j
> water or white of an egg, and dust with
. powdered sugar. Make a few fancy cuts
t on it before baking, and after it is
. i washed and sugared do not cut too
f j deep. These cuts give it a rich-looking
. j appearance. The cup in the center eol>
I Iccts tin? juice, and if the whole of tlie j
I pie is not eaten at one meal what is left
t ; can be supplied with juice by simply
. lifting the cup arid allowing the juice
i j to escape. The edge of this pie, to l?e
| artistic, should be pinched up with the
linger und thumb, then notched with a
knife. If you use fruit which gives too
' much juice you can prevent boiling over
^ bv mixing a little flour with the sugar,
about one teaspoonful of flour to twelve !
! of sugar.
- ! DoroiiNiTH.?One largoegg, four and
t one-hull tiildespoonfulsmoltcd butter or
i i lard, one cofl'co cup sugar, one cup J
s | sweet milk, olio teaspoonful ginger j
ti ( bought at the ?liug store, two of cream j
I tartar from the same pjacc, one of soda '
/
Best of All.
The world liatli very little it can give
To make ua happy; all. its precious things?
What men call precious, and for which they
live?
To a sad heart are worthless offerings.
For what arc gems and what is tawny gold ?
And rarest spices from sweet Cyprian blooms?
And silken fabrics shimmering fold on fold,
dissolved in the milk. Mix the cream
tartar with flour enough to make the
dough just stiff enough to handle, fry in
hot lard, take out and lay on brown
paper a moment, then in a dish and
grate sugar over them first on one side
and then on the other; do not allow
them to cool before putting on the
sugar.
Preserved Plums.?Allow to every
pound of fruit a pound of sugar; put into
stone jars alternate layers of fruit and
sugar, and place the jars in a moderately
warm oven. Let them remain until
the oven is cool. If prepared at teatime
let them remain until morning;
then strain the juice from the plums,
boil ami clarify'"fc. llemovo tlio fruit
carefully to glass or china jars; pour
over the hot syrup and carefully cover
with egg, tissue paper or thick white
paper, or bladder tied closely down.
WISE WORDS.
rlhc man who can't be angry is a fool;
*!./ > u-lin ivill nnt. nllmv himself to
be is wise.
No one oan know the sorrows of another's
heart, and no one can tell where
the shoe pinchcs except the man who
wears it.
In the matrimonial market some
choose the man without the riches and
others the riches witiiout the man. In
after life the former live-in a ilower garden
and the latter in a hothouse.
If it is your purpose in life to make
your face your fortune you must look
well to it, or it will turn out to be your
misfortune.
Our lives are like some complicated
machine, working on one side of a wall
and delivering tho finished ;alric on
the other. We cannot cross the barrier
and see the end. The work is in our
hands? the completion is not.
.11112 illllD Ul 1UXl J > KS1 uuu
achievement lie all around us, and if
we never catch a glimgse of the views
they afl'ord we need not complain that
it is because of the insuperable limitations
of our surroundings.
The books that delight the mind and
sweep the chords of the hjeart as with a
magic hand are those that have been
written by men and women whose pons
have been urged on to genial tasks by
gifted intellects and sympathetic loving
hearts.
Employ thy time well, if thou meanest
to gain leisure; and since thou art not
sure of a minute, throw not away ar.
hour. Leisure is time for doing something
useful; this leisure the diligent
man will obtain, but the lazy man never;
for a life of leisure and a life of laziness
arc two things.
it is not what we earn, but what we
save, that makes us rich. It is not
what we eat, but what we digest, that
makes us strong. It is not what we
read, but what we remember, that makes
us wise. It is not what we intend, but
what we do, that makes us useful. It is
not a few faint wishes, but a life-long
struggle, that makes us valiant.
An Old Florida Fort,
Writing about Fort Marion, St. Augustine,
some scribe says: This fort, constructed
of a shell conglomerate, known
as coquina stone, was begun in 1G9G,
and, built by Indian labor, was finished
in 175G. It is a model of the military
engineering of the time of its construction,
and when garrisoned by British
troops from 17G3 to 170(3, it was considered
one of the finest fortresses in the
British possessions. It covers an acre
of ground, and the vaulted rooms,
opening off from the central square,
furnish accommodations for 1,000 met*,
and tho fort .will mount*" 100 guns.
Ovci Tort Marion have waved the 8j>.uiish,
English, Confederate and United
States flags. The American Hag was
first raised above its battlements in
1N21. in 18UG, while a heavy gun was
being mounted on the northeast bastion,
the terreplein fell in, and a hitherto unsuspected
dungeon was revealed. Upon
its lloor lay a human skeleton, chained
ilw. 1?tt ao-aIi tviMCif Wlmn tlin
IU Hit* UilJA I'J ??*1VU ,
military engineer descended into this I
dungeoj, he noticed a largo stone in j
the wall, which, from its appearance, J
and from tho comparative newness of
its cement, had evidently had not been
a part of the original wall. On removing
this stone the explorers entered a i
second and smaller dungeon, and by
the light of their lan'ern, saw two iron
cages, one of which had fallen to the
lloor but the other was still hanging by
a hook to the wall. Each cage contained
the skeleton of a human being,
one of which had evidently been a woman.
For what crime, or unfortunately
incurred anger of ono high in authority,
or rash political aspirations those vie- I
tims had been thus walled up alive, will
never be known. The thoughts that
rush upon the mind of the visitor to
these gloomy vaults make him long for
the outer world, and Aviien lie once
more sees the sunlight it is with a feeling
of glad relief. It is said that one
of these cages, with its contents, which
had been broken by its fall to the
ground, was buried near the fort, while
the other one was sent to the Smithsonian
institution. It is believed,
however, that it was not allowed to remain
in the museum long, but was removed.
An old sergeant living near by
is the only guardian of the fort, as its
rooms are too damp to be inhabited.
Therefore the visitor is allowed to roam
through it at will, and at night these
parapets, which to within a short dis
tanco or tune nave rung u> inc " au s
well" of the sentinel for almost 200
years, now faintly celio the murmured
words of fond ones lingering in the
tender moonlight ? sensible people
avoid the malarial night air and stay in
the house?or in the glare of the sun
the bastioned angles are the subjects of
these remarks.
Mow the Kroiini rs Live.
Recent events have given an interest
in these people, who dwell iu an almost
unknown country in North Africa. The
dwellings of the Kroumir chiefs are
somewhat superior to the other inhabitants,
but even the chiefs share their
homes with the mules, the cows and the
goats. The dwelling consists of but
ono room, divided into two unequal
compartments by a roughly made partition
about a meter high. On one side
of this Willi the family Jive; on me
other the cattle. At the entrance to
each village or group of mucl lints there
is a sort of public building called the
" Djemaa," or meeting place, anil it is
here that the people assemble at intervals
to discuss*matters of general interest.
The men wear a loosely-fit ting
woolen or cotton shirt, and over it one
or two burnous, according to the season.
Their headgear is a friiul of skull-cap,
kitted or of red felt. The arms, legs
and the neck are left bare, but the feet
are protected by apiece of leather attached
to the foot by a number of intertwining
strings. The dress of the young
women is described as extremely graceful.
A large piece of woolen stuff,
folded in two, is attached to the
shoulder with a metal brooch, and
reaches just below the knees. A brightlined
girdle encircles the waist, and
their toilet is completed by a gaudy
handkerchief wound round the head.
