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p In Patience. What if tlion lives!. evermore alone, Poor and forgotten and in thy silent place? ?hat if for bread thou gettest but a stone. And in thy gardia no roso lends a grace? S?j!J in thy so:U the souls of all :he flowers *T33 #'! with perfume all thy dreaming sours. "What if the stars are far away and cold. And Love hath no last kisses for thy lips? If thou hast found misfortune overbold, And joy's sweet sun hid 'neath a cloud's eclipse? Still, some . stray gleams must keep thy desert fair, 7 And wandc.ing breezes lift thy heavy hair. No soul but hath some sun, or star, or moon. That keeps itself a sacred thing of light; As brooks go rambling thro' the rose-rapt June, Some joy will seek thee in thy darkest nigbt; Some hallowed dream, will be fulfilled and sweet; Some bads will open at thy patient feet. Seek not to wrench from Fate the hoarded . rnze; O 1. -i. -I J -r> 1 X- J-t kjooa. iiui. u> ucau grim xurtuue w uiy need, Save by the upturned glance of loyal eyes. Save by the heart that can in silence bleed; Stand in thy God-appointed place, uprignt, , And thou shalt yet be the victor in the fight j I ?Funny Driscoli. j ? THE G-AMBLEB'S WIFE. K-=- I " What new beauty have we here, j Carl?" I asked, taking a small colored ; picture from among the mass of papers, pamphlets, wrapping paper, etc., that covered the table and floor of the library and which would have told j plain enough to all acquaintances that: Carl was at home once more, after j this, his longest ramble in foreign ! lands, without the corroborating testi- | mony of cigar smoke or the lounging ' figure in the old rocking-chair. For this brother of mine never spent J over six months of the year in the; beautiful country come of his child-1 hood, giving the other six to whatever place or people promised most enter-: tainment on short notice. The last; xnree montns nau oeen spent in runs, j so I conjectured the little gem of art IJ ? held in my hand was a French beauty; j the pure outlines and exquisite com-1 plexion looking most life-like as they ! smiled up at me from the tinted card.j But notwithstanding the great beauty j of contour and feature, there was a! I frightened, almost haunted look in the : dark eyes that told of tragedy, or at j least anticipated it. " Who is she, Carl ? The eyes affect j me stran<?elv. with their wild, frisrht ened look. There is a reign of terror in them equal to the one her ancestors passed through. I almost see the shadow of the guillotine in their velvety depths." " Let me see; ah, my little sister, may you never know so hard a fate as this poor girl encountered and sue-; t/-\ "Vi~k cU a ic nnt "PVon/^li n vumvwi VV? ? A \Sy l/UV 1AVW JL. * V.XAVAA W . Russian?but married to a French- j man." And Carl took the picture i I from my hand and placed it on a small j easel above his desk. " I will tell you j about her, Louie, if you have an hour, | and I will tell why I told you. " It was while Tom Barnes was with | me last June, and when we left Yer-1 sailles for Paris, that I first sawj Madame Literre?though I think the i name an assumed one. We had to run yr^jgnt being Jet^E-remember, and IK ' . Barnesrout or- nurnor because ot it, j plunged his face into his book and left j me to mv own resources. " "As soon as I was comfortablv set-1 % tied I, as usual, began scrutinizing my | traveling companions, and to try to imagine who and what they were. There were four besides ourselves in the carriage. . One, a quiet, middleaged Englishman, who was soon asleep in his comer. The two who sat next myself were evidently husband and wife, though he paid her none of the attention and politeness usually ac-j corded in public, even if dispensed with privatelv. He was a pale, quiet man of twenty-five, perhaps, richly " but quietly dressed, and seemingly taking no notice of any one around him. The wife, too, was pale, and much as she looks there in that little picture. Her dress though simple was perfect, and evidently the production of some first-rate artiste. Her whole style proclaimed her at once to belong to the higher order of society. " She seemed to be suffering, and frequently put her hand to her fore r\-r>A T /iheorvp/l nnnri thp rlpli. U^UVi) vv% v?v~. cately-formed, ungloved hand a costly diamond. It was a beauty; and I enjoyed looking at tlie flashing gems as she caressed a small English dog that often looked up at her with affectionate recognition. "The other passenger I could not make out at all. lie was elderly, commonly dressed and with scant gray hair and heavy whiskers. His piercing eyes were frequently placed on the silent young married couple, and then he seemed as utterly oblivious of them as they of him. "What was his nation. ality? Was he with them or a stranger like myself? I could not telL And the more I looked the more uncertain I became. I thought, too, there seemed an efeort at disguise. He kept his face averted all he could, consistent with his watchfulness of the quiet young husband that he at times eyed so very persistently. "We sped alongoverthe beautiful |H? ' road, each absorbed in his own reflections, broken only by an occasional low sigh from the lady, and soon arrived at our destination. The train stopped, and as none of my companions showed any disposition to move first I aroused jsames iroin me wpuu vj. uu iuiuuuw and we left the carriage. ... . o "Dinner over, we went to the theatre, and afterward, by the persuasion of a friend, to a private gamblinghouse. I was greatly surprised on entering to see my elderly t raveling companion seated at the table, his eyes . and manner keen as ever, and deep in a game of rouge et noir. It was early yet and very f^w people were present; but every sound was hushed, and the game went on in dead silence, broken only by the voices of the dealers calling the result of the games, and the ^rattling of the gold as it was raked m -v-' from one to another. The old man seemed in luck for the time being and won eveiy game. I thought a gleam p-- of satisfaction shone over his face as ||4:the door opened And our other traveififcv ing acquaintance from Versailles?the K||quiet, careless husband?entered and "I did not play that night, and my II ^*hole attention was given to those m | two. The voting man lost from the | : first deal. Rouleau after rouleau vrac ! swept from, the table bv his watchful old opponent; but still he played on , The large sums he lost and his pale, excited face deeply interested me, and I stayed on and watched him until late at night, when he left the room, his ; last Xapoleon gone. " After supping at a coffee-house I went back to my room at the hotel, but for some cause could not sleep, j The heat was oppressive and my room J small; besides, the game I had been watching had excited me strangely, j : and I only fell into a troubled sleep near morning. " I was awakened about daylight by voices in the adjoining room?those of a man and woman, evidently. The man's voice was low and pleading j and the woman seemed to be crying j I could hear enough to understand I that she was rei'using him some request, for his tones became loud and ; threatening, and at last I heard him say: " 'If vou refuse me, vou seal my ruin and your own. I have no more j gold, and I must have the diamonds tc j retrieve myself.' "Hysterical sobs "were the only i answer he received, and he continued: " 4 Something tells me I shall win i to-night, and