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- * ' A DREAMER OF DREAMS. "irV ? " Relates Htr Reniarknble Kfbrlracen?Hove Dreams at? Reliable or the Contrary?The Genuine Article Described and IllMBjUei^"'* * . J. Tho Chicago InteT^Ocean 'prints a communication which says: I want exerf person who reads this to understand that it is the plain, nnvarnishidtmth. Being natural, 1 should commence .with children's dreams. Of course They are more^fooliah and harder to understand than grtrwn persons' on account oi^ihe immaturity of their mindaj.ne^ettlideiS^ tlw have a deep meaning. Jtfy theaiii|woio always hints, or, .mora? properly, Significant of the future. My oldest sister was aware of thiBypod often asked mewhat I dreamed. I told her I dreamed brothififr'came home and left Ms Jpones. Sb^seern&l excited, and sat oowii and wroffe him a letter, telling him to come, home immediately, as some great danger threatened him. He replied to her letter, made light of her warning, and ended by saying that was some of her " old woman's notions." Mark what followed,. In about six weeks lie was brohght home a corpse, being greatly reduced^ in flesh, liaviug died of typhus fevfer. I "will relate toother child's-droam. A liMdei/boy, tour years old, dresmed he went info a certain room, and" man's head lying on thQ door. Some timi^after a man died ih the same room after a lingering illirtfes. The dreams of some persons are not reliable. Persons having weftk minds and crooked ways eflald^ot be expected to dream straight. The general unbelief in dreams comes mainly from this cause. When we moved to Illinois my husbandk wished to purchase a span of hersos.' The result -was, old nags1 in various | stages of' decay, were brought and represented as sound and "without blemish. In every instance I detected what ailed them, and their peculiar traits. To' make a long story short, I will merely relate one dream. I imagined myself sitting in the house, when a woman ;entered without ceremony. She held her head slightly back, and I noticed wrinkles extending from her ears to her nxroa nmro li/av o lnnlr nf crrAAf. v J^i tr>" * ^ ,4Vk M ^ v. o i suffering. I asked her what, ailed her. I She said: " I have been afflicted with a : pain in the back of my neck. They have nibbed all kinds of strong stuff on it, but nothing does it any good." She said a great deal which is not necessary to mention. The next day al)out noon a man drove up to tire gate with a span of mares, which he wished to sell for $150 apiece. My husband examined them, and could see nothing amiss, but said he would not take them xiniil I looked at them. As I walked from the house to i the gate, I noticed one of the mares held her head back, had her ears cropped, and also wrinkles extending from her ears to her eyes. I bid the man the time of day, and then said: "There is something the matter with that off mare." As soon as I said that he gave j a ofovf oa+lirvnrrh cnmpf.hinfr linrJ I a nuvivtvu num, u>j vuv^iqu bit him. I felt certain I bad hit the nail ou the head, so I said: " Husband, go around and loose the collar and see j if there is not something the matter [ with the back of her neck." As soon as bo touched the harness she kicked like vengeance. At this tho man seemed to recover from his fright,and said: "Oh, don't do that! I have been rubbing strong stuff on her neck, and she is afraid you are going to rub some on." After the collar was removed it was evident she had an incurable disease; and her neck was minus a pound of flesh V! ' Words of Wisdom. There are some human tongues which have two sides, like that of certain quadrupeds, one smooth, the other very roifgh. The passing years drink a portion of the light from our eyes, and leave their traces ou our cheeks, as birds that drink at. lakes leave their footprints on the margin. . V" He who writes against the abuses of the age in which he Jives, must depend on rue generosity or me iew 101- ms bread, and the malice of the many for his. fame. Benevolence does not measure its | charities too nicely. "The clouds never send down to ask the grass and plants j below how much they need; they rain J for the relief of their own full bosoms, j If the sprmg puts forth no blossoms, I in summer there will bo no beauty, and i in autumn' no fruit. So if youth be ; trifled away without improvement, riper j years will be contemptible, and old age | miserable. A young girl, scarcely yet awake to ; the mysteries of her nature, and fluttering over the first demonstrations of love, I is like a child sporting on the rippling ; strand of the sea, when a high tide is 1 about coining in. He who goes through a laud, and | scatters blown roses, may be tracked I next day by their withered petels that j strew the ground; but he who goes through it,' and scatters rose seed, a j hundred yeara after leaves behiud him a land^full of fragrance and beauty for his ; monument, and as a heritage for his j daughters and sons. As there are some faults that have been teamed faults on the right side, so there are some errors that might be j denominated errors on the safe side, j Thus, we seldom regret having been too i mild, too cautions, or too humble; but | we often repent having been too violeut, i too precipitate, or too proud. A Submerged City. A strange discovery is reported from the Lake of Geneva, Switzerland. A tonr- | ist having lost his trunk, two divers were j employed to search for it. While they were below water they found what they 1 supposed to be a village, siuce covered ; by the lake. Their statement led to au investigation of the spot by the municipal authorities, who took measures to ascertaiu the truth of tiie extraordinary account of the divers. On covering the placid surface with oil, these latter were able to distinguish the