With regard to morals the laws are
strict. No man is allowed to have more
than one wife, or to live with a woman
unless the union has been sanctioned by
marriage ceremonies. Women, however,
are bought and sold like cattle,
and a widow can be appropriated by a
male relative of her diseased husband
without any payment being exacted
for her. The, usual diet of the tribe
consists of " kous-kousson," a national
dish, milk in abundance, and fruit; the
aged alone cat wheat or meat. The
Kronniirs entertain scant respect for the
authority of the bey of Tunis, but regard
with reverence Abilallah-bonrjemal,
their patron; it is this marabout
or priest who, they believe, protects
their territory, and to whom they
look for guidance.?lltnui
grajiliie.
A Lizard or a Lie.
An astonishing siory has been brought
to light by tin? serious illness of a man
named Pete Lemcn, living in Detroit, to
the effect that two years ago ho swallowed
a small lizard in a glass of water,
and that it has lived and continued to
grow in the man's stomach till it has attained
huge dimensions, and can be felt
just below the ribs above the loins. It
moves about, the stomach, musing great
pain and profuse vomiting. Lenten can
only rest, when the lizard is still and by
lying Hat on his buck, and has come to
be hopeless of relief save in death.
"When the accident occuried the weight
of the liiun was 17f> pounds; tio;v seventythree
pounds, lie is sixty years old.
Satin cord gimps and chenille embroidery
replace moss trimmings on
bumaaer garments i
'
Tlie costliest prouucis oi lliu x.ubu;iu luuuic.
Tliey cannot nave the soul a .single pain,
Or to the weary heart bring hopo again.
What is the Hash of wit, the anion's glow ?
The wine may shine, and leap and sparkle up,
From marble tables white as purest snow,
And brim blood-red the gold-incrusted cup;
The air may languish filled with perfume sweet,
Etruscan vases burn witli roses red,
And velvet carpets sinking 'ncatli the feet
Give back 110 echo from the stateliest tread*
I)ut human hearts crave something moro
than this?
Splendor alone can never give us bliss.
Far more, far moro we prize a gentle touch?
The mute caress of lingers 011 the hair?
A kind word spoken?0I1, how very much
These littlo tokens do to lessen care,
It matters little if the home be bare
Of luxury, and what the world calls good,
11' we have only one true spirit thero
!?. t. iw.in mir lir.fter wplvfH are understood
Whoso deepest licart-throbs arc for 11
alone,
With whom in thoughts and wishes wearo
one.
HUMOR OF THE DAY.
What nut is mcst toothsome, eutcn
n-iti, flm nn 9 Dirt vou sav douirh
nut ?
Melted butter ifi like a bold militia
man only when it is dropped from the
rolls.
Said the genera!, to the major: " What
is your rank, sir ?" and the major replied:
" I am a major, general."
There being warm weather, it is about
time to discover that the ice crop was
spoiled by the frost.?Elmira Free Pre
Chanp:, the Chinese giant, can read
the Bible in six different langaages, but
thinks it reads best in the Chinese version.
Wo don't.
Mining stocks were not invented in
Banquo's time, although he said: "The
earth hath bubbles as the water hath."
?Boston Courier.
" Pinafore " and the smallpox reached
Honolulu and Japan on the same boat.
They didn't mind the smallpox very
much.?Boston Post.
The saying that beauty is but skin
deep needs to be modified. Is there
anything particularly sinning auuub u
cliime of bells till tliey are pealed V
A lady who had quarreled with her
bald-headed lover said, in dismissing
him: "What is delightful about you,
my friend, is that I have not the trouble
of sending you back any locks of hair."
?Chicago Tribune.
The very latest, nicest little idea is
for a young lady to decorate a miniature
bellows and seud it to her best gentleman
friend. It signifies: " Don't mind
your poverty; I will raise the wind."?
New Haven Register.
If a poor merchant should marry an
extravagant girl would his book-keeper?
If she should neglect to sow on his
buttons, would her dress-maker '{ Ant
if she should refuse to put on her own
clothes, would her hair-dresser.
Some washerwomen don't v ndcrstand '
their business and loosen ,hat back
button on the shirt so it will come off
at the last minute and give innrp gfl fry '
cuse for being lata at- 'clifircm. .otiz*
most of thorn are thoughtful enough to
do it.?Baton Pout.
"So you enjoyed your visit to the menagerie,
did you?" inquired a young
man of his adored one's littlo sister.
| " Ob, yes! And do you know, we saw
a camel. I here that screwed its monlh
and eyes around awfully ; and sisti-r
said it Ioors exactly as you do when y< i
are reciting poetry at evening parties."
AN" EXPLANATION.
Her lips were so near
That?what else conhl Z do ?
You'll be angry, I fearWell,
I can't make it clear,
Or explain it to you,
But?ner lip* were ao near
iiiat?wunt cise cnuiu i uo
?Scribner's Magazine.
" Maggie, dear, if I should attempt
to spell Cupid, why could I not get beyond
the first sjllable?" Maggie guve
it up, whereupon William said: "Because
when I come to c u, of courss I
cannot go farther." Maggie said f;he
thought that was the nicest conundrum
she had ever heard.?Buffalo Repress.
"Charles," she said, as she brushed
the hair back from his forehead when
he sat reading the paper yesterday
morniug, " why is a watch-dog smaller
in the morning than he is at night ?"
" He ain't." " Yes he is. D'you give it
up ?" " Yes." " Because he has to be
let out at night and taken :in in the
morning."
All Indian Fever and Ague Cure.
A party of us, while on a recent excursion,
cam 3 across a company of Indians
who were from Maine. One old
squaw, who was preparing materials for
baskets of rather line pattern, was quite
sociable. In the course of our conversation
she told us an Indian boy had
the fever and ague. We asked:
" What do you do fo:r it?"
"Oh, we do what they tell us? r
take something?I can't think what
they call it."
" Quinine," we suggested.
Here a big Indian, who was within
hearing, put in:
?t 'l'l.nf'o nnienn llfrli J"
Aim?orv?, "O?
Anil the squaw replied:
"No, no; we don't, take that."
j "It goes to the bones," said the man.
"Yes," he continued, "quinine will
kill?settle in your bones?make um
ache."
We inquired what he considered the
best remedy. Upon which our Indian
sage replied:
"Grated horseradish, one-half cup;
whisky, half pint; mix; take a spoonful
| three times a day?no fail?will cure
you." After a moment he added: " It's
! heating;" which we do not in the least
doubt.? Oneida Circular.
A Texas Apiary.
Mr. John "SV. Fry, of Texas, has a
model apian* and vegetable garden on
! Morgan creek, which suggests on a
I miniature scale the " happy valley " of
| Haavelas, if you connect with it honey,
strawberries and general tlimc ana pros- i
| perity. The farm of a hundred or so i
! acres is at the base, or rather upon the
slope of one of the mountains. Mr. Fry
\ lias at present only about forty hives,
and could keep hundreds, but lie sells
I them oil'. Last season Mr. Fry robbed i
! one gum live time, realizing 125 pounds
I of honey; another three times, realizing
j seventy-live pounds. The net proceeds
J of a single hive was 8-11.25, the honey
selling readily at fifteen cents a pound.