I must have the ring.' " 'Xever, Charles! I cannot give it up. It is all I have left. It was my motners ana i win noo let it leave i me.' "The man's voice was so choked : with passion that his words were inarticulate, but with a burst of wild anger he left, siamming the door after him. The woman's sobs became lower, her crying ceased, and I fell into ; another nap, not waking until near 10 I o'clock. " I saw neither of my gambling ac- j auaintances that dav, and the nisrht ; ? found me again in Monsieur Carlo's ; rooms. The old man was again on ? I hand?not satisfied I thought, with ! his winnings of the night before?and i ? i again I saw a gleam of satisfaction ! cross his face as his victim of the pre- I vious evening came in and got ready to j play. "'Make your game?the game is j made up !' cried the dealer, and was j about to deal the cards when the young ! man who had just entered called out in a loud voice : " 'Fifty Xapoleons upon the red!' " Seeing he placed no money upon the table, the croupier paused a mo- I ment, then said : "' Sir, you must stake the money.' "The gambler started and turned j paler than ever; a long, shuddering sigh broke from him as he felt first in j one pocket and then in another, and j finally grasped his hat and fled from : the room. The playing went on for a j while longer, and then one bv one i they went out, leaving only the attendants, the old keen-eyed gambler and myself present. Something?an undefinable feeling of interest in the unhappy man who had left the house in such despair a short time before? held me there; I must see if he returned. " Suddenly the door opened and he ran in, as if fleeing for his life. I shall never forget that sight, Louie. His face was ghastly, his dress disordered, and he trembled as though with ague. As he rushed up' to the table, in the strong glare of the lights. I saw great drops of perspiration standing on his brow. He thrust his hand in his pocket and tossed a ring down before his opponent. "' There ! it is worth ten thousand francs. Now cover my stakes,' he cried. " I instantly recognized the beautiful diamond as the one his wife had worn in the cars, and the conversation ' i I had heard that morning came back j to my memory, and I knew my fellow- I travelers were tlie man and woman I had heard disputing in the early morn- j in<i hours. But he had succeeded in ' overcoming her determination, for he had the ring, and my heart ached for the poor wife as I wondered how he | had obtained it. "' Red! I bet on the red !' asrain shouted the young man ; and in a moment the croupier called 'Black wins!' and the ring was no longer his. ~ "With n, wild crv the wretched loser .. -? i fled from the house; and completely ! unmanned by what I had seen I re- i turned to my hotel, hoping the young ! man would soon follow me. "I found them all?travelers, pro- j prietor and servants?wild with excite- j ment over the murder of the beautiful I Russian lady. An hour before her i maid had gone to her room and found l her deluged in blood from a wound in j her head, and dead. The husband had j been in and left some few moments be- 1 fore. I went up to her apartment and to the bed where she lav. Her exquis- | ite face was fairer than in life, for it had lost the unhappy look and seemed j at peace. As I turned to leave the I I room I saw this picture among a heap i | of things turned out of a man's travel- j j ing case, and appropriated it. Probably j the husband had tossed it there in his j | search for some valuables to risk at the j gambling-table. "The miserable man took his life before he was apprehended for his crime; and the old gamlL-r who, first I in Ar?a /licormcf* in annthpr hnrl followed the easily-duped victim from city to city and won many thousands from him, left Paris before the husband i and wife were carried to their last j resting-place in-the beautiful burying ground where his forefathers slept. " Louie, this is why I refused to play ' -* - * even with Howard, last evening. I have never touched cards since, and I never can again." ? San Francisco I Call. The Highest House in Europe. An astronomical observatory has ; ' lately been erected by the Italian govj eminent on Mount Etna, above . * ; Catania, which is the highest inhabiti pfl huildinsr in Europe, as it beats the : St. Bernard hospice by over 1,000 feet. ; It has two stori?s, with spacious bal! conies, and has been built on a cone i ! near the summit of the mountain. The j I observatory will not be touched by any ' eruptions, as the lava always flows I down on the farther side of the vol! cano. Walter Xevegold, a lad fifteen years | of age, living in Bristol, Pa.,* has pat| ented important improvements in roll! iner mill machinerv. He is said to be I the youngest inventor on the records i at Washington. i r"- ' "\r-:-V' v . . - ; 7 Substances Used as Woney at Different JL 1111VC# The following table will be found 3 i exceedingly interesting. It shows the remarkable variety of substances used as money at various times in different countries. The year, city or country iml nT?t?.T-i-il fm-mlnvf'.'l as; ninnpv Mrr> given as accurately as possible in each case: j i I ~ ! COCSTBT. 5CB!I iSE? " . 1900 Palestine Cattle, cold &r.d sihcf, by j j weight. lArabia Cold and silver coins. Pha*nicia Gold and silver copper J i coins. jPh<eniciani colony in: Spain Same (some still oxtantV 1200 IPhvrgia Coins by t^ueen of Phe- ! i lops. list IGrccce .j Brass oins. 862 Argos 'Gold and silver coins by : j Phidou. 70^-500. . Rorne 'Brass by weight. 51S lllonic Copper coins. Uncertain Carthage Leather or parchment j j money, first "paper j I bills" known. 491 (Sicily 'Gold coins by Gelo (some 1 | still extant). 430 Persia 'Gold coins by Darius (two I still extant). 473 Sicily "Gold coins by Heiro (some I still extant). 407 'Athens 'Debased gold coins, for| eisti. 4C0 'Sparta. 'Iron, overvalned. 360 lMacedon'a...jf'irst <;old coins coined in Greece by Philip. 266 Rome First silver coins coined | | in Rome. 54 Britain..... .(Pieces of iron. _50?;. Rome (Tin and brass coins. rnM.rfnin Ani'nis ~"i? 1 Period folioicing the failure of the ancient mines. "(a. D.) i j ' 212 | Rome (Caraj calia) | Lead coins silvered and copper coins gilded. 106? j Britain Living money, or human beiugs made a le^al tender for debts at about ?i 16s. 3d. per capitsPeriod of representatives for money. 1160 : Ital v. i ' Paper invented, bills of ex change introduced by I iae<jewa. 1340 (Milan, Italy.. Papei biils ale^al tender. 1276 [China Paper bills a legal tender. [Africa, part; : of |"Maclmte8" (ideal money. i This view is doubted). 1420 Granada, Sp.. Paper bills a legal tender. 1574 Holland Pasteboard bills, represen1 I tative. Uncertain Iceland Dried fish. Uncertain jNewfonndl'd. Codfish, dried. Uncertain'Norway and I Greenland..: Sealskin and blabber. :H!ndoostan ??j parts o fi i Africa. ]Cowry shells. Uncertain X. America... Agate, cornelian, jasper, I lead, copper, sold, silver. terra '.otta, mica, I pearl, lignite. ; in.liantribes.. Coa!, bone, shells, chalcedI ony, wampum, peas, etc. Cncertain'Oriental Pas-! ) toral tribes.jCattle, grain, etc. Uncertain[Abyssinia |Sa.lt. L'ncertaiii .China a n d i I India. I Rice. Cn erta'm; India I Paper bills. ; Lncerw1 >. :una. rieces 01 umm. Uncertain j Africa Strips of cotton cloth. Not stated... Wooden tallies or checks. Period, following the dixeovertf of the American ntives. .C31 Massachusetts Corn ale^al tender atroar| ket pri'.e. 16"." Massachus'tts Musket halls. 