plan of a town, , streets, squares and detached houses I marking the bed of the lake. The ruddy hue which characterized them led the I observers to suppose that the buildings ! had been covered with the famous Vermillion cement which was used by the i Celts, Oimbri and the enrlv Gauls. There are about 200 houses arranged over au i oblong surface, near the middle of which ; is a space more open, supposed to have been used for public assemblages. At the eastern extremity lies a large square tower, which was taken for ,a rock. A superficial investigation seems to indicate that the construction of these building date from some centuries before our era. Tlie council of Yaud has decided to have the site of the dwellings enclosed by a jetty stretching from tho laud, and to drain off the water, so as to briug to light what promises to be one of tho most interestiug archaeological discoveries of our day. The Blue and the Gray. An interesting fact attending the reccnt outbreak in Louisville, Ky., which was at once followed by tho enrollment of nearly a thousand citizens for the protection of the city, was the service side by" side of ex-Fed oral and ex-Confederate soldiers. Ex-S^cretary Bristow, for instance, colonel of one of the Federal regiments, recruited in Kentucky, stood guard with General Basil Duke, John | Morgan's most dashing lieutenant, and ex-United States Marshal Eli H. Murray, the youngest brigadier in tlie Union army, commanded oue of tlie hastilymustered commanies, while Major E. A. Richards, who served under General Lee, was one of his fellow-officers. Hundreds of ex-soldiers of the blue and gray stood shonUer to shoulder in the ranks. ODER SIX FLAGS. The Vnrlcd Military Service and Interest' ~ * Iiik Adventnren of Gen. C. J. L. Cook. The Kansas City Timex. says: 0. J. L. Cook, who is in the city, is a remarkable mau. He has served under tli< flags of the Un'fced States, the Confederacy, Mexico, Austria, Egypt anc Cutia, and is now on his way to Mexicc to seek fortune again. He is a native ol San Antonio, Texas. His parents wert Germans. In 1854 he was admitted tc the West Point Academy. He was sc young that his real age was concealed. He was not more than fifteen years oi age. He graduated in 1858, was .commissions! as second lieutenant of the Second Dragoons, and sent to tne irontier. He later entered the service of th< Gonfederate government on the staff- oi Stonewall Jackson, where he waB cbiei of engineers. After Lee's surrender he aecompa'ued John C. Breckinridge tc Europe, but returned soon afterward, and entered the Mexican service undei Juarez. ' At the close of theVear 1865 he found himself in Mexico. Maximilian was on his last legs, and the American fret lance felt no inclination to enter the imperial service. Making his way . intc Northern Mexico, he volunteered ir Gen. flscobedo's division in the Liberal ^rmy, and was promoted to {he position of brevet brigadier general, With the success of the Liberal armjr he went tc Europe, offered his services to the Austrian government, was assigned to service ii^ the topographical engineer department, and went "through the short and disastrous campaign which lost to Austria and gained to Prussia the control of the German States. In 1867 he entered the array of the khedive oi Egypt. Soon after entering the service he had a dispute with Gen. Kirby Smith, which resulted in a duel and his own resignation. From Egypt he went East, and circumnavigated the globe. After ? ?^ wavI/1 IYA wanf fn II IB IUIU XUUUU C11C UViiUf uv nvuv w Cuba, arriving there in July 1868, where he opened a hotel and entered into the cultivation "Of tobacco. His hotel became the resort o?< Hie revolutionists, liis sympathies being with th? patriots, he was soon an object of suspicion, and finally his house was bunied, and-lie barely escaped with his life. He made his way to the revolutionary army, where he did some fighting. He was one of tli? agents who went to New York to assist ip raising funds and munitions of war. It was his fate to be one of the passengers on the ill-fated Virgiuius 6n her last trip to Cuba, and he was captured with the unfortunate Capt. Fry and his crew, and taken to Santiago de Cuba. He was led forth with the doomed men of the Virginius to be shot, and he would certainly have been butchered with the rest had not Sir Lambton Lorraine, of the British war ship Niobe, 1 i.:? I.T? rr? DttVCU Ilia 111C. ULU i/joxuiru j/xitioa putection, and was one of the two men on whom the British commander threw the English ensign. Next, a schooner named C. J. L. Cook was purchased and placed under his command. She was loaded with war materials, and Cook started again for Cuba. This time he landed his cargo on the south coast of Cuba, at the base of the Sierra Maestro. He remained in Cuba, and again entered into active service. It was his misfortune to be captured by Spaniards, who caught him asleep and disarmed him. In the struggle he wounded one of the Spanish soldiers, and so enraged the commanding officer that he had him stripped and beaten with an iron ramrod until his back was raw. They then dressed his wound3 with salt, and imprisoned him in irons in a filthy dungeon. He was recognized on his arrival in Havana, tried, and sentenced to be hung June 3, 1875. On the night before the clay set for his execution he succeeded, by the aid of a Tennesseean, named Adams, in obtaining a quantity of drugged wine, with which He drugged ins lour guards inside, and obtained the key to his shackles. He stabbed and killed two sentries, and made his escape to a schooner called the Carrie Mayco, upon which he was secreted in a hogshead. An Exemplary Convict. An incident worthy of notice occurred at the State prison at Jefferson City, Missouri, on the morning of the fourth, says the