! The vegetable garden is largely an artij
lieial one, having been cut out of a hillside,
terrace fashion. It is irrigated
l from the spring by means of a light but
j immense wheel, at least twenty feet in
diameter, which is turned by two trained
j hounds, placed inside, treadmill I
| fashion. The revolution of this wheel 1
\ works a pump, which conducts water I
j ill over the garden.?Jiullimore Ameri-l
wot.
I _
Served Him lliglit.
j A woman at Cape Giradeau, Mo., who j
had suffered from a husband's neglect, 1
j traced him to a barroom where he was
i playing cards with several companions.
| Setting a covered dish she? held in her j
hands down upon the table, she said: j
I "Presuming, husband, that you were
j too busy to come home to dinner, Ihavo I
brought you yours," and departed,
j With a forced laugh he invited his
' friends to dine with him, but on reI
moving the cover from the dish found j
! only a slip of paper, on which was ;
j written: "1 hope you will enjoy your j
| meal; it is the same your family have <
! at home."
A. S. Gardiner, of Ypsilanti, Mich., I
in rcsponso to a challenge to produce
! nit ear of corn with 000 kernels 011 the
ear, produced a basketful of ears aver- '
aging a foot in length and none having
j less than 5)00 kernels to the ear. One j
. specimen had l,2t!S) kernels. The j
variety is a yellow-dented red cob, and
was planted in hills four feet apart each i
j way, and yielded 120 bushels to the
acre.
j Ono of the youngest church edifices j
in the United States has the oldest
steeple. It is the Kpiseopal church at
Tacumsa, Washington Territory. The
building is of logs and the tower is a
} tall lir tree which lias been cut oil' forty
! feet from the ground, on the top of
j which in a cross and bell. The rings of
1 the treo show it to be 800 years old.
???
NEWSCOF THE WEEK.
East and Middle.
Alfred B. Stbeet, tho poet, died at Albany,
N. Y., aged seventy ye are.
At the opening of tho New Hampshire legislature,
in Coneord, Governor Bell delivered bitinaugural
address in tho presence of both
houses. Tho address gives tho State debt as
*o 01,1 "7A 1^0 l,v 11'in fi!)? Mmn if. wnp
the previous year. The savings banks have a
deposit of $32,097,734, or nearly $4,000,OOC
more than in 18ti0.
The men employed in tho eighty New Yorli
breweries struck tho other day for increased
wages and loss hours of labor.
At Edgewood, Fa., William Murphy shot and
badly wounded his divorced wife, who was
married to another man, ajul then killed himeelf.
A boy eleven years old died in New York the
other day of hydrophobia, having been bitten
by a rabid dog last April.
The annual reunion of tho officers and soldiers
of the Army of the Potomac took place at
Hartford, Conn., many visiting organizations
taking part in the parade and the streets boing
thronged with people and gay with decorations.
Arming flirt liersoilH ureseilt were
Generals Sherman, IJurosidn and Sickles, tlw
governors of Connecticut, Pennsylvania and
Maine, Secretary of War Lincoln, etc. At the
ImsincsH meeting General Charles Devens, of
Lowell, Mass., was chosen president. The
meeting of the society next year will bo held at
Detroit, Mich.
West and SouthA
montmknt to tho Confederate dead was
unveiled at Frederick, Md.
The Iowa Greenback convention, in session
at Manihalltown, adopted a platform in conformity
with tho financial principles of the
party as well as resolutions sympathizing with
the Irish land league and favoring tl.o election
of President and Vice-President by direct
votes of the people. A ticket waa nominated
headed by I). 51. Clark for governor. Mrs.
Mary E. Nash was nomiuated for superintendent
of public instruction.
At Lowmoor, Va., a negro boy employed
at the iron works, who was conveying
a case of dynamite to tho powder-house, en
tcred a blacksmith shop. A moment afterward
persona in the neighborhood wore startled
by an explosion and saw the wreck of the blacksmith
whop living in the air in all directions.
The boy and the three colored men who were
at work in the shop wore taken out rlvendfully
mutilated.
The Virginia Readjustee, after a two days'
convention at Richmond, nominated Colonel
W. E. Cameron, mayor of Petersburg, for governor,
John T. Lewis, a Republican, for lieutenant-go
rernor, and John J. Blair, for attorney-general
Senator 3Iahone's name as candidate
was withdrawn at his request. A largo
number of colored delegates took an active
part in the proceedings.
As Mr. and Mrs. Henry ' [errian wero driving
home, near Des riaines, III., under the shelter
of an umbrella during a heavy thunder-storm,
they were both struck by lightning and killed.
Tho horse attached to their buggy was also
killed. When found they were both seated up
right in the buggy. Mr.-<. Morrian's dress had
taken fv:c ant! ourncd nearly o)T.
At Monti -cllo, la., .Tames Ilogan shot his
divorced wi.'o six times, inflicting injuries
likely to provo fatal, and then with oao shot
killed himself. She had obtained a divorce
bccausc he was a bigamist, and he had threatened
to kill her because sho refused to remairy
him.
Amikrt Ci.ap.k. an emigrant who came to
Peru, Neb., a low days ago, and is supposed to
have been crazy, first cut his wife's throat with
T poeluJt-kiiife and then went out on the street
with a shotgun. The first person he met was
Mr. E. M. Sargent, a well-known harness
maker, whom he shot and instantly killed.
Then, with the pocket-knife which ho had used
on his wife, he cut his own throat, indicting a
fatal wound.
Two freight trains were wrecked and two
men lulled near Cedar liapids, la., because a
telegraph operator forgot to deliver his orders
to keep back ore of the trains.
At tho Methodist ministers' meeting in Cincinnati
a prominent topic of discussion was the
Revised New Testament. Tho preponderance
of opinion seemed to be in favor of the revision,
and it was almost unanimously, though
not formally, accepted by those present.
Dkajuvood, Dakota, has been visited by a
terrible wind and hail-storm, during which
hailstones the s ze of hens'eggs fell, and one
woman was killed and another woman ana r.tvr
two children were seriously injured.
A ganc. of roughs attached to a circus made
a descent upon ;i crowd of people assembled at
a dance in the Vi llage of Chesaning, Mich., and
attacked them with clubs. A policeman was
killed, and abor t twelve of the villagers were
injured more or Iras severely. l-ivc or tno
rul'lians were a nested, and the people were with
difiieulty proven ted from lynching them.
itev. W. P. It. Newberry, a Kentucky clergyman,
with four other men, started iu pursuit of
his eloping daughter and J. J. Oaks, her lover.
Surrounding the house in which the two, who
had been married, had taken refuge, they approached
with drawn revolvers. Oaks met
Newberry at the door and shot him dead.
A cotton manufacturing company has just
been formed in Atlanta, Ga., with a capital of
$1,000,000.
A dispatch from Chattanooga, Tenn., says
that an organization of ex-Confederate soldiers
has been formed there to offer a reception to
the Society of the Army of the Cumberland,
which is to have a reunion nt Chattanooga in
September. It is said that every cx-C'onfcderate
soldier in the neighborhood of Chattanooga
has joined the organization, and that tho most
prominent of the living generals and several
thousand soldiers of tho late Southern army
aro expected to bo present.