1690 Massachusetts. Paper bill?, colonial notes. 163-t England. Banknotes. 1700 Sweden Copper and iron coins. llU'Z p. VaTDIlIlO. . . A^OlUII.ai M1ILK. 1712 S. Carolina... Banic notes. 1715 .'France Interconvertible paper ! bii:s a legal tender. 1723 1 Pennsylvania Paper bills, colonial notes. 1732 .Maryland iluaian corn a le^al tender, j 2:>d. per bushel. 1732 Maryland iTobucco a legal tender at | Id. per pound. 177C Scotland. Tenpenny nails for small i cbaL^e. 1753 F r an k I in,; State of: (now part of X. Curo-' lina) Linen at 2s. Gd. per yard, whisky at 2s. cd. j-er gallon, and peltry as legal tender. Period following the failure of the American niiii&t. ts10-'-10 ..!a!1 cornnierc'lj I countries...(Great era of bank paper ; bills. 1826 iRassia. ;P!atiuura coins (disconj ! tinned in ISM). 13*1 ...... .ur.uvv, ya. w of Cocoa beans, and at Castle j Peote, soap. Period following the openings of California and Australia. i IS49 California ;Go!ddustby weighty als? minute gold coin for small change, coined in private miuts. 1S.-53 Australia. Gold dust by weight. LS5o ;Coramunist| i settlement! in Ohio called Utopia..! Private bills, each repreI seating *> one hour's labor." Period following the suspension of specie payment* in the United StaM. i i 1SC2 United States Paper bills a legal tender. iS63 X. Carolina.. Tenpenuy nails, at five j cents each, for small : change. 1S63 Camp at Flor-| j ence, S. C.. Potatoes for small change. IS63 United States Postage stamps for small j change, temporary. 1S65 Philadelphia.. Turnips for small change, ! temporary and local. ISG5 United States Sickle coins for small 1 | change overvalued. I 1 Ihe grandeur of TVonian. When you want to get the grandest idea of a queen, you do not think of Catharine, of Russia, or of Anne, of England, or of Marie Theresa, of Ger many; but when you want to get jrour grandest idea of a queen, you think of the plain woman whc sat opposite your father at the table, or walked with him armin-arm down life's pathway; sometimes to the thanksgiving banquet, sometimes to the grave, but always together?soothing your petty griefs, correcting your childish waywardness, joining in your infantile snorts, listening to vour evening prayers, toiling for you with the needle or at the spinning wheel, and on cold nights wrapping you up snug and warm. And then, at last, on that daj when she lay in the back room dying, and you saw her take those thin hands with which she had toiled for you so long and put them together in a dying prayer that commended you to the God whom she had taught you to trust?oh, she was the queen! The -i ^ J 4.* UlliiiiUlS U1 VJtUU VTililiC U.U>Vil l,U JLCOUU her; and as she went in all heaven rose up. You cannot think of her now without a rush of tenderness that stirs the deep foundations of youi soul, and you feel as much a child again as when you cried on her lap ; and if you could bring her back again to speak just once more your name, as tenderly as she used to speak it, you "ho nvilUnrr t r\ +Vitv\w vmitcalf r\n the ground apd kiss the sod that covers her, crying : " Mother, mother!" Ah! she was the queen?she was the queen. Xow, can you tell me how many thousand miles a woman like that would have to travel down before she got to the ballot-box? Compared with this work of training ! kings and queens for God and eternity, j insignificant seems all this work of voting for aldermen and common jouncilmen and sheriffs and constables and mayors and presidents ! To make one such grand woman as I have i iescribed, how many thousands w ould j you want of those people who gc i in the round of fashion and dissi- j oation, distorting their body until ic j their monstrosities they seem to outdc the dromedary and hippopotamus! going as far toward disgraceful apparel as they dare go, so as not to be arrested by the police?the behavior a 5<Yrrn\v tn flip rrnnrl arid a pnrirntnre t.n : the vicious, and an insult to that God j who made them women and not gor- i gons; and tramping on, down through j a "?'Ions and dissipated life, to tem- : poral :.ni eternal damnation.?Dr. j Talrru,v s. j THE FAMILY DOCTOE. A r> *% rtnrfl -fnr i/w?rm rrli 7)r TTrnf^Q -TXO (1 Liu V. 1V1 ^ / -i. V j Health Monthly advises the sufferer to j take either a lump of sugar soaked j in vinegar, or five swallows of water, j Persons who suppose themselves suf- j ferine from heart disease because thev j have pain in the region of their heart j or palpitation, seldom have any disease i of that organ. In nine cases out of ten ; O I they are sufferers from dyspepsia-? j nothing more. Congestion of the j lungs is most frequently caused by a ; sudden change from the heat of an ill- i ventilated room, or railroad car, or horse car, to the cold air outside, without being protected by sufficient clothing ; hence many persons thus seized drop dead in the streets. Hot drinlcs are specially hurtful to the stomach. They cause irritation of the nerves of the stomach, and conse- j quent mild inflammation of that or- j gan, so that after a hot drink the stomach is red and congested; in time a debilitated condition is set up. A temperature of 100 degrees also destroys the active ferment of the gastric juice?pepsin?and so leads to indigestion. If the stomach is at all disordered, hot drinks give rise to much griping pain, and in many c<tses to vomiting. In cases of diarrhea, too, hot drir.ks only increase it, wliile cold ones tend to lessen it. The Goat-H?rd Who Became a Great Sculptor. The story of the early life of Lawson, the eminent sculptor, is full of interest to working men and their families. His father was a miner, as were most of the inhabitants of the beautiful valley among the mountains in which he spent his childhood. Suddenly one morning in June an alarm bell intimated to the village that an accident hr.d occurred in the mine. Immediately the road was filled with crowds of people, aad among them was a boy of between twelve ana fourteen, who was ashy pale, his legs trembling so that he could scarcely move, but who nevertheless strained every nerve to reach the mouth of the pit. The waters had got into the mine, and it was feared that all who were in it were in danger of being drowned. PmnL- T.jiAvsnn's mnthpr had died four years before, and from that time his father and he had been everything to each other. His father was in the flooded pit.and he thought: "What will become of me if I lose him too!" All hands were instantly set to work to open a fr-?sh passage in the mine, so as to rescue the unfortunate men as soon as possible, but this could not be accomplished in less than twenty-four hours. Frank worked among the hardest. Ilis arm at last ceased, paralyzed by exertion, and he soon fell down senseless. A poor man who knew him, lifted him carefully and carried him to his cottage, and when he awoke it was to find that his father was dead. lie obtained a situation as a shepherd boy with a gentleman of large property in the district in which the village stood Having at cnce entered on his duties, he soon became a great favorite with his master, who found that although he was so yourg he was thoroughly to be trusted. One day, as ne was silting on a bank, feeling more than usually weary and depressed, he chanced to put his hand into his waistcoat pocket, and there he found his old knife, which had formerly given him so many hours of enjoyment. He instantly set to work