Indianapolis (Ind.) Journal. Ten years ago a boy sixteen years of ago was sentenced to ninety-nine years imprisonment for killing his employer, in Linn couuty, Mo. He was poor, friendless and neglected. No one has ever written to him or visited him since he entered the penitentiary. He was as much forgotten by the outside world as if the grave grass was growing over his head. He had no one to ask a favor for him; no one to plead for his pardon; no one to care whether he lived or died. And yet such was his determination to do right, to get God's forgiveness for his crime, to merit the respect of even bis fellow-prisoners, that for ten years he has not disobeyed a single rule or regulation of the prison, has never received a reprimand, and 1ms won the friendship and favor of the officials in charge of the place. They, acting voluntarily, on account of his uniform good deportment and exemplary life, appealed to the executive to pardon him. Consequently on the fourth, Acting General Brockmeyer, in person, delivered the release, and the overjoyed mau stepped out of the prison gate a free being once more. The prisoners seemed to be deeply impressed by the incident, and many resolved to imitate his perfect deportment. They raised S13 and gave it to their departing comrade to aid him in starting in his new life. The occasion will never be forgotten by those iu that prison, and much good is hoped for from its impression on the other convicts. A During: Feat Above Niagara Falls. The tug Minerva, engaged in towing mud scows from the Wellaud canal to the Niagara river, had proceeded well out into the river just above the falls, with her usual tow of three loaded scows, when the lines holding the last of the three parted, and the acow reeled around and made for the rapids. Jim Bampton was at the wheel, and with great presence of mind he headed his tug for the rapids and made a circuit around the scow, which was now dangerously near the rocks. In the mean time thfi men boarded the two remaining scows and dumped them, rendering them easier to handle. When they approached near enough to the runaway, a man jumped aboard of her, fastened a line, and dumped her. And now came the tug of war. They lay on the very edge of the rapids, when the throttle was thrown wide open, and the tug headed up stream from the cataract. It was nip and tuck, | and they were about to cut away part of > the tow, when the tug seemed to gain a ; little on the current, and gradually j emerged into safety with her full tow. ? How People Get Sick. Eating too much and too fast; swal! lowincr imperfectly masticated food : 1\ taking too much fluid at meals ; drinking poisonous whisky and other intoxicating drinks ; keeping late hours al night, and sleeping too late in the morning ; wearing clothing too tight, bo as to relax the circulation ; wearing thin shoes; neglecting to take sufficient exercise to keep the hanaB and feet warm ; neglecting to wash the body sufficiently to keep the pores open; exchanging the -warm clothes worn in a warm room during the day for costumes and exposure so incident to cvenl ing parties ; starving the stomach to gratify a vain and foolish passion for dress ; keeping up constant excitement; fretting the mind with borrowed troubles ; swallowing quack nostrums for eve 17 imaginary ill; taking meals at irregular intervals. 0 KANSAS BILL ON GUARD. How He Cleared a Platform When He was Ii Under Orders. The Chicago Times, in an account of C the strike, says: When one of the hand? some privates of the First regiment was a ordered to keep the crowd off the pint- x I form atone of the depots the other day,., m > he doubtless thought ^t was about as "?J i easy and\ peaceful a duty as a ^soldier ? j could be called vmon to perform. Keep-. ^ > ing the crowd off the platform f Pshaw, i, > what -was easier ? And the young war- h rior pranced proudly to the placed assign- " [ ed him, and grasping his gun firmly, to ^ call general attention to the dangerous c( s weapon, said: " Now, stand back, gentle- ?ft men." ?< " *4 - - 61 s A crowd" no matter llOw peaceably in' clined its component members may be, is a rude, impolite, udfeeling thing, ti > Friction produces irritation. The most ai > amiable man in the world iB generally a it , selfish brute in a crowd. This crowd was as obnoxious as any crowd ever is. It 01 failed in the moat exasperating manner to [ to appreciate the dignity of the young ?' i soldier's position. It absolutely seemed > to lose sight of the fact that he was there pi at all. It punched hid,elbows into his ei > ribs. It trod on his toeB. M get him** * i somehqw inextricably mixfejl with-his ftI i gun and cross-belt and cartridge box. He couldn't tell exactly which was which, w > As long as he couldn't keep off the crowd in t he wished from the deepest depths of his B . heart that the crowd would keep off him. ^ . Once in awhile a piping voice could be ]n . heard coming somewhere from the strug- di : gling mass of heads, elbows and shoulders u< i saying: "Now, gentlemen, you must ? stand back." I've got ortkrs to keep you' i back." . . g The train on which were the regulars, oj ! whom th#crowd was waiting to See, ar- w rived just as the big bunion cm the sol- 5? tiler's left" foot had exploded under a ,tt crushing pressure, and just as he was M contemplating the expediency of trying erf the effect of a shot into the crowd. The hardy, sun bronzed -veterans filed jr off the train and fell into line with mili- Be tary despatch and precision. "The men there don't seem to mind yonr guard -ca much," said the oaptain to one of the officersof road. " No," the Tatter re- ^ sponded reluotantly. /> m "Send Kansas Bill here," said the l& captain of the regulars to an orderly. * "Kansas Bill," a big mountain-hardened Indian