The Ohio Republican?, at their State convention
in Cleveland, renominated Governor
Foster by acclamation and adopted a platform
which indorses Garlield's administration,
favors protection to American labor, and
asserts that tho question of amendments to the
State constitution relative to the manufacture
and sale of liquor should bo submitted to the
people.
From Washington.
TnF. appropriation for the census bureau, i!
lias b' en discovered, will fall far short of tho
sum weeded to complete' the work, and tho
clericid forco has been dismissed, with the
privile ge of doing volunteer work.
Foreign News
Kt.ir.iri' nhocks of part!iriuako at Mount Vosu
vins lmvc been followeil by a strong eruption.
P.road nnil active streams of lava are flowing
down the northeast Hide.
Collisions between the police and the military
on one side and the people 011 tho otlier are
increasing daily in Ireland. A riot followed
the attempt of a bailill", assisted by eighty
police, to eviet a tenant. The house wan found
occupied by armed men who tired upon the
police. Tho latter returned the fire, smashed
in tho door and dispersed tho occupant*, taking
thirty prisoners. As they were n tiring they
were again fired upon f :i 1 fceveral wounded.
One farmer was killed by a blow from the buttend
of tigun, and several civilians wore severely
injured. !
Anrniiisnoi' C'rokk made two speeches in
Tipprrary, Ireland, 011 the land league and
tiie land bill. He insisted that the agitation
was 11 constitutional movement and approved
to some extent of the land bill, condemning
the absence of any provision for tin: agricultural
laborers, lie appealed to Mr. Gladstone |
to put a stop to evictions and said the Irish
people were enlisting the sympathy ami moral i
support of the world.
In the liritish house of commons Mr. .Justin I
.McCarthy's motion censuring the Irish oxeeu- j
live for the arris! of Father Sheeliv, Mr. Dillon
and others w;m defeated by a vote of 1:10 to 22.
Mr. l'arnell devl.uvd that the tenants would ,
e ntiiiue to defy the landlords in spite of bayo- j
1.For applying the epithets "calumnious*' I
an*' "lying" Mr. O'Kelly, Iioine-rule member, I
11 ]>.t:i motion of Mr. niailst >110, was suspended j
.0: the remainder of the silting.
A<roi:i>ixii to the recent census the popula- !
.ion of London is :l,H| I..*i71.
M. I!mn<:ai:i>, the French inspector of tele- ;
graphs in Algeria, and Iwcnty-livc of hiscscyt. I
hue been massacrul by the Arabs.
A roNsi'tiucv against the life of the czar has j
been discovered iii St. Petersburg, ami twenty
lie arrests have been made.
'fin: crop prospects in Kuglatid are quite
gloomy, ami tie.'re will be at least a partial :
failure. Drought is burning up the fields. 1
The hay crop will b" a total failure. Hundreds j
of farmers, already in sore straits, will be j
mined by a bad harvest this year.
.11:1.1.1 r. A<;iia Mi kni, the principal insiigato* j
of the Miamloab massacre, during tin- Kur.;;.-iinvasion
of Persia, has been blown from tho
mouth of a cannon at Ti.nreez.
Tub annual tvpogrjphL'al convention was
held this year in Toronto, Ontario. Printers
from all parts of the United Slates were
present.
Tub czar of Russia is completely broken
down and has shut himself up at (iatsehina,
where he is closely guarded by Cossacks and
police. Constant fear of Assassination is said
to liavo turned him ink 4 physical wreck
} groat condition of dieordor prevails in
Peru. I
A cable dispatch says that " the number of
outrages in Ireland is increasing. Tho figures
stand as fallows: January, 439; February, 170;
March, 14G; April, 29C; May, 327, and for tho
first week in June, ninety-nine. These include
attacks on property, attempted murder, cattlohoughing,
incendiarism and all other offenses
directly traceable to agrariauism." West Cork
is in a stato of anarchy, and largo drafts of
constabulary are being dispatched there. Tho
police throughout Ireland are greatly dissatisfied.
Eleven of them have been killed and 400
disabled since the riotintr becan. and their
ordure forbid them from punishing their assailants.
Large numbars of tliem aro resigning,
while others remain on simply to bccomo entitled
to tho retiring allowance.
A si'KciAT, dispatch from Qticbec .to tho New
York Herald says: One of those destrnctivo
(ires to which Quebec is so subject broke out at
11 p. m., in tho midst of St. John's suburbs,
midway between St. 1 loch's and Upper Town.
The fire originated in a small wooden house in
Oliver street and immediately spread to the adjoining
buildings. The lire brigado became
demoralized and lost all control of themselves
and tho lire. At 2 o'clock this morning St.
John's Church (Roman Cafholie), the largest in
the city, worth $100,000, is burning, ami GOO
houses arc destroyed, somo of them brick and
stone, but the majority poor and small, and of
wood. There are certainly 1,000 famili"homeless.
The principal streets destroyed are
Richmond, Latourelle, Olivier, Richelieu and
Daguillou, running east to west parallel with
the river. Also St. John street, St. Marie, Deligny,
St. Claire and Sutherland running north
and south.
A pisocf.ss server has been fatally beaten in
the county Sligo, Ireland. Severe rioting has
been going on in tho county Cork. A party of
marines were roughly handled by tho enraged
people and compelled to retreat under protection
of the priests.
The Itiot in County Clare, Ireland.
A special cable dispatch from Dublin to the
New York Tdtgram says: The following is s
detailed account of the affray between the
people and the military and police in the county
Claro which took place yesterday: It appear*
inat eighty policemen proceeded to Bodyko foi
the purpose of assisting in tho eviction of a
tenant. Bodyko is a small village situated midway
between Scariff aud Tulla, where Home
milJiirt? nvr? of nrrtar.nf <roi*ri?4nnf>f1 TllO ttnliflfV
while proceeding in small parties to the place
of assembly, were attacked in detail by the
people. Ambulance wagons conveyed the policc
from Jinnis. They were under the command ol
the county inspector.
On the way from Knnis a hive of bees was le|
loose, and the stings of the insects caused tho
horses to become restive and unmanageable,
One maddened beast dashed itself against o
wall and was killed. Mounted orderlies were
dispatched to Tulla for the assistance of the
military, while, in the meantime, the polico, ir
united force, proceeded to the house where the
eviction was to take place. It was situated or
a hill, and as theyascended toward it tho police
were attack-el by an armed band of desperate
men, who from the covert of the fences at each
side of the road poured a galling lire into the
ranks of tho constabulary. The latter wer>
immediately deployed in* skirmishing orelci
and returned tho lire with effect, killing one
man and wounding several others.
The police succeeded in reaching the house,
which was found to bo tilled with armed men,
They broke in tho front door and took tho gar
rison by surprise. The rioters rushed throng!
the back door, but several were arrested. Souk
who had attacked the constabulary from behirn
the fences were also taken, and in all some
thirty prisoners wore captured. The house wa:
taken possession of au-1 the family inhabiting i
were cleared out. While returning with theii
prisoners the police were attacked and 'ire<
upon the second time, one of their horses bein;
shot dead. Beyond this no serious casualty
occurred. The police behaved well. Tlx
mounted men who were dispatched for tlx
military had also to run a severe gauntlet,:
determined effort being made to prevent then
from reaching Tulla. They, however, rode int<
the town through all obstacles. The polici
succeeded in convoying their prisoners to jail
Later reports about this affray state that i
fanner named Malonev has died from the effcct"
of a blow fiom the butt-end of a gun.