and carved out the figures of the two dogs in the wood. He was himself pleased with the likenesses, and having finished the;n brought them home with him and laid them quietly on the table in the house of the shepherd whom he had been employed to assist. " What!" exclaimed the man ; " why that is 'Bruno,' and this is 'Snap;' do you mean to say that you have made them?" "Yes," said the young artist, " 1 have indeed carved them both myself, and I did it n purpose for you, as I thought you wvuld be pleased to have a likeness ol your two favorites. His master, the squire, had a number of fine horses, and the youth very much wished to make a likeness cf one of these?a beautiful Arab?but he found it difficult to obtain the requisite opportunities of observing the animal, lie most fre quently saw it merely as it quickly passed him with its owner on its back. But he persevered and succeeded. When he had accomplished lii3 purpose he was one day staading at the gate of the park, comparing his work with the original; and, looking with satisfaction on his production, he exclaimed: " It is really like." "Like what?" asked a i voice just behind him. It was his master's. This was the turning point in the youth's history. This gentleman had business connection with Liver- j r>r.<vi oo wr>lI nc a. l.-trcp estate in Wales. I and lie was so much pleased with Lawson's skill, and the promise which it showed, that he soon after arranged that he should remove to that town and pursue his studies under the direction of a sculptor there. In Liver pool he experienced many difficulties and not a few real hardships, but he persevered and in the end was rewarded. King Duke IX. "West African papers publish acnnnnto rtf thp rv>rnnnt.ion of Duke Ephrim J. Orck, king of Duke Town, at Old Calabar, by Jlr. Edward Hyde Hewitt, h;>r majesty's consul on the West Africa coast. The ceremony took place at the mission house, and was attended by the traders, merchants, chiefs and natives' of the district. A throne was erected in the church at the left side of the communion rail. After retiring to the vestry the king emerged robed in a huge coat of a semistate and semi-mail description. The j coat was of native manufacture and | wns tior! round the middle bv a fancv i V | cord. The Rev. Messrs. Anderson and ; Edgerley officiated. The crown and j scepter were placed before Consul i Hewitt on a table. The throne itself! i.;t : been sent out from England and bore the English royal co.it of arms, being upholstered in crimson brocaded j satin. The existing treaties with the j English government were read over \ to the king-elect, who took the usual! ? ' ; oath binding himself to uphold them, j He further promised to govern his; people to the best of his ability, and to ' encourage and develop the trade of! the place. Consul Hewitt then placed I the crown on Orok's head, invested \ him with the symbols of authority,! and proclaimed him. as King Duke IX.: EARTHQUAKES ASD SEAOTJAEIS. Experienced by One irho Sailed the Ocean Pl.Tft TT- rr..TI^, /?? ?!.n IIA T> -w?ut??nc Jiciin wi iuc .-?uurai nc avc" i ceircd in South American Wajer?. Mr. Martin, chief clerk of the j auditor's office, was found hard at work at the pay-rolls, preparatory to paying off the city employes, and afttr a few moments' conversation the reporter asked if he felt the earthquake on the morning of the 27th. " Quite distinctly," replied Mr. Martin ; "it woke me up out of a sound sleep, and for a moment I fancied myself back on the west coast of South America, where they are exceedingly common. The first one I ever remember to have experienced was out in Yaloaraiso. the Drincinal seamrt of a. - - f a x ir Chili. There were three vessels of our employ lying in the harbor at the time, anil as some of us had served together on different ships in the East India t rade, we agreed to have a jolly supper ashore for old time's sake. I do not know of A merrier crowd that could be got together than a party of young sailors who had been shipmates together for years in many different seas and parts of the world, taking life in a sort of happy-golucky style, as we 'apprentices' used to do, and then to meet after a few years' separation as officers of different ships in a foreign port, thousands of miles from home, with all our adventures that had taken place during our separation, and all our recollections of happy hours passed with each other to go over again?all our dangers by sea and our freaks ashore to recount and the news of absent friends to tellSo it was a jolly party that landed that night at the wharf, and long did the dinner last; when the cloth was removed, and the cigars and wine made their appearance the yarns that were spun would have done credit to an old forecastle hand. Our room faced the street, and from the windows was a balcony, which took in a view from the bay right up the mountain side. It must have been about, midnight when, as we were all (Teeply interested in a story being told by one of the { arty, we felt a slight trembling beneath the floor, and then the bottles and glasses began to fall and break. Hardly knowing what it was, we rushed, to the windows and out on the porch, and then for the first time realized what it really was?a regular bona fide Chilian earthquake. "The glasses jingled, the houses rocked at each other across the street, the mountain seemed bowinsr to the o sea, and the very bay seemed to be shivering in the moonlight, while up and down the street, as far as one could see, were men, women and children clustered together, as far from the houses on either side as they could get, kissing crucifixes held in their hands, and praying long, loud and most fervently. After two or three good shakes nature finally subsided without doing any great damage; the people once more returned from anticipations of another world, and realizing in manv instances that their scarcity of clothing was hardly consistent with their proper appearance in this one, rapidly disappeared, and soon the street was as deserted and quiet as it was before Dame Mature deigned to draw our attention to a new phase of her life. "Why, there is hardly a town up and down the coast, from the Straits of Magellan to the Isthmus of Panama, but what has some story of earthquake or its natural following, ' the tidal wave,' to tell of. At Irica, for instance, during an earthquake, a tidal wave swept an American and a French man-of-war far inland, and when it subsided left them high and dry a mile from the sea, and at one place along the coast, I forget the name just now, a vesel was lifted up on to the cliffs which faced the sea, and when the wave receded turned a somersault back into the bay from which she was lifted- Then there is Callao, in Peru, one night dropped out of sight in the bay, and the only person who saw the performance was an old fisherman named Lorenzo. He was in a little boat out in the bay (whether bobbing for eels or trolling for' mackerel deponent saith not), when he was very much surprised to find himself rising out of the water on the back of the hill, and a very ugly hill it is, too. However, when daylight, or reason or whatever fit was, came to him, there was he in his boat high and dry on the top of the island, seventy-five or a hundred feet above the sea. while the whole lower town of Callao, with thousands of people, was seventy-five or a hundred feet beneath its surface. Speaking of earthquakes, it is not