fighter, with tawny, strag- g? gling beard and long yellovfclocks, a la. or 4 poets of the Sierras, came forward a b< moment afterward and touched hia cap. 81 * " Bill." -J v, j* " Ydas^ Bir," witli another touch of his ^ ^ tr " Bill, go up there and keep the crowd 6r off the platform." pi "Yaas, sir." j" Kansas Bill hitched up his breeches, whipped out a bayonet from its sheath jj and fastened it on hiB gun with more He racket than ai company of militia could ve make. ^ Kansas Bill had been used to rough ?j ways. He had fought Indians out West ^ so long that he had forgotten all the soft at ways he ever knew, if, indeed, he ever pi knew any. Ee didn't say, "Now, gentlemen, move off." Oh, no. He said, in a coarse, uncultured voice, " Get out gt o' here, get o' here, get out o' here, or Ni I'll grease my sticker with ye. Do ye Ti hear, now? Take that, take that," and ?[ during these ejaculations began swinging that bhyonet around in such a wild and \ utterly reckless manner that the mob Fi rapidly made way for him. Then he th turned around and gave several depart- pf ing loafers a savage prod. Then he crabbed his trun bv the stock, broucht mi it to a right-shoulder shift, and when he had finished this performance, he shifted q] his quid to the other side of his mouth, 8. expectorated gleefully, and had the en- in tire platform to himself. j*1 . Li The Sun Cholera Mixture. C< ro The Now York Journal of Commerce m says: la: More than forty years ago, when it was A found that prevention for the Asiatic cholera was easier than cure, the learned bt doctors of both hemispheres drew up a he prescription, which was published (for 0? working people) in the New York Sun, ^ and took the name of " The Sun Cholera Mixture." Our contemporary never lent m its name to a better article. We have rii seen it in constant use for nearly two score years, and found it to be the best j? remedy for looseness of the bowels ever pr yet devised. It is to be commended for th several reasons. It is not to be mixed with liquor, and therefore will not be ? used as an alcoholic beverage. Its in- fo gredients are well known among all the Bti common nennle and if. will linvfi Tin r>rA- Ri judice to combat; each of the materials is in equal proportion to the others, and it may therefore be compounded without professional skill; and as the dose is so very small, it may be carried in a tiny ne phial in the waistcoat pocket, and be al- rii ways at hand. It is: tb Tinct. opii., g Capsici, ar Ivhei co., el Menth pip., in Gampho. ^ Mix the above in equal parts; dose, ^ ten to thirty drop3. In plain terms, take m equal parts tincture of opium, red pep- Ti per, rhubarb, peppermint and camphor, tb and mix them for use. In case of diarrhea take a dose of ten to twenty drops ^ in three or four teaspoonfuls of water. No'one wlio has this by him and takes it G in time will ever have the cholera. We in j commend it to all, and hope that the receipt will be widely published. Even ^ when no cholera is anticipated it is an ai excellent remedy for ordinary summer w complaint. C: Absent-Minded. T' One of our most excellent qf/Ly physi- | F ciaus, says the St Joseph (Mo.) Herald, has the peculiarity of being exceedingly absent-minded. The other morning, when dressing himself, he discovered g( s >mething unusually heavy in his vest hi j p )cket. Upon examination it proved to fc ue a vaiuaoie goiu watcn. ne noi ~ being the owner of Bticli an expensive B article, it puzzled him to know how it b, came there. After a few moment's re- ct , flection lie remembered attending a w lady patient the day before, and for '*! timing her pulse, had asked the use of T , her wateh. He returned in haste and at I delivered it to the owner, who had been A j alarmed, believing it to have been stolen. " , I One of the hottest days of the season ? . j his wife laid out a clean vest for him to ^ I change before he wont out. Iu a few b; j minutes he was ready to go, and put Si j the clean vest 011, went to his office, and SI , | remarked to a friend that it was exceed! j ingly hot. His friend ngreed with him, ^1 t but wanted to know how many vests he re was in the habit of wearing at a 01 f j time. He had 011 two. ai ; g I Two Marriages Instead of One. ci I A marriage was arranged between two 01 | young people living some distance apart, j j> j near Bengal, India, but who had never bi \ J?l? * r . ; O vVU 3 (IUUU1C1, J.11U UilUC^IWiil UUl.y *? r ; arrived at the bride's village, and the ^ . ceremonies had actually begun, whi n a 0; . report reached the bride and her mother cl i that the intended husband was an incur- ti > able cripple. They both declared that , they would commit suicide rather than & complete the ceremony, and as it was a In . fact that the would-be bridegroom was a n." [ cripple, he was dismissed. But, accordi inpr to the prevailing superstition, eter- ?i ; nal disgrace would have attended the ij . bride if she had not been married on that ti day when matters had progressed bo far. al So, another bridegroom had to be Bought, ^ i and aftor searching the highways and by- m ways a boy was captured and duly mar- fa lied in the pluce of the cripple. The ;T< latter beiug in the same plight, had also in to provide himself with a bride before jjj the day closed, and thus there wcr? two (li marriageB instead of onei m SUMMARY OF NEW8. temtlm Item* from Hone and Abroad. A verdict of murder against the Yigilapee. ommittee of Scranton, Pa., was brought by 10 alderman's jury investigating the deaths of le men killed during the recent riot Were, and constable arrested two of the committee, hereupon the militia were called out and the Tested men were taken from Uio constable nd released, and the whole Vigilance Coraitttee at once assembled under arms in thp.. pro of the Lackawanna