Treatment of Children.
Every one has observed that dull,
gloomy weather is pretty sure to pro
duco dispiriting thoughts; there is ?
natural reason for this?the mind is nol
only a motive, but a receptive organ
and all the impressions it receives fron
without reach it through the media o
senses which are dependent on the con
ditions of light and atmosphere for thei]
action, and therefore immediately in
fluenced by the surrounding conditions
It is n common-sense inference that i;
the impressions from withoui reach th(
mind through imperfectly acting organ!
of sense, and those impressions are ir
themselves set in a minor .-esthetic kej
of color, sound, ancl general qualities,
the mind must be what is caller!
"moody." It is not the habit of ever
sensible people to make sufficient allowance
for this rational of dullness anc
subjective weakness. This suscepti
bility to outside influences varies witl
different people?hence the wide diver
sity of temperaments.
If people knew as much about wlial
they think they know, as they thin!
they know about what others think thej
know, we think they would know more
than they think they know now.
ItlUchicf in the Air.
We cannot analyze the serial poisons that produce
epidemic and endemic diseases; but the
valuable discovories which have been made in
vegetable pharmacy enable us to counteract
their malitic influence. The most powerful
known antidote to every species of malaria i?
IIo.tettkit's Stomach Birmts, a pure botanical
me licino, in which the finest anti-septics,
tonics, alteratives and stimulants of the vege
combined. At season# of tho year when the atmosphere
is surcharged with miasma, and
whenever the specific virus of any infectious
disease is supposed to bo present in the air, this
famous corrective should bn taken regularly aa
protective. All who choose to olnerve this
precaution may bid defiance to intermittent
and remittent fevers, and, in fact, to all disorders
generated by foul exhalations or impure
water.
That was a good specimen of Amer
ican wit in tho reply made by the old
settler who had lived in -his city since il
was a log cabin or two, to the young
man who was putting him through i
course of interrogatories. "You musi
have lived here a long time ?" " Well,
I reckon." " Why, how long since yoi
came hero?" "Young man," said tli<
old settler, seizing the questioner bj
the coat lappel, "do you see that hil!
across the river V" pointing to a loftj
peak. " les," said tne otner, i ao.
"Well, I kim liere, sir, when that was
nutliin' but a hole in the ground."?
Boston Bulletiti.
A Wise Deacon.
"Deacon Wilder, I want you to tell mo hoc
you kept yourself and family ho well the pas
season, wlien all the rest of us have been sic!
so much, and have had the doctors running t<
us so long V
" ]>ro. Taylor, tlio answer is very easy. ]
used Hop li'rrrKns in time and kept my family
well and saved largo doctor bills. Three dollars'
worth of it kept us all well and ablo tc
work all the time, and I will warrant it has cos
j you atlfl moft of tllO HPlglluorw on? 10 mo nun
11 red dollars npii-ce to kc<-p wck tho same tinio,
[ I nuest) you'll tako my liicdiciiio hereafter." Se<
other column.
''I cannot sing the old songs,"
shrieked an amateur soprano the othei
night, and while she took in breath for
the next line a young man who hail
looked in fur a moment was heard to remark,
casually, but emphatically: "You
iust bet you can't." It broke up the
concert en the spot
|)r<Mviiiii!! Hen 31 ny Catch at Sirawn,
; P.ut s? n.-it>lo people when Mick tako Warner's
S:i'i' Kidney and l.ivcT Cure.
Tlie movement is being made in Lon
don to bring Booth, Irving and McCul
lough together in tho same play.
T/iulicx. Attention.
Wo want intelligent, oHergctie Lady A'gent?
to sell to womkx osi.v, an artich-of rcij hygienic
merit. For particulars ami liberal terras, addrem
WAfiXKK Si CO., Chicago, 111.
l'oit itvsiTisn, iM.iiiKsrioN*, itepre>sion ol
spirits and general debility in tin ir various
forms, also as a preventive against fever ami
:igiie and other int* rmittent level's, the I-'KltKn
l'lu'svifiiaii !> Ki.ixiu "i- Causa ya Baku, made
by < 'aswi ll. I!a/ar?l iV Co., N'ew York, an:l soi l
by ali druggists, is the lust toiii.-; and fill
pati' nts lveovi-riug from fever or other sickness
it lias no eijual.
Vi/.i'.riNi: ?It ex!> lids its.inthiciiec into every
part ot ihe human organism, commencing witli
ir^. foundation ; correcting iiis\ise I action, and
restoring vital power-*, creating a healthy formation
and purification of the blood, driving
out ilisei'M1. and leaving nature to perform it>
allotted task.
A great improvement lias recently been made
in thai its-'lhl product, < 'ai;i oi.txi:, a deodorized
ex'iaet ot peti'ol -iiia. uhi. h is the only article
Ilia: really cures baldness. It is now the lineal
of hair dressings.
ItlX'l K.;> Kit Oil IIEATIl.
WMinm -I. C iiiidiliii. ?t Siniii-rville. Mays., says: In
:li?* f.-iil ol IsTiI i w;st.l!:eii Willi bleelmjiot tie- i.nics.
.'oIlinveil 11;.' II severe conch. I loot my ajiji'tite and
lesli. :tit<I w.\s oiitirs-'ii to my !i,mI. In Is" I was admllt.
t" >li" lei' j-ilal. 'I'll* doctorssaid I had a hole
ji'imj !nsw ?< iiijr us .i hall-dollar. At one time areport
?V||! iii-oiind that I was dead. I f-'ave U|< ho[>e,
ill! a friejl'l t'*1:1 In:' iit 1*11. \V|!.r,IAM ii Al.f.'s 11 M.SAM
rou't::i: l.ev;s. I pit ahotih, when. tomysu.-i rise,
t .-Oimili !!- ' ! t'l !'. lii'lter. anil to-day I I'eel better
than for three years j .ist. I write this lioj.iu - every
>i:e iii.iii't d with diy'easei! luniis will tak" Wii.1.1am
IIai.i.'s Uai-sam, and be convinced t' cos?!'MITtoN
CAN IIK ei ltt:i>. I call positive!'- -,i; it has
|o;ie limiv fjooil than all tin.' other luetliciii. s I havo
taken since t!iv sickness.
WAKUANTi:!) I'OU 3t VEAKS
.t.V/> XK\'KU FAILED
To fCr.E Croup. Siuisins. Diarrlnea, I)vs-:it r and
Si-I Siektu^. t dieii internally, and (SKAUAM'KKU
I'.-rtei-ll-. hamilcs- also externally, l!iu ;. Ilrai-cs,
Chronic iClf-illii.itOld Sores, I'aills in the liiulis.
hack and ch?<t. Sach a remedy is l)n. TOISIAS"
VKNKTIAN MNIMKNT.
i WXii out onee trying it will ever bo without it;
nvcrt'ioa i-lrsiciauii uso it.
Heat Triim ever used | descrintivo circular*
froo. S. y. iitAtnio Titfan Co., 6b3 Broadway, >'. V,
A. GREAT EEYELATION.
Some Valuable Thought* Concerning Qu< P*
man Happlnesa and Timely Hugger "
Hons About Securing It. *'
ir
01
SYNOPSIS OK A LECTURE DELIVERED BY DB. P
OHAS. CBAIO BEFORE THE METRO- 81
P0LITAN SCIENTIFIC ASSOCIATION. ?'