generally known that they are felt at sea, but it is nevertheless true. I was i once in a bark one hundred miles from the main land, and probably as far T A e\ry ( CATT? Of? TM Af oUULii VJL o uaii x ciuauut/j ^ouixi^uiiiaoo called Robinson Crusoe's Island, it being the island on which Alexander Selkirk was wrecked), when I experienced a shock as though the ship had struck a reef. I sprang to the rail, but she appea- :l to be going through the water the same as ever. I felt the jar again, and the captain's head was thrust through the companinnwar tn Irnnw what, was the mat.t.Pr. I looked at the compass and found her on her course, and the man at the wheel said she had not varied a quarter of a point in an hour, but admitted he had felt the shock. By this time all | hands were on deck, and it was unanimously agreed by all that it was a regular earthquake, or, more properly, a seaquake.?Cincinnati Enquirer. The Cost of the Feuces. It has been estimated by Bradstreefs that there are six million miles of fence in the United States, the cost of which has been more than $2,000,000,- i 000, or about $625 a mile. Formerly ! - I the fences of farms were built of j wood, and the annual repairs put a j I neiivy Lax upon iuu i<uuitrrs. jliiu < last census shows that the cost of i such repairs in 1877 was $7S,629,000. ' Most farm fences are now built of j j wire, and sixty thousand miles of j < such fence were built in 1S81, at a cost j ] of $1.0,000,000, or about half the cost per mile of the old wooden fences. Texas papers tell of a young man 1 named Harrison, who was attacked by ] three cowboys and three Indians in tho ; \ nation, and, after a bloody battle, won ; ( the field, fhe Indians were killed and : j all the cowboys wounded. I Stories Abont Animals. A gray horse used by the St. r.^1" Transfer company in one of its teams is an habitual tobacco cliewer. A terrier dog at Americus, Ga., has forsaken his home and taken up his lot with a herd of goats, refusing to associate with other canines. Jealousy recently induced a large .1 4- ~ 4-", , - /-V /*1/1 UeilUl uug tu ULtclUiX a iivc-jau-uiu boy. The boy was petting a new lap clog when the big dog jumped upon aim and threw him down. The lap ilog, going to the bov's assistance, was killed. A novel fight occurrod in a stable io Council Bluffs between a stallion and a bulldog. The fight lasted more than an hour, and was so furious that no one dared enter to interfere. After fatalh bruising the dog the horse threw it outside the stall with its teeth. "W\ 13. F. Daniel, of Dublin, Ga., was deer hunting recently. Ilis dog caught t~\ : ?7 - i i 4. ~ ? u IUWLI. jjiuuti anympieu LU secute it, and the doe came to the rescue, lie dropped the fawn to catch the mother, but after a desperate struggle she slipped from his grasp and got away. A lady at Branchville, X. X, one day fed a common brook turtle that had approached her door. Thereafter the turtle paid frequent visits. This season the animal brought a mate with it, and the two make frequent excursions from the brook to the house to obtain food. A fight between a toad and a large black spider was recently witnessed at Merrick, L. I. After each round the toad hopped to a plantain leaf, bit off a piece and then returned to the fray. After this had occurred several times the leaf was taken away, and the toad, failing to find the leaf, soon rolled over and died. The distasteful odor of asafoetida that a Virginia lady had placed under the leaves 01 ine porcn as a aismieciaut drove awav a wren that had just gone to housekeeping. For some days the bird and her mate were observed to be very busy, and it was soon discovered that they had moved their nest twig by twig to the opposite side of the portico. At a wayside inn in the south of France is a roasting jack moved by animaJ power. Two dogs turn the machine, working alternately. One day the dog whose proper turn it was being absent, the other was caught and put on the wheel, lie natiy, However, reiuseato work, and neither coaxing, threats nor chastisement produced any effect. After some delay the missing dog was found and set to the task. After he had nearly completed the job he was released and the first tried again, and the animal so lately recusant now offered no opposition, and made the wheel revolve with a hearty good will till the roast was finished. The bluejay is the boldest and most mischievous of wild birds. Xeai Knoxville, Tenn., recently, one was seen to fly a number of times to a high picket fence to attract a pair of kittens playing on the lawn. Tlic kittens linally mounted the fence and began a cautious approach from picket tc picket. The jay let the first get to within eighteen inches, then hopped over between the two. The second kitten approached; the bird hopped over it. It turned and the jay hopped back and between. The first kitten approached and the jay hopped back over it, and lie kept it up till one kitten got disgusted and left and the other followed soon after. Once or twice after the jay tried to inveigle the kittens to another frolic, but failed. Abe Simmons, of Rosendale, X. Y., has a wonderful dog named Jack. Jack used to toss a silver piece placed upon his nose and turn around once and catch it in his mouth, but some one put a hot penny on his nose oneday and that spoiled the trick. In the winter time he is the dread of all thecMmnl wlin harp slpiorhs for WVUVVA V*4?AV4J> VM ? ? A?v ? V ..xj - ^ he will rush out when a boy is going along, grab the rope of the sleigh, pufi it loose from the boy and run off with it as fast as he can go. Finally the boys combined against him. When Jack decides that he wants a sleigh ihey let. him have the rope, but five or six boys jump on the sleigh, and Jack very soon tires of drawing them. Jack, when a cork is thrown up in the lir, will jump up, turn a somersault and catch it in his mouth. A. T. Stewart's Body. Talking to a Xew York detective of ficer tCMUiy, says a corresponueni 01 the Cincinnati Enquirer, I asked him what had become of the body of A. T Stewart. " The best information I possess said he, "is that it has not only nevei been recovered by the family and executors, but that it is not now in possession of the original thieves." "Well, whojgot it from them?" said I. "It is the understanding at police headquarters," said he, " that a second band of thieves, thinking the body was a good thing, stole it from the first. Probably some of the persons privy tc the robbery took the body away from those who had been at the pains to dig it up and spirit it off." " Well, how was Mrs. Stewart appeased ?" " Why," said the offiecr, " I suppose she thinks that the bones have been recovered. She either thinks they have been recovered, or does not inquire concerning them. The fact is," said my friend, " that after the robbery of that grave, it became a question among numerous wealthy persons in New York what tc do to prevent a spoliation of other tombs of the same class. You kno-w that immediately after the robbery in St. Mark's churchyard the tomb of the Vanderbilts at Staten Island, was watched, and so were several other tombs of conspicuous persons. They all got tired of paying special watchmen, becausc it looked as if they might have to watch the tomb for a period oi years, and every rich man that -died would require two live ones to look after his bones?a thing not very palatable to heirs. Consequently a notice was sent to Judge Hilton that he ought not