company 8ittirig. ull, with a band of from 0,000 to 9,000 Sioux idians,18-in British America, and boasts that e will soon return to the United States and >new the conflict* against the whites Twelve < arsons were more oi^Tess seriously injured by 10 upsetting of two coshes and two sleoping irs of a train near Centervflle, Mo The imine in portions of Indians on the increase, ^tailing great suffering upon the natives..... l Richmond, Va., the Conservative State oon-*? antion for the nomination of governor ibd ;her officers met and perfected its organka- on Three hundred sillpyeavers?women id girls?struck against a reduction of wages i New York As a train of igu&OTwtavrth was a its way from New fork to Long Branch themder ran off the track while crossing a bridge rer Ocean port creek and the locomotive, mail . iV.AA M?aaAnn?yn^a/ihaa TTjiimf /traaVlinflf J U nuu bill DO ^OODDUKOI u^uvuv/o <tvhv vtwun...^ ito the shilllow water below. TJtie scene that resented itselfjrafc terrible. Froiii tb$wrecked ira heads, anna and legn protruded, while ?d shrieTn^or aid filled the air_ One iaf ter lother of the injured passengers was recov- ; ed from the cars and a special train and ledical assistance were telegraphed for. It as found that over seventy passengers were ijured, two of them Beriously Senator laino called the Maine Republican State conjntion, held at Augnsta, to order, and Joseph rummond was appointed chairman. A resottion indorsing the Southern policy of Presiant Hayes was followed by a resolution dehunting such policy, and considerable feeling as brought ont in the convention. Speeches i favor of the resolutions were made by their ?pective adherent^ but upon a motion of jnator Blaine?who thought the occasion injportune for an oppression of opinion?both ere laid upon tho table. Selden Connor was inominated lor governor by acclamation, esolutions were introduced and carried Btating lat the Republicans of Maine viewed with ilicitude and alarm the complete consolidation ' all political power in the sixteen Southern ;ates in the hands of one party and the prac LXU UlBlIBiJUiXlDUUlCUL UI II1U.UY VUUCIO 4 KUUli le action of the Democratic House of Reprentafciveain refusing to appropriate money for 16 army was unjustifiable ; that the Republi,ns of Maine favored the purification, integrity id independence of the civil service; that the dustrial interests of the country ought to relive encouraging legislation; that specie payenta ought ta-ho resumed; that no further qd"gr&ats or Bubndiea. to railroads ought to r given; and finally, that South Carolina, lorida and Louisiaa* had been fairly and gaily carried by the Republican national and ate tickets in November, and " for the Demoatio p^ty now to raise the cry of fraud is >th unmanly and dishonest."... .The Georgia ate Constitutional convention adopted a resoifion repudiating tho bonds issued by the construction governmont. * * At Troy, Kansas, a railroad tiaiu ran off the ack and a car full of passengers fell over an abankment fifteen feet high, smashing to eces. About twenty-five persons were inired, several of them fatally The first legraph in China, six miles in length, has i sen completed and is in operation... F. M.W. olliday was nominated for governor upon the venth ballot by the Conservative State consntion of Virginia, and General James A. alker for lieutenant-governor. The sessions ' the convention lasted for several days and times were exciting and stormy, the straggle sing between the repudiators and anti-repucliors. The latter were fcuccessfnl, and the atform contained a resolution recognizing the (ligation of the State debt and calling upon e general assembly to endeavor to readjust it ( ith justice to the creditors and honor to the , ate Senator Conkling has returned to , aw York from his trip to Europe At ptonville, Tenn., Gen. II. Darnell, who was 1 i trial for murder, defied the court and ' leriff, and with twenty-five armed follow- , 8 at his back escaped "into Kentucky ( number of anti-administration papers in ance have been prosecuted and fined by 1 e government ana others have been sup- i eased in portions of the country An tempt is being made to organize a strong : jrkingmen's political party in Ohio, to parti- ' pato in the coming campaign. A mass meeting of workmgmen in Cincinnati, lio, nominated a full State ticket, headed by H. Bond, of Cincinnati, for governor. Meet- ! gs were also held in Philadelphia and Columis, Ohio, for the purpose of forming a work- i gmon'a political party Advices from ; ma, Pern, state that the Pacific Navigation . jmp&ny's steamer Eton was wrecked on the ra in rvtnon oKnnt aovonfr 1 ilea from Valparaiso, ard tbo loss of li?o was rgo, probably reaching one hundred persons, i number ?f the crew and passengers took ; fuge on the rocks and a Chilian gunboat and J tiglish war ntcamer went to their assistance, it were unable to take them off, owiDg to the 1 (avy seas running. About twenty survivors 1 t the rocks suffered so terribly from exposure ' id want of food that they eventually threw i emselves into the sea, to end their misery. Rev. C. Lazensbv, a Primitive Methodist mister, was drowned while bathing in the rer at Plattsville, Out A dosperate battle ok place between regular soldiers and citins under Gen. Gibbon and the Nes Perces dians in Montana. The Indiana were surised in their camp, but made a hard fight, e squaws participating and jk iring deadly 1 illeys into the small force of v.iites. Gen. ibbon's command had three odicers, sevenen men and five citizens killed and about rtv-five wounded, the IndianH suffering a ill heavier Iors Lightning euterea a vedish Lutheran church at Jamestown, N. Y., iring the Sunday school services and killed a >y named Anderson, besides prostrating an a lady and two children. Colonel