81
" The public speaker of the present day la- b
bora under difficulties of which the speakers ol
the last century never dreamed, for while the
audiences of the past received what was said a
without rjuestion, those of the present day ar<
I usually tue mental equais or supurjura 01 mc
ones who address them. Rev. Dr. Tyng, o) P
New York, when a theological student, supplied ^
| a church in a neighboring town, and on his ti
j way to preach one morning met an aged colored a
I man. ' Well, Uncle, do you ever go to hour the m
young preacher?'asked the unfledged doctor. 'No,
Mawa,' replied the negro, 'dis chile don't
let none o' dem students practis 011 him.' The
darkey had begun to think. The free and independent
thought of this age accents state- |
inents oniy wnero mey are proven to uu num,
while the development of mental power seems
equally great in every other department of life.
The valuable inventions of the day are counted I
by thousand*. The increaso of scientific study
is universal. The spirit of inquiry in all fields
is so marked as to cause
COMMENT ON EVERY SIDE,
while people seem investigating and advancing
in every direction which can help them moral|
lv, mentally or physically. This is specially
true of the human body and everything which
concerns it, and the truths which the people
have found, even in the last fifty years, are
simply marvelous. How really ignorant some
j cultured and supportably scientific people were
only a few years ago as compared with the present
day, may bo better understood from a few illustrative
facts. A prominent writer prepared an
elaborate essay to prove that steamships could
never cross the Atlantic, and his pampnlet was
issued just in time to be carried by the first
steamer that went to England. People oncu
believed that the heart was the seat of life and
j health. It is now known that this organ is only
a pump, simply keeping in motion what other
and more important organs of the body have
created and transformed. It was once supposed
that if a person felt a pain in the back, the liver
was deranged; if a pain came In the lower chest
! ti.n inni^ ivnrn nfTivte.l and consumption was
near; it is now known that a pain in the back
| indicates diseased kidneys, whilo troubles in the
! lower chest arise from a disordered liver and
: not imperfect lungs. A severe pain in the head
, was once thought to come from some partial
derangement of the brain; it is now known that
troubles in other parts of tho body and away
from the head, cause headaches and that only
by removing the cause can tho pain be cured.
; It ia a matter of
PRIVATE HISTORY
that General Washington was bled to death.
I His last illness was slight, and caused principally
by weariness. A physician was called who
I 'bled him copiously.' Strange to say, the
patient became no better. Another doctor was .
called, who again took away a large amount of
the vital tluid. Thus in succession four physicians
drew away the life of a great man who was
intended by nature for an old age, and who prematurely
died?murdered' by malpracticebled
to death. That was the age of medical ,
bleeding!" !
The speaker then graphically described an- j
other period which camo upon tho people, in }
which they assigned the origin of all diseases to f
the stomach, and after showing the falsity of j
this theory, and that the kidneys and liver were
tho causes of disease, and that "many people aro
! suffering from kidney and liver troubles to-day
will) <lo not Know, out who snomu snow it miu
, attend to them at once, continued:
"Let us look at this matter a little moro
closely. The human body is the most perfect
t and yet the most delicate of all created things.
? It is capable of the greatest results and it id
I liable to the greatest disorders. The slightest
: causes sometimes seem to throw its delicate
s machinery out of order while the most simple
t and common sense care restores and keeps them
f in perfect condition. When it is remembered
1 that tlie amount of happiness or misery we are
to have in this world is dependent upon a perfect
body, is it not strange that simple precautions
and care arc not exercised ? This is one
of the most vital questions of life. People may i
i avoid it lor the present, bnt there is certain to ]
1 come a timo in every one's experience when it <
i must he faced.
3 "And here pardon mc for relating a little
personal experience. In the year 1870 I found
i myself losing both in strength and health. 1
3 could assign no cause for the decline, but it
continued, until finally I called to my aid two
prominent physicians. After treating me foi
some timo they declared I waa suffering from
Bright's disease of the kidneys, and that they
, could do nothing moro for me. At this timel
. was so weak I could not raise my head from the> ,
t pillow and I
I FA1XTKD UEPF.ATF.nfcY.
My heart beat so rapidly it was with difficulty ]
! could sleep. My lunga were also badly involved; i
. I could retain in.thing upon my stomach,
* while tho most intense pains in my back and
- bowels caused me to long for death as a relief,
f It via at this critical juncture that a physical
longing which I felt (and which I most firmly
believe was an inspiration) caused me to send
for the leaves of a plant I had once known in
E medical practice. After great difficulty I at I
) last secured them and be^an their use in the
5 form of tea. I noticed a lessening of tho paiu 1
at once: I began to mend rapidly; in five weeks
J was able to bo about and in two months I be- I
T ! came perfectly well and have so continued to
, this day. It was only natural that such a re[
suit should have caused mo to investigate moil
thoroughly. I carefully examined fields in
medicine never lwfore explored. I sought the
j cause of physical order and disorder, happiness
I j and pain, rml I found the kidneys and liver tc
. be the governors, whose motions regulate the
. j entire system."
I A /lnu<i?'i|?inrr of l^nrrfh 41m rkftiPAQ f?f Ml*
kldnevs anil liver, ami their important part ic
life, the doctor went on to say:
"Having found this great truth, I saw clearly
lI the cause of my recovery. The simple vegetable
| leaf I had used was a food and restorer to mj i
L well-nigh exhausted kidneys and liver. It had j
r | como to them when their "life was nearly gone
5 and by its simple, yet powerful intluenco had
purified, strengthened and restored them and
saved me from death. Realizing the great benefit
which a knowledge of this truth would give
to the world I began, in a modest way, to treat
those afflicted and in every rase I found the
! aamo
l HAPPY RESULTS
| which I had experienced. Not only this but
1 many, who were not conscious of any physical
1 trouble but who, at mv suggestion, "began the
use of the remedy which had saved my life, ]
found their health steadily improving and" their :
' strength continually increasing. So universal,
' where used, was this true, that I determined the
entire world should share in its results, and 1
' * therefore placed the formula for its preparation j
1 in the hands of Mr. II. II. Warner, of Rochester, i
1 N. Y., a gentleman whom I had cured of a |
1 severe kidney disease, ami who, by reason of ,
! his personal worth, high standing and liberality |
' in endowing tho Astronomical Observatory anil j
other public enterprises, has become known and (
1 popular to the entire country. This gentleman i
at once began tho manufacture of the remedy
on a most extensive scale, and to-day, Warner's i
| Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, tho pure remedy
I that saved my life, is known and used in ail
i parts of tho continent.
' "I am aware a prejudice exists toward pro>
| prietary medicines, and that such prejudice is
1 j too often well-founded, but tho value of a pun
b remedy is no less because it is a proprietary
I medicine. A justifiable prejudice exists toward
! J quack doctors, but is it right that this preju^
| dice should extend toward all the doctors who
5 | are earnestly and intelligently trying to do
M their duty? liecause Warner's Safe Kidney
[ I and Liver Cure saved my life before it became
r | a proprietary medicine, is it reasonable to sup.
i pose that it will not cure others and keep stdl
j more from sickness now that it is sold with a
' i government stamp on the wrapper? Such a
- theory would be childish."