to pay any reward for the return of Stewart's bones, whether Mrs. Stewart wanted to do so or not. The understanding is that Judge Hilton and other gentlemen pacified Mrs. Stewart in some way. You know the coffin of Stewart was not carried off by the thieves at all; they merely took the plate from the top and a piece of the cloth, and took out the body, so we presume that the coffin has been set in the new cathedral at Garden City, without the real bones, but nobody wanted to look into it. Windmills. "Windmills have not gone out of use yet by any means. Two of large pumping capacity were shipped recently from Xew York city for Guantanamo. Cuba. The ironwork of one of these mills weighs over 9,000 pounds, and the outfit was intended for pumping from a well 150 feet deep. Each af the windmills was complete in all its parts, having a large tower made ?f Georgia pine to support it, and pumps, pipes, connections, etc. The turntable of the larger mill, which supports the crank shaft, weighs 2,250 pounds. It is surprising that more svindmills are not used in this country ?Christian at Work. Probably the youngest farmers in !-><-> /inimtiT om +TX.-/1 MiilHren livincr V^VUJUVAjr V wnu iear Shreveport, La., who have eight icres in cotton and ten acres in corn, md will make good crops. The chilIren are brother and sister, aged respectively thirteen and ten years, and lave done most of their own wort. i irnpa AVTI T>T?T TfiTfiTTti J1VUAJU A?1 JL/ JLVJJJJJLMXV %J kj? The Evi4???? . ?" Faith. Ecal faith, by its ve?/ ^ '""re, is a standing rebuke of a religion v: ^ere feeling. Genuine spiritual emotion is the effect of Scriptural knowledge and conviction of the truth, under the influences of the IIolv Spirit. But when feeling gets the control of the judgment, when conscience is overpowered by wild fancies and excitements, when reason is misled by a morbid imagination, then come strong delusions, selfdeceptions, zeal without knowledge, and fiery intolerance. Fanaticism quickly burns out, but faith endures; and, in their periodical conflicts, faith has been and always will be victorious, because it is reasonable, calm, founded upon competent knowledge, and tri- J uinphs over ignorance, passion and J selr.?Christian 1 ntelligencer. Religions News and Notes. There are 42,000 Methodists in Missouri. There are three Lutheran churches in Florida. The Methodist churches in England gained 22,713 members last year. The Episcopal church of Scotland has 229 churches with 67,383 mem bers. There are on Manhattan Island seventy-nine Episcopal churches, with a total of 25,275 communicants. The Presbyterian church of Canada is raising $100,000 to build churches for the emigrants ^svho are pouring into Manitoba. There are 610 names of Chinamen on the rolls of Sabbath-schools in New i orK ana i5rooKiyn ana tne average | attendance is 331. The United Presbyterian foreign mission board has directed its missionaries who fled to England to return at once to their work in Egypt. The Churchman proposes that the coming centennial year of the Episcopal church in this country be observed by removing all debt from] 3,000 parishes. At Rheinfelden, Germany, the Cathlics offered the use of their old church to the Protestants for the installation of a new pastor, and many of them attended the service. Michigan has now two hundred and thirty-nine Congregational churches. During the past year ten new churches were organized in the State, all at eligible points, and the total membership is 16,957. Rev. Dr. Chamberlain says : There is a tremendous upheaval going on all through India at the present time, and I fear that Ilindooism is going to fall to nieces before the church of Christ is ready to seize the fragments of the ruins and build up the temple of the Lord. The census commissioners in their recent publication of the statistics of county Antrim and the borough of Belfast, north of Ireland, thus classify the religious denominations: Presbyterians, 43.6; Epicopalians, 23.3; other Protestant denominations, 10.4; Roman Catholics, 22.7. A famous Xorth Carolina clergyman, while preaching iTTew bunuays"' ago from the text, "He giveth His beloved sleep," stopped in the middle of the discourse, gazed upon his slumbering congregation and said: "Brethren, it is hard to realize the unbounded love which the Lord appears to have for a large portion of my auditory." Di. j ohn Eae does not hold the common opinion that the Esquimaux are a diminutive race. He is inclined to think that they are fully as tall as the average native o? London, and much heavier. The women, when young, he says, are very pleasant-looking, almost pretty, extremely solid and compact, with small feet and hands, and wellformed limbs. As to strength, he found that the Esquimaux could lift 400 to 500 pounds withease.May the good work begun by St. Jacobs Oil continue until rheumatism and neuralgia have been banished from -Lt xi- i?i f ht rr \ n?^ i;ie ear li j.?a.lou,wj yn. x.) jt/cdo ? /?* Knickerbocker. Washington is growing very rapidly. The permits for building issued during the last year were 1,739, representing an outlay of $2,468,986, which is $500,000 more than for the preceding year. Gone! Inflammatory rheumatism, cured by St. Jacobs Oil. Ira Brown? Chicago Tribune. There are now over 2,200 convicts belonging to the Texas penitentiary, 487 of whom are confined within the walls ; che remainder are on farms and railways. Being entirely vegetable, no particular care is required while using Dr. Pierce's " Pleasant Purgative Pellets." They operate without disturbance to the constitution, diet or occupation. For sick headache, constipaI :ion, impure blood, dizziness, sour eructations from the stomach, bad taste in mouth, bilious attacks, pain in region of kidney, in| Lernal fever, bloated feeling about stomach, rush of blood to head, take Dr. Pierce"? " pelltts." By druggists. Ix Texas i,wi miles of new roads were constructed last year, costing nearly $50,000,000. The State has now thirty-four railroads, aggregating 5,90S miles in length. Favoritism I is a bad thing, but Dr. Pierce's " Favorite Prescription" deserves its name. It is a certain cure for those painful maladies and weaknesses which embitter the lives of so many women. Of druggists Sixk culture is becoming an important industry with a large colony of Mennonites located in Nebraska. They feed the silk worms with leaves of Russian mulberry. If bilious, or suffering from impurity of blood, or weak lungs and fear consumption (scrofulous disease of tha lungs), take Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" and itwiil cure you. By druggists. At a wedding in Cleveland, 0., the justice performed the ceremony in English, the bride responded in Bohemian and the groom answered in German. Incomparable. Po'jghkeefoIe, N. Y., May 31,1SS1. H. H. V/akxe2 <? Co.: Sirs?I suffered ten years with kidney and gravel complaints. The only thing that did me good was your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. I pronouncs it an incomparable remedy. CllABLE3 H. HET.xe3. A fathee and two grown sons in Western Oregon have imperfect hands and feet. Each J-.as ona finder on the left hand. They make I baskets for a living. Ladies. send 2."c.^o Strawbridse <? Clothier, Sth and Market sta., Philadelphia. and receive their Fashion Quarter!',:for sit mouth?. Now music and 1.0jO engravings in each number. Within the last twenty-five years the steam pressures of locomotives have been increased from sixty pounds to over 160 pounds to the square inch. I.vo.