John A. Joyce, who was one among e munber convicted of complicity in the sfarious transactions of the Western whisky ag, was released at Jefferson City, Mo., on e plea that bis sentence of three years and a ilf was cumulative, that he could not have ten leganv semenceu iu mure umu iwu yean*, id that Laving served that period he was ititled tj his discharge The cattle plague on the increase in England, and a Cattle ague committee of the House of Commons ive recommended "stringent measures to pre>nt its further spread A party of fifteen en from Mexico Jntered Bio Grande City, Bxas, broke open the jail, shot Judge Cox and ie jailer, and released two notorious outlaws, tie civil authorities called upon the military it assistance, and Colonel Price, with one ludred regulars andtwoGatling guns, started pursuit, but the outlaws reached the Rio rande river ahead of tho troops and recrossed to Mexico... . J. R. Murtagh, proprietor of ie Washington National lirpithlican, was atcked with a cowhide by J. R. Wheatley, a ashington journalist, for refusing to retract 1 artielo reflecting. on Wheatley's character hicli had appealed in Murtagh's paper adet Nortlirup, member of the third class in ie military academy at West Point, was rowned while bathing in the Hudson he main building of the Taunton Crucible orks at Weir Village, Mass., was burned by an cendiary. Loss, ;S2(i,(X)0 ; insured. The American ritic team for 1877, to parr??nn.fa in Mia rmmimr ftf, reedmoor, ban been chosen an follows, the mtlemen selected being the eight who made the ighest scores in the preliminary competition ir places on the team. The names are": T. 8. akin, captain; H. 8. Jewell, I. L. Allen, H. Jackson, L. Weber, Frank Hyde, L. C. race, and C. E. Blydenburgh, with L. L. Hepirn and T. Lamb as substitutes An exirsion train on its way to Bennington, Vt., as run into by a freight train at Hoosic inction and a passenger car was smashed, x persons were injured more or less badly.... he Democratic State convention of Maino met , Portland and nominated J. H. Williams, of ugusta, for governor. The platform adopted laffirmed the principles and platform of the ational Democratic conventiou at St. Louis in ane, 187C, and asserted thati4 the reversal of le verdict of the American people as expressed f the ballot box in Noyomber last, electing imuel J. Tildfcn President of the United tates, was the most monstrous political aud in history, and we call upon Congress to repare and submit for ratification an amendicnt to the Constitution which mil render its (petition impossible."... The Greenback party f New Jersey met in convention at Trenton ad nominated General Thomas D. Hoxie for nvernor. Resolutions were passed demandig the repeal of the resumption act, denounng contraction and advocating a larger issue r greenbacks and tho rcmonetization of silver. Queen Victoria prorogued tho British arliament until October 30. Tho queen's >eech referred defiantly to Russia "....The lid of a band of Mexican desperadoes upon io Texan town of Rio Grando City is regarded y* the United States authorities as" a more soriis affair than any previous violation of Ameri in Boil, and complete satisfaction and reparaon will be demanded. The Independent Greenback party of Penn lvania will hold a State convention at Wilamsport on September 19, for the purpose of Dmin&tiug candidates for the coming eleoon.: The New York Prohibitionists met in invention at Utica, nominated candidates for ection, headed by Henry Hagncr, of Brookn, for secretary of State, and parsed resoluons condemning the liquor trafiic, opposing ipropriations of money for sectarian purposes, id favoring woman Huffrago A new oil I I'll at Smith's Ferry, Pa., throw oil over the ! en working about u ucrweu una iguuc<i, itally burning W. L. itayT, Charles Amnion, | )lin Ravi mul William Jlcltcady, and wivurely j j tiring "John Clinton and Hon It in rented that the king of Holland intends to ah- | cato A Republican conspiracy has been j ecovered in Spain an<i frustrated, a largo imber of arrests fating m wi? ... .The captain f- -I ?- . --* -r--^ of the whaling vessel Edward Lee, of Prorincetown, Mass., reports that he km fired into bv f( an unknown gunboat at CayrfciL on thi north 11 side of Cuba. The matter will dj looked Into " by our government A storm passed over " Clinton, 111., completely ^destroying a church, o school house, mill and other buudings, and do- a ing great damage to rthe crops ..A. D. Scnreffer, caahier of the Fanners' and Mechanics'Bank of WeHtminsfer, Md^committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor A crowd of over 40,000 peoplfi'assembled in Bennington, Vt, on the first day of the celebration of the centennial battle of Bennington, te Delegations were present from Connecticut tc nnd-Tfew Hampshire, and the procession was p the most imposing ever seen in Vermont A c< great deal of enthusiasm was manifested, and e< on every aide were to be seen flags of all &, nations and triumphal arches bearing Jr inscriptions. The oration of the day was drf- p livered Jap Hon. Daniel Roberts, aria a poem u Written-hy Mr?.--Dorr was read. Speeches, were ^ also made by tienerai iianxg ana otners. ire si- q dent Hayes and party arrived soon after, tie ai Conclusion of the exercises. 