The doctor then paid some high compliments
to American science, and closed his lecturc as
follows:
H " How to restore tho health when broken, and
t j how to keep the body perfect and free from
; j disease must ever be man's highest study.
) That one of the greatest revelations or tho
; present day has been made in ascertaining tho
[ j true seat of health to be in the kidneys and |
r ' liver, all scientists now admit, and I can but
j fcel.tliat the discovery which I have been per- j
) ' mitted to make, and which I have described to
t I you, is destined to prove the greatest, best and
j most reliable friend to those who suffer and ,
, : long for happiness, as well as to those who de>
{ sire to keep the joys they now possess."
i ? ami at, nrfi von coinff
AUIULLV I ? J J - -- a u
' j to do with that club ?*' ' Send it to
1 the eilitor, of course." " But what are
' ! you going to send it to the editor for V"
i " 'Cause ho says if anybody will send
him a flub he will send them a copy of
t j his paper." The mother came near
f fainting, but recovered herself sullij
ciently to ask: "But, Tommy, dear,
i what do you suppose he wants with a
s j club ?" " Well, I don't know," replied :
| the urchin, " mil ess it is to knock down
_ j subscribers as don't pay for their
paper."
is the r. It EAT
1 Family Medicine and
Health Restorer.
Purifies the Blood. Renovates and I J
Invigorates the Whole System.
I
GENERAL DEBILITY.
| lvbility is ;t t nil nso.l to denote :i ??l
1 Tlif nuirilivi-r>>!i-itif ot the biond ar>
I in I' M than their regular ; ortion, whilo t!i"
watery part is in exi-ess. lvbility i* of 1 r- |i:> nt
J iHvurh ik'-1. M is itn'i'li "it to a variety of disea*. h.
Tin- louvr limits Jitv .1! I to lie sw.illi'ii. 'I'll;' patient i
i-feeble atnl eantio: bear mueh e\erti?a. Tin- ritvuI
lation i> irr.'lint almost alwa>s weak. l'.il|-i;
tatiou oi ;I.- !.. irt is a very 'ommiM h; tnptom. YioIt-lit
:i o.'trti thiv.vs the heart into the inw'
j t it in ii <: i;-?iis actioti. Tin1 vital tutietions an- Ian*
j 1,'ui'lh |M-rtor>i!<' I. The museii!arstreti;..tli is !:mill
i>heil : t follows moderate or slight exert is"
1 Thel.r illtili-,'. llioii'_-li i|iiii t when :;t r< st. !; rome.i
It ii rri< <1 anil v.-u I'ainfullv.'witated under exertion,
j as iii ritiuiint:. a?veiidim; li' ichts. Tin* nervous
s..sti to ;:r ill <1 ? : ! i I. Vortitro. .li/^ilii j-s,
: as la: ''.ifot l.ti; Ml' r-tv v> ry rotunioij. V iolent
.tn l !.-? iii t*- i ris in the J.ead. side and |
lip a-' i t'o-ly. i.ro also friM|tuitt i
af -.. i>-' -.tis- ase. Tin* secretion* nr.- I
' .. ..hut l.?-l ! : triiiaN-s tin iiifii-i s anaii.i.-.-t
aiwa * < :t,i< r >ii-j < (. ( * ! or very partially
I'.-rti >ri;!.-.i. Th" !>:!' i< sea-ity. and fu-itivcsiej-K. with
unhealthy < v.:ciiatioiis troin tlit- bowels. ami d..s- i
i 1 < )'tst;:to of the stomach, are extremely common
symptom.-'. I
~l
i Disease oi'tlie lilood. !
:
riAT.riMoHK, Mit.. A| ril US, 1,N7<). ' ,
| I>lt. H. It. KTKYKNS:
Iii-.ir Sir: I have suffered for a'.out two years J
j with a disease of the Mo.nl. ami :i!f f n.-i.1 in?-r-i;f I
| remedies, I,111 litlilill|T t|o I'eliet. 1 vas 111.Ill: ' (1 to try ' ,
I Y<;,'etine. Aster taking two bottles I was entirely j <
cured. J li.tve recommended it to all my friends,
j and believe it to be the best iuodioiir' ol the kitui in j (
use. Yours truly, '
LEANDEU LUSBV.
i
imi?? it?m?w^?i?riff.
? Factory
Facta.
Close confinement, careful attention to all
ictory work, gives the operatives pallid facea,
oor appetite, languid, miserable feelings, poor
Iood. inactive livor, kidneys and urinary
oubles, and all the physicians and medicine
I the world caunot help them unless they get
at doors or use Hop Bittehj, made of the
ureat and best remedies, and especially for
ich cases, having abundance of health, snniine
and rosy cheeks in them. None need
ifl'er if they will use them freely. They cost
ut a trifle. Sec another column.
In general, pride is at the bottom of
II great mistakes. All the other pasions
do occasional good, but wherever
ride puts in its word, everything goes
rrong, and what might be desirable
o do quietly and innocently, it is morlly
dangerous to do proudly.
PERRY BAVISr
Pain-Killer
iA SAFE AND SURt
REMEDY FOR
Rheamatism,
Neuralgia,
tiiiuima,
Diarrhoea,
mmm Dysentery.
11| ^ j Toothache
A T,L DRTGGIgTg.
MYM U?
IHOP BITTERS?!
| (A Medicine, not a Drink.) E
CONTAINS I
i nOPS, BU IIU, MANDRAKE, j|
i DANDELION, |
9 ASU TDK Pr REST AND HSST MKDICALQTALI
TIKSOF ALL OTUEB BMTKKS. M
| THEY CURE I
9 All Dlseasesof theStomacJi. Howeis. wooa, m
5 Liver. Kidneys, and Urinary Organ#, Ker? "a
1 vounnchs, Slconlessnosai: J especially ?8
V Female Complaints.
I SIOOO m COLD,
| W'itl he paid for a case they will r.ot carc o^?8
1 'help, or for anything Impure or lajurloua H
| -found In them.' ES
I Ask yotir drup^Ist for Hop Hitters and try Ij
S them before you sleep. Take no other* H
3 I) t. C. Is an absolute and Irresistible euro for H
^ Drunkeuucas, like of opium, tobacco and jli
Sesu rok CincriAn. bbssbbbsbH
,'j All aNovo ;cltl l.v c]ni-.-i;l?u, m
5j Hop Ulitcn Mfg. Co., IlochdU-r, X. V., & Toronto,QbL H
Card Collectors!
* I
1st. Buy seven bars DOBBINS'
ELECTRIC SOAP of your Grocer.
2d. Ask him to give you a bill
Ltl 11* r
3d. Mail us his bill and your
fall address.
4th. We wm mail YOU FREE
seven beautiful cards, in six colors
and gold, representing Shakspeare's
"Seven Ages of Man."
I.L.CRAGIN&PQ.,
116 South Fourth Street,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
For Catarrh,
KW/lGfi... n ?1 ^ay Fever,Cold in the
rc2 !?????Al 0 E.1fi *"I ''r,'ath? through the
1080.- It will be abg?"
v*IifnSrZnorbed. clcansing and
or HEALS healing the diseased
ffMSALP^s ( MiM1DCmhane'
For Deafiiess,
*iw< , lec/C^l^iCtf0 jS Occasionally apply a
..%& ,'article into ana back
^ the ear?rubbintf'in
There is a Balm in Cilead.
The success which has marked the introduction
liere of Civ'.m lialm, a Catarrh remedy, 1-rcpared by
Kly Uroti.. Ov/rgo, N. V., is indeed marvelous. Many
persons in I'ittston arc using it with mo?t satisfactory
results. A lady down-town is recovering the sense ol
unell, which sue had not enjoyed lor lifteen years,
through the use ?f the lialm. She had given up her
asp as incurable. Mr. Uarber, tho druggist, has
used it ill hi* lamily. anil commends it very highly,
lu another column, a young Timkhannock lawyer,
known to many of our readers. testifies that ho was
:uivil of partial deafness by the Balm. It is certainly
i very cmcaeious remedy.? From the Pittston (Pa.)
Gazette, August 15, 1871).
Price?30 cents, (in receipt of 30 cents, will mail
& package l'reo. Send for circular, with full information.
KLY CKKAM HALM CO.. Owego, N. Y.
8old_byjil 1 Diimtlst-f.
|? "WILSONIA "
\ mMM I Triumphant!!
? /? ? The Downfall of Jttetallic
J V] \?1K Belts and Batteries and the
feSSm* z Dangers resulting therefrom.
3* The "WILSONIA" MAG?
I NETIC GARMENTS are the
man-el of tlie world.
They are dumbfounding the scientists and physicians,
and making glad the hearts of the people.
A HI NDHKI) and THIRTY THOUSAND .
people have demonstrated andean testify that disease
cannot be where the "V. II.^oNIA " MAGNETIC
CLOTHING i.s worn; and this without t ho barbarous,
antiquated custom "1 swallowing poisonous drugs.
They are the downfall ot quack nostrums, and wiU
help every physician to become an honest man ; and
(it drugs are to bowsed at all) will compel every physician
to write his prescription in plain English^ so
tllllt tno l)l'0|IIUIli;i> UllUn ? m?i ...v .ujsieians
nt the country who would consult their own
best inte ri'slx should make themselves acquainted
with tin- " WILSONIA." Thru will they become a
blessing to the raee. indeed, inasmuch as that while
thev are armed with no tiotent a remedy as the magnetic
clothiuir the iiooj'lo woulil teel safe in their
hands. ami ii?>t (as now) l>e constantly chantring their
iloetorx. The "WILSONIA" MAGNETIC GARMENTS
will eure every form ot disease known to man. Send
for cireularx rontainiuK I'riee list, testimonials and
tiicr iuterestiun memoranda ol the all-con'itiering
"WILSON I A."
N. H.?STATE DISEASE AND SEND FOUR DOLLARS
FOR A SAMPLE OF THIS WONDERFUL INVENTION.
MONEY ORDER TO BE MADE PAYABLE
ro wm. wir,soN, .j?.i itlton st., Brooklyn.
Payn^^^^^^atic Engines.
Reliable, Durable au<l Eeonomlral, irlttfumM a
'.?/>> pi,tr< r irith ij /. furl iruil c utter thtttr itny nlhfr
Hn'jih, built, not fitted with a:i A.itomatie CtU-olT.
Send lor Illustrated I "atal tie Inr lni< rmation fi
Prices. 1!. W. 1'avsk .v s.?, 1; >. wj, Cornint-*, N.Y.
AGENTS WASTED FOR
BIBLE REVISION
The 1 M*xf eh?'app>t illu^tratei! edition ot the IUv
New Testauwnt. Millions of people are waiting
r..r it. I>i? ti"t l?e iIiimmvimI liv the Cheap John pul>
i<ht*rx of interior ionn. See that the eoi>y you
;?* <-<.tita;iii 1.10 tin?* engraving's on steel anil wood,
iitiir* I'oiniiiftT money aelliDjj this edition. Sonu
or e;rr?:!:i!s. Address
National IVmlimiini; Co.. Philadelphia, Pa.
6ELLULGID
EYE-GLASSES.
iit-prehciimiik 'in! elioiecat sc'loo tod Tortoise-ht
11 ami Ainlu'i*. The li;?litc.<t. liand.-wmorft,
ind j?'.ron^est ivtioun. s??lil l?v Opticians and
ewelers. Ma.lo by SPENCKK OPTICAL
u'f'g. co., 1jj Maiden Lane, New York.
TYPE CO c
VStylo"Catalogue. ?.
? l-'till !:i.'i.: :;i.iti?m for3-<v!it stamp. "
"Ll^o t Frlc- . Eo-:t Avcrtment. T
? PH!-iA6"?t.PHIA PA S
(i
I M.k\. ?l-t* > I*i* fJ i.i.'., h lils!?.?:y of till rmlidTI
| ?,r:' *1' 9 J ^wr. I.lteroiur? I l'?i? U||
I I "? !'{? '12 ?! ?Vi>l*. jj J i..iiio v??l. li.iii Iboniely ?1 cut<uc$u*
o?h u ui;*l iur ouiy iiii ri?. "? />**.
IAMIA r: .\S liin?s ro It W. 14th St.. N.Y. P.O. Box 4?0O.
VWMY5J lf; Mfi'fTV. Th- "rvt nV %'A
o r5 v i in o.iy'j 11.'.^makiim/.v.- &jtm\
Allien trJ. L 2!u;.uci, 1 Moul'j 11. Ltotoo, Mui.
CAN MAKE '10NEY duriui; odd
5^ ii d w AideA.'i.!.'< ib-.rtv buty. i'a.
? 'Ii'.-ltil -nri s N' rvo-.i-- P.-hility &
. \ \V.-ii.:i-.s.<t?..-ie r.i'iv- "r..?!? .M-- il"dn:; ;;ists.
S- :i i t'i.rCiri'Ulitr. Allen'.- l'!i trniaey,:{i:{l-'ir>tav.,N.Y*.
^ >IONT?l! AGENTS WANTED 1
ssiftao 7.) );..>t s-llin;.' Arti-les in the world, a
W \a sa'uj h'/n < . lironHon.Detroit,Mieh.
i <;KNTS WANTK!) f?>r the Rest and Fastest
. V S' liin).' l'.et"rial l!n<iksan l tiililes. 1'rieesreiinecd
1:1 i i ret. National l'ul'lishilii;<' >.. l'liiladi iphia,Pa.
F.1FN Learn Tel. vra].hy. Eirn?t'i toSl'Mt
ivjuiik* intn ;l month. <irt li.Mcs i_''i.iranteed
>ayiii|joiV.ee?. Add's Valentine Uros., Janesville.WiH.
pec a week in your own town. Terms and *" outfit
3>DD Add's ll.il.vt.LKTi A;t'i>..l'ortland.Maine.
NhrplMlKl." * ' " '*1 Pri ' . A. 1- .ror('afa'o"ues,
jiittl l.lublu Eri- Mu.-;e I'uMUhliii;<%?.. Erie, Pa.
C R <590 l? r .'.ay at home. Sami 1' s worth Wfree.
^ AddressStiNsun Portland,Maine.
c70 a week. *12 r> rlav at home oimily mado. Costlj
^ Outat tree. Add-# Xmvk & Co., AuirmU.llaia?.