\'s Patent Metallic Hesl Stiffens:* eei> ne.v boots au l >hoesfro:n running over. ki'A by shoe and hardware dentera. Deacon Smith bays CarboKne. the Hcodo? .-.I petroleum hair rerewer and restorer, n i .-m/v. its imn?nvemmt. recommGi.ds i .-j all his friends as the perfection of >11 hai: I preparations. Mission'^ Peptonized best toxic, theonly 1 preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. It contains blood-making. forcc-generating- and life-sustaining proper- j ties; invaluable forindigesiion,dyspepsia,nervous prostration, and ail forms of general de- | bility ;also,in a.li enfeebled conditions,whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, | | overwork or acme disease, oaruouiaxiy n rui suiting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, , Hazard & Co.,prop'rs.,N.Y. Sold by druggists 25 Cent* Will Bay a Treatise upon the Horse and his Diseases. Book of 100 pases. Valuable to every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. Sent postpaid by New York Newspaper Union, 150 Worth Street, New York. ** Rough on Rats- " Clears out rats, mice, roache3, flies, "u'f '.eubugs, skunks, chipmunks, gophers, lr? 0 ;-n agists. The Science of Life or Self-Preservation, a medical work for every man?young, middleaged or old- 125 invaluable prescriptions. I TT7ENTT-F0UR HOURS TO IJVE. From John Kuhn. Lafayette, lad., who announce* j that he Is now in "perfect health." we hare the folio wins; "One year ago I was, to all appearance, in j the last stages of Consumption. Our best physiclans gave my caw up. I finally got so low that , our doctor said I could not live twenty-four hour*. My friends then purchaned & bottle of DB. WM. HALL'S BALSAM FOB THE LTJXG8, which considerably benefited me. I continued until I took nine bottles. I am now in perfect health, ha-ring ] nsea no otner medicine. DR. DsWITT C. KELLIXGER'S LINIMENT is an infallible cure for Rheumatism, Sprains, lameness ana Disea?os or the Scalp, and lor promoting the growth of the Hair. B K.ST TKLSS EVER USED?Send for circular. N. Y. Elastic Truss Co., removed to 744 Broadway, N.Y. ALLEN'S BRAIN FOOD!?Most reliable toaio for the Brain and Generative Organs. It positively cures Nervous Debility and restores lost virile powers. Sold by drajgists. SI; 6 for $o. Free oy mail on receipt of price. JOHN H. AX.LEN, Chemist, 3lo Firet Avenue, New York. 25 Cent* will Buy a Treatise upon the Horse and his Disoases. Book of 160 pages. Valuable to every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. Sent postpaid by NEW YORK NEWSPAPER UNION. ISO Worth street. Sew York. nwrti if i Dirt"l<? lnii n a iv n r<j %j? < 8 NEW T02X. Beef cattle, good to prime, lw 10% I Calves, com n to prime veals 8 @ 10 j Sheep 5 Iambs 5%(ct 5% Hogs?Live ll%@ 33% Dressed, city. 10%@ 11 Flour?Ex. St., good to fancy 4 65 (tb 6 80 West, good to choice 4 66 (S 8 73 Wheat-No. 2 Red. 1 09&@ 1 03% No. 1 White 1 11 @ 1 11)$ Rye?State 77 <? 77 Barley?TVo-rowed State... 81 & 81 Corn?Un^rad. West, mixed. 67X@ 80 Yellow Southern 72 @ 72 (fcfic^Whit? State 43 (? w Mixed Western 38 @ 42 Hay?Med. to cb. Timothy.. 70 w SO Straw?No. 1, Eye 60 @ 65 Hops?State, 1881, choice ... 68 @' 70 Pork?Mess, new, for export.21 70 @21 20 Lard?City steam 12 75 @12 75 Refined 13 00 @13 CO Petroienm?Crude 7^@ "J4 Refined 8 @ 8^ Batter?State Creamery 30 @ 34 Dairy 20 @ 22 West Im. Creamery. 20 @ 28 Factory 15 @ 18 Cheese?Stale Factory 8 (q 12% Skims 2 @ 6 Western 5 @ 11% ?State and Penn 27 & 28 Potatoes?L. I., bbl 2 23 ^ 2 50 BUFFALO. Steers?Good to Choice 6 00 @ 6 60 Lambs?Western 4 75 @ 5 25 Sheep?Western 400 @425 Hogs?Good to choice Yorks. 8 40 @ 8 70 Flour?C'y ground n. process. 7 25 (d) 8 25 Wheat?No. 1. Hard Duluth.. 1 17 @ 1 18 Corn?No. 2, Mixed 70 @ 70 Oats?No. 2, Mired "Western. 40 Barley?Two-rowed State... 80 @ 20 BOSTON. Beef?Ex. plate and family. .17 50 @18 00 Hogs?Live 8)?@ 9% City Dressed ll?@ U3~ Pork?Ex. Prime, per bbl... 2100^ 215' Flour?Spring Wheat patents 7 25 (a) 8 75 Corn?High Mixed 80 @ 81 Oats?Extra White 51 @ 52 Rye?State 80 @ 8e Wool?Wsh'd comb <& delaine 44 (A 48 Unwashed " 28 (& 30 WATEKTO"W2f (MASS.) CATTLE MABEET. Beef?Extra quality 7 378 12V j Sheep?Live weight 5 (5- 6 ' Lambs S/ife 6y ' Hogs?Northern, d. v? 11 @ 11% \ PgELAD7T.PIHA. < Flour?Penn. ex family, good 5 50 @ 5 75 ? Wheat-No. 2, Red 1 10 (? 1 10 Jc Rye?State ; 70 <5 70 a Com?State Yellow 82 (& 82 J Oats?Mired 69 @ 69 ? Butter?Creamery Extra Pa. 31 & 3i 1 Cheese?N. Y. Full Cream... 12%@ 13 J Petroleom?Crude 6 @ -7 J Refined 7&<6 iy \ DUDfll FOB RHEUMATISM, ; Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, h Backache, Soreness of the Chest, i Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell' \ has and Sprains, Burns and ~ Scalds,'General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache> Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other i Pains and Aches. J Ko Preparation on earth equal* Sr. Ji.C0M On. "S as a soft, sure, simple and cheap Ixtornal p Remedy. A trial entails bqt the camparatiTotjr ? triSiag outlay of 50 Cm: Is, and erery ou* en truing with pain caa havo cheap aad positive proof of its claims. n Directions In Eleren Laagcafea. " SOLD BY ALL DEUGGIST8 AST) DEALES3 .1 15 JfEDICUTEL 1 A. VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, lid., V. 3. JL. ,r N YN~T^-42 ,?w, .. v w-v., Xiia true antidote to ^ I I* a b5?l^ the effeota of miasma gS 534$* " ^ fcfcjffl^ is Hcstetter's Stom0?il8*ATll ?^ach BitUrs. This medicine is ono of the - ? ^T\ most popular reiae jfrSff. <tas of an aco of ?ue?$*% ccfisful proprietary a. specific*, and is ia .r iatu demand jTi<*j^ wherever on thi* Oontincnt fever and acne ^fB&&HcS^fiSSSSSL^^S exists. A irir^zbssf=l three times a day is the beet poesible preparative for en- ^SwMjBSW^ coanterin* a malari- - . _ ocb atmosphere, res- 1 fe^TOMAi,VS S2?? eC>3 Ce.ro FEt3 5?3i5 rr)??h. For e.\l? hr xl] % "XT" Drujrjpst* and Deal- 1 "' ~ v - v ? er? generally. ti I1IS11D! i Parsons' PnrjjKtlve Pi!!? make New Rich Blood, and will completely change the blood in the entire system in three months. Any person who will tak* on* pill each night from 1 to 12 weeks may be restored to soand health if snch a thine be possible. Sold every* whero or sent by mail for eight letter stamp*. I. S. JOHNSON & CO.. Boston, -Una*., formerly Bangor, 3Ie. KnCF'KSenillMPHBN iji^nvTOais^ more jsnp?rtact JuiWU J r Juil 1 amjonjajDcanecf C!MpS'Hls^FfilE TBIAL is oSar*d to til affiicud with symptoms of toe disease ijddioaa. fez 788, H. Y. City. j. ~CKANDAIL'S, OU9 *>u atci) -i. i. i-itsb. 1841. Mnfrcrs of Baby 7 V. JSSSy and Uoll CarriiiRC*, Ve- n ^55locipedes, Bicycle*, Hob/xf7*G?5i/A by and .Spring fTorsco, _ ^5 ^!eis?Us,W8saua?ndToy * yi~? Block*. Retail sales. SontC. * D-t0 an* address. Illustra. * t-i O'in-nlzn ix-ut free. o >By iSL Dtxrs bkasd kuxtr^-\ /sgaca n JTtW*?^ Jw CT r?r?i luifiMt N??(vS?, Win. p'^*<,S fTftwi M.L||6SS i! I. sr J Z*> ." ? p /?> 5 !T 5 ? *>? ??<* C n art ?*t <fc FortalMfor c. 5^rarui,S*wMin ? p;*ru * 2taa e 3 c b a Kcr pric?,ote, n writ* Tns -i ULTHA^' A TAYl-OIt CO. MacifciUt.OA ?r*l:f.S Waited ior the Bcki and Kast-cst-sellin; ( xi. I'ivt.iml 34oOh!* .-.n?i I>:bley. Pricua teJucad :t: p?r t cent. .National PcuLl^msa CO., Philadelphia, Pa.. a i vi\v . i i vv! "VTTON_a mast*eh? orotector; fits v A. a nr eup. Srad 2.1c. fur isaiplf, or st*inp for pirtiou- e its. Ago:;ts <"nted. E. A. G1LKKRT, Me*dTiil>, Vs.. ^ ACENTSWANTED.4?S , to nuke money rapidly seilixj; our NEW BOOK: 1 BEwYfiSFs ' IM.M IWIKI-MSUBIIT \ Showing up !l>a Xev.- Tcr'^ of to-Jjv, with Its palaces, ill i crowded tliorvmffhfarej. i's rushinc elevated trains, its coaat ei? *isrbt*. ;:s romance. Its mvitery. it? dark crimes tadten iblrt traffedi^. tta charities, and in fact ?Tery l pba.<< of llf? in toe jfifat citv. Don't waste time sellta* . slow books, hat ."Mid for circular* firing fa!! tabl? of I contents, tens* to After.ts, Ac. Prospecuu now rud/ and tcrritorr in g-eat demand. A<Vlre*s .... _ BC?OLABS232tiS..65X8<ri*thSL,Kulti?35hia,I^ - I , ? G| HAS BEENPROVEo V f 2 The SUREST CURE for =-:.-5a1 | KgDMEYDISEASES^I J1 I Doe? a lose baoicor arffoardcre<igrfa?* w " -^Xil B oat? tiat you aro a Tlotiin? TH22T DO EOT c J HESITATE; use JEDDKET-WOBJT at OSW. ? r&tfl R (&mgglstm rooommcnd It) end itw?C tpeedily m U. OTantrn?>s.^;m,tr^ fc I It Is a SURE CURS for all I inicc.cE<i-:;,ha,.,vFB,E 5 It haa ?peci5c action en thia asoat important E ' j! crjan, enabling it to throw off torpidity and tap fi j action) tkolisalthy scoretiozi ofm'.-".t " Bile, and by keeping the bcrwelj in&Moaadj* B Hon, ofiectiar its regular discharge. EMfIfyoasrara2teiaffflroa S ;-,Fg?Hra ESSCSSClf ICZa tare the ch?Qs, | ?ro billons, dytpeptic, cr constipated, Kldaey- c - ' :N'--^aegji| i "Wort wCZsaroZyrjliev?aad?ir?iciJy core- E ! In the Sprigs:, to cleanao the System, every B ~~~j4GS&Z j onaahonld take a tic recgh. ogcrse of it ' K ' B AfjJnQ For complaints pecaliarto $ HI hflWlvgi yocrsci, s-cches psinand g ' I; weaknesses, KLD2T3T-V70?T is unsurpassed, P |, as it will act promptly and eafcly. >*- g 2 Either Sex- Inccai-ineree, retention. cf urte^ J H brick dust or rojy depeeiij, sad dull diss^ae 5 ' '""'flM 3 p=/>*i?i allipoodilyyicldtoita ccrs-tivo power, g S ETIt Acts at the same time on the KH>2? jsxa, If j?r. -^21 J UTVEBAOT rOWTLSU~3 PorCcastipaUfaa, 5^ jtfW g Klea,cr'Rvn-irial-'tTi it is apcmanffltcrso. 4D J 'll |_SCLD 3Y DSUCCISTS. Price 31. ^Bjc nil l^ll rfg- '-?? oldest and the standard Unirnent ee meg -wi United States- Large size, $1.00; medium 50 .. TgSS oents small. 25 cents; small size for family y~~-~W\ use, 25 cents; Merchant's Worm TaKets, 25 cents. For sale by every druggist and dealer yffl in general merchandise. For Family Use. . v|| The Garbling Oil Liniment vTSrra -A wrapper, prepared for human flesh, U pot ; up in email bottles only, and docs not stain :? . ^3B I the skin. Price 25 cents. TIid Garbling- Oil Almanac for 18S3 ipg Is now in the hands of our printer^ and win . be ready for distribution during the mentis of November and December, 1882. TheAl- : " manac for thw? cominjr year will be mor* use- -x~J?38| fol and instructive than over, and will be : | sent free to any address. Write for one. ./-' tfgjSgi iiSk. tile nearest/ viugjuk .. If the dealers in your place do not keep ' " 7 Merchant's Gargling Oil for sale, insist upon " their sending to us. or where therget their ~ medicines, and get it. Keep the bottle well -^h corked, aa<l shake it before using. Yellow . _ wrapper for animal and white for hnmtn Spccial Notice- >:-0& The Merchant's Garj?ling Oil has. been In ???jS|^H n*e as a liniment for half a century. All we ask is a fair trial, but be suro and follow di- ~ j The Gargling Oil and Merchant's "Worm : Tablets are for sale by all druggists and deal- ^ era in general merchandise throughout the . ' '"' JgB Manufactured at Lockport, N. Y., by 3?er- chant's Garbling Oil Company. mm JOJI PETITION far SIXTEEN YEARS: * .^ag ither Aninricjn Or**ns haris* bsen found ?qul auaB&33tS39^^| Ubo CHEAPEST. StTl. 1S9; 3* oct*T?; Ba&wut ainpass and power, with beet quality, lor pop???? acred and secular mnuic in schools only x; ;V /^PSl ?22. ONE HUNDRED OTfTKR STYLES ?.. ::>ggB iSO. S.V7. SGG. 572, S7?? 35>S, 31W.?m?; - . -rttam o SoOO *nd opvrtrd. The larger styU* art Kltollfm-' -' icnlrd. frv an*f *9'hrr Ori?/m*w Ai*o for 6*syp*yoiwrti. " <EW ItiliUSTRATlSD C\\TAI>OGTOFK3EB.-r^^3J AIAMAO^ Company h?r? conrannced " I"?11 M & <F fH ^ tho 3i<nnl*ctnre of UPKI(?HT ' . JgM llAIyVU GRAND PIANOS, mnodndnr^^W^ mpcriant improvement*; zdding to power *na besot j ox . one and durability. TTill n+t reqwr* tHninaj^^uartmr ' .<W u5 muck a* oihw Pianos. I^LTJSTItATEI) ClK* '''.* _ tffl T?rrrt**fHwtr*nd . valuable. Tiocaaads FJEVE2 FAILS. _^J proclaim it the moat ghSf ?? s?TV wonderful Iawgaaat ,r,33?5g! E?^ sale by all Dramcii.. "HE DR. S. A. EI TH3IOND 3LEDICAL CO-4 Sole Proprietors. St. Joseph, ZEio. '* -?? Payne's Automatic Engines. Raiiabls, Dur?-bl? ?x.d Kcosomic?], vdi^ttntUk ? or* poarr vith % Im futl axA 1cater than cutf *&*P biffin* built, not fitted with *a Automatic Cutoff. Bead yr Illustrated Catalo;;:;# "J," for IzfonnntiMi and "ricae. B. W. Pats* ?fc Sosa. Box 860. Corning. S.Y. FRAZER B AXLE SREASE Bent in the world. GrttheceoniM. Every . tckitfe haa onr trade-mark ?nH M narked '.' V ?3 raster's. SOLD EVERYWHERE; FSVE-TON WM DMKUBflf 1 All Iron ud ?? ?!, DwuWe 3rus Tare B?*a I H ra?a JU p*n tfc* fnlcht. *21 iJw ?^u?lly I?r, g gj WIes 8F B:!?HAMT3^ 1jgs^giih/ 3 Best Cousk Twt? rood- g CIY 'ktwastx xoyzr: T?rwnA -<* XH ?l A L'?t ?ui i Utomh Ikj( JW.? i<J ,^ri *r ? be?y fro** !?ir ?i femll -,. v I O ^ ? u Tsicso. srxxsorara n? V?53b -; ' :, < KncottTttt. UA1K i.?>n <- ^WrT'l^g TTJ ti? p?n S?*B:>S 4i***frr ?v-:h ku SXTJUl TTT "SBBJIKLA ITAOXd. Ini UNLT SIX CiSTS X 0r. J. toO-TIX- (SHSSm >- . -OKS t H. I?1W. & *??, ??? J?reo ?f ?U tftwr.M 'QBy\ . j; ^,dfatcfees rfltlUC UCS3 It you witnt to !e*nj te'.ezrxphy in * Ub?S fnCn frw months sad hecert*iaof a situ*. - ~-;J cm. addrcM Vaifntiac Kros., JscMviile. Wa. MOWLEDGE IS FOVEB $ BBAD!^ 4: .'HE SCIENCE OF LIFE: OR, SELF- 99 PRESERVATION, ' sa medicaltreatise 011 E*hap<ited Vitality, Nerrgns ad Physical Debility, Premature Decliaa in i an indispensable twatiso for #?ij sua, whetlw $; > T'-y^aa ounj, middle-ac?i or old. "HE SCIENCE OF LIFE; _ OR, SELF-: '^WiM PRESERVATION, s beyond all comparison the most extraordinary ' ~3?H rork on Physiology ercr published. There is nothing. rhxtever that the married or siczie can either require -jSsSjfl r wish to know but what is fully explained.?Toronto ' ""'SB CHE SCIENCE OF I,TFE: OR, SELF-s__ PRESERVATION. ^ nstrncts those is health how to remain so, and the ta? alid how to become well. Contain* one hundred and '--Si'** wenty.tire invaluable prescriptions for all forms of \?5s3?2 cute and chronic dieoases, for rich of which ft fink . las* physician would charge from 33 to $10.?ZondM rHE SCIENCE OF UFE: OR, SELF- iffiM PRESERVATION, .JjS Contains 300 pa^es, fine ateel enararinjrs, is superbly : iound is Frozen muslin, embossed, full cat. It is a aarrel of art and beauty, warranted to be a better gedical book in erei7 tense than can b<s obtained else- - "V:"s3i rhrre for double the price, or the money will be refund- - " d in ereiy instance. ~J.uihor. PHE SCIENCE OF MEEjl. OR, SELF- y|||gg PRESERVATION. a so much tuperior to all other treatises on medical JjjMk objects that comparison is absolutely impossible.? ~<ifl lotion Herald. CHE SCIENCE OF IJFE; OR. SET~ ''*?~SS PRESERVATION. m sent by mail, securely sealed, postpaid, or J" >rice, only $1.25 (new edition). Small illn*^ De ic. Send now. jat an The author can be consulted oa a /?nh#? toll and experience. Address . f ""V' PEABODY MEDIC, ?W.H.Pi-f WhKhCOTt BaUuk strwt. " ^nty-seven -wM i so extended by < tn fiivpr a ciirfoofl s^re