4 ? i ?? - kdi SEVEN WEEKS IN A SMALL BOAT, k \ s. in e? The Voyiwre of Capt. Crapo and Ilia Wife Across the Atlantic. . A correspondent of the London Daily News at Penzance, speaking of the ei arrival, at that-place of Capt. Orapo and c< his wife, who left New BedfortT on-May d 28 in'a small boat, says : The, vdjage al was commenced on May 2$, whqn the b vessel left New Bedford, bufc-by atress n of weather she had to put up intojChatham, Mass., where she stayed until the ' second of June, when the sails were B again hoisted, and the little pigmy left d( on her perilous voyage with a fair wind. re All went well for three days, the wind n< being southwest and the sea calm. The 5? sea then changed to southeast, and it W( came on foggy for four days, and continued foggy up to the time when they reached the Grand Banks, seventeen to days out. Here a most fortunate thing ^ happened for the navigatora The 8a drogue which they had brought with ot them was found to be of little use, be- a cause it "was too light. While off the ,a banks they saw a keg floating, which m luckily they were able to secure. Capt. Cratio knocked off the iron hoops, and n with the Bame canvas made a new drogue which answered admirably. When it is & considered that at one part cf the voyage j?' they were obliged to lie to for nearlv {jj three days in a great gale of wind, it will n, need'no -effort to imagine what a fortu- ot nate acquisition the new drogue was. After leaving the banks, where they lay to in a gale for fifteen hours, the weather improved, and they sailed on till the twenty-first of June, when another gale was encountered. While lying to, the New Bedford spoke the steamer Batavia, from which assistance was offered, and the offer was made to take them on ^ board, which was pluckily declined. ^ After this incident they encountered a succession of gales, the only wonder be- _ ing that they survived to tell the story. T) During the voyage, which occupied _ e 1 J UW.UA ? LUri/J-illLiC UUJO, LL1C 1UUUC1 UlUttC, UUV happily there was a spare oar on board, which was used until the first could R be repaired. The seas were running mountains" high, and during all that m time, even when lying down to rest, they H< had to lie on wet clothos. On one oc- at casion the captain was for seventy hours *? Bteering without relief, the weather be- fi Lng so frightful, and on another he was eighteen hours consecutively attending w to the drogue. Capt. Crapo says he R; could not have stood another fifteen days; indeed, he had not slept for qi seventy hours when he landed. His o average sleep while coming across was gt' nuder four hours a day. Among the H< many extraordinary things connected ? with the voyage is that it had to be run n by dead reckoning, as the New Bedford was not equal to a chronometer. Only on two occasions could they get their pj longitude. When speaking the two ves- w sels Capt. Crapo had intended to make tor Falmouth, but the wind was against bi it. Capt. and Mrs. Crapo seemed wonderfully well after the hardships they had undergone, though the captain has 01 a bad hand, and when he came on shore bis other hand was firmly clenched after Et seventy hours' steering. The house they ? .1 - J- 1 Fl stopped at was mvimeu uj peiuoun chjjci ^ to shake hands with bo brave a couple, oc The boat was also visited by numbers. Capt. Crapo thinks of going on to Fal- bJ mouth, and afterward to London and the & Paris exhibition. b< I 8t h< One of Brigliam's Dupes, m w A writer in the Tribune, of Salt Lake Bj City, Utah, Bays : Some years * ago I ^ listened to the story of one of Brigham's oi dupes as he was escaping from beneath the yoke. Born in Sweden, where he espoused Mormonism, he started for Zion with his young bride. Beaching Cleveland, Ohio, his funds, he found, would only bring one of them to Utah, h His wife stayed there with friends, while he came here, went to Provo, o: where be found employment with a w bishop of the church. Money was earned and given to Brigbam to send for his a wife. Months passed and no wife came. 81 Again money was sent, with-like result, ^ until the husband had sent money four times through the same eonrce. Be- Bi coming, at last, very much disgusted, ? lie announced his intention of going ~ alter his wife, still serving the bishop = until he thought he had funds enough. pj Applying for his pay just after the liar- ~ vest lie was told to go to the stubble field, where almost every head of wheat * had been carefully collected, and to ?' " glean liie pay there." He came to our city followed by spies, aud finally . reached Ogden and a friend there con- I cealed him, and with the aid of kind- I hearted railroad men he found his way I into liberty again. I saw him trembling with fear while hiding from h's pursuers ; and, again, after he had passed beyond their reach. How great was the _ change in his deportment and looks. Our valleys no doubt contain thousands T who are receiving no better treatment, f and yet most of our visitors come here, look on the best of Mormon society, and go away and proclaim this a great, prosperous, happy and free people. They kuow just as much of the true tb Mormon life as if tli *y had never visited ar Salt Lake City. in A Frontiersman's Endurance. a< at Bill Hunson, better known, as * "Frontier Bill," while pursniDg a herd of mustangs near Hat Creek in the Black Hills, was thrown from his horse and knocked senseless, in which ^ state he lay for several houin. When he recovered his horse was gone, and his wounds pained him so badly thut he could not walk. He managed with great difficulty to crawl on his hands to a pool of water, some fifty rods from j the place where he fell He remained there during the next day and night without a mouthful to eat, and the pool having given out he started on his hands and knees in search of more. About twelve o'clock on the second day : he says he was so hungry, thirsty and j lame nnd tired that ho could go no | further, and crawled under a tree and | stretched himself out to die. While j laying thus, bordering on the insensible, lie heard the leaves shake near him, and wearily turned his head in the direction of the noise, To his terror ; | and astonishment he espied a large rattlesnake reaching for him. The sight of the venomous reptile bauished hunger, thirst and pain for the moment, and he raised on his elbow and en deavored to scare t.Iie scaly tnmg awav. The snake struck at him twice and then 1 glided away. This adventure roused I him somewhat, aud lie made another endeavor to reach water. Finally, after mueh pain and milTeriag, lie crawled into the Cheyenne road and could go no further. Next morning a vsnchman, " located at Hafc Creek, tound jiirn there. m laving on his face, insensible ai.d almost * dead. H<; was taken to tho rau-h mid , eared ft;*', Thbee Miseries.?To walk two miles >r the purpose of asking a favor, and aen feel too modest to name it. Bowing > a person whom you mistake fax anther, and getting nothing but a vacant tare of surprise for your pains. To -bd i a scrape every lionr, merely for -wonl f nerve to say no. Protnlae and Performance. The proprietors of Hostetter'u Stomach BBr ira promise nothing in behalf of this famoof >nio and rognlating elixir which it will not Brform. No pretensions irreconcilable with jmmon sense are made in reference to it, but ridence of the most positive nature has been jcumnlatinK for over a qnarter of a oentnry t its behalf, which proves to bo a reliable reventive and curative of malarial diseases ad efficient and genial tonic and general ooj> krtimand specialljrvahuble in cases when ief bowelfl, liver, stomteh wTloinsry orgaruT w*ffeoted. DeWHty, the souri?<rom vrhenw ) m?ny bodily.evils spring, is entirely remftiedby tho iavigorative action of Ibe Bitters, hich arrests^-premature decay and Tgpaiii issea of nervous and muscular power vrfcile aproving the appetite and rendering digest^ wy. tfT.rPhysicians of high standing unhesitatingly ive their indorsement to. the use of the Graefiberg-M^rehidr# Catbolicon for all female jmpIainfcC He weak ind debilitat?d.flnd wonerful relief from a constant use of this valut>le remSS% Sold by alfljrgggists. f 1.50 per sttle. 8eu2f /or almanacs, Qraefenberg Co., ew York- \ m. V Randall's Spran Core, discovered by Dr.' , J. Kendall, Enosburgh Falls, Vt., is a won>rful discovery, as itfcnflfcj&ll blemishes and mnttaa Hlfl KmiMl witVldllf, hlistflrilW'. It is >w sold by dealers thronghont the country or nt to an; address on receipt of one dollar. >nd address for circular giving proof of its Dnderful effects and a list of agents) etc. Hatch's Universal Cough Syrup has been put a six years' test in our trade, with, the folwiog result: It gives the best of satisfaction all of oar ouBtomers, and they testify to that tsifaction by buying far more of it than any her cough remedy, although we keep in stock large number of that class of medicines, in ctall that have been heretofore considered ost salable. Slauohtee A Wills, - .. ...... Waverly, N. Y. Light, Well-Raised Bread. Biscuit*, ilces and pastry, digest easily and conduce to x>d health. Good health makes labor of all nds easier, and prolongs life. Dooley's Yeast owder will always make all these productions $ht and wholesome. It is warranted to make jtter, lighter, sweeter, more toothsome, and atritious biscuits, cake, bread, etc., than any her baking powder. CHEW The Celebrated " MATCHLESS ' Wood Tag Ping Tobacco. The Pioneeb Tobacco Company, New York, Boston, and Chicago. Pond's Extract. o people's remedy. It not only affords immeate relief from pain, bnt is a permanent core r many disorders. Book at dniggists. .Sold bjr DroffffiHtn. a at wonderful bilious remedy, Quirkls Irish 3a. It costs only 25cts. a package. The Markets. !?IW TOBX. :ef Cattle?Native 10J<? 11* Texas and Cherokee. 08X? 09 llchOows 00 00 086 00 Jg??Live. 06V? 06* Dreeeed 06*8 073.' ioep 06*0 06# unbe O?*0 06* itton?Middling 11 11% our?Western?Good to Choice.. 6 25 <? 7 00 8Ute?Good to Choice 6 00 0 6 23 heat?Red Western 1 42 0 1 47 No.? a jmiwmuxee. i m ? j. i ? re?State 86 0 PB irloy?State ? 9 82 irloyMalt 1 35 0 1 20 its?Mixed Western 34 0 34 irn?Mixed Wortorn 61 0 91 ly, per cwt 66 0 70 raw, per cwt 56 0 60 >p? 76'??68 ?16 .... 76'a 06 0 10 irk?Mew 13 76 018 7ft ird?City Steam 11X0 "X ah?Mackerel, No. 1, new 34 00 026 00 " No. 3, new 13 00 01i 00 Dry Cod, per cwt 4 76 0 6 CO Herring, 8caled, per box 32 0 3* itroleum?Orudo 07X007# Refined, 13.X ool?California Fleece 36 0 35 Texas " 39 0 SI Australian " 43 0 46 ltter?State 23 0 38 Western?Choice 26 0 26 Weetarn?Good to Prime.. 33 0 35X Western?Firkins 11 0 16 iee?e?State Factory 0* 0 09 Stats Skimmed OS 0 06 Western' 07X0 38 fg??Statoand Pennsylvania. .... 16 0 16X BUFFALO. our.... 9 78 010 36 hoat?No. 1 Milwaukee. .... 1 80 0 1 70 irn?Mixed. 61 0 61 its 7. 40 0 40 re 9* 0 W irley 83 0 83 irley Malt 1 00 0 1 10 PHIULDf LPHIA. wf Cattle-Extra. . 06X0 C'X 06 0 07 ags?Hreesed 08X0 0914 nnr_??nnQTlvan1a Kltra 7 fSO ? 7 63)4 heat-Red Western 1 40 0 1 <0 68 0 68 )rn?Yellow 61 0 62# Mixed 69 0 63 tf??Mlxod 8 0 38 itrolenm?Orn te O9#0O9 ^ Roflned, 18?i ool ?Colorado 2S 0 31 Texas 27 0 80 California 2) @ 88 BOSTON. sef Cattlo 06X0 loep 06X0 06# 06 0 09 our?Wisconsin and Minnesota.. 8 00 0 9 00 jrn?Mixed 63#? 66 l to? " 68 0 69 * ool?Ohio and Pennsylvania XI. 60 0 P0 CalHornta Fall 18 0 20 BBIOUTOV, KiM. jef Oat tie 0?X? 07# loep 06 0 0g# imbe 07 0 lu ogi 07X0 08 WAmtTOWK, if ASS. ;ef Oattle?Poor to Choice 6 78 010 00 >eep 6 76 0 8 00 imba .. 7 00 01 B 60 MATCHMAKERS' Tools and Materials. 8' nd for rice list. Geo. K. Smith <t Oo.. P. O. Box 3096, N.Y L SUBURBAN ffl?* % r.v. D?. SHKA.R8, Rector, offers to six boys, G to 11 lira old, its advantage* well-known 24 jreara. School my opon. See Reforence Circular*. LADIES THE InAAAMifAliAn A( DAAIUWI Tcscrvauuu ui Dcauiy. A TREATISE ON THE FACE AND SKIN. The mrrlirnl hygitn* of (hr fare, and $kin includes all at the durmitologic and calliplostic art* have most markalilo. The nose, the eyes, tbo mouth, etc., etc., e all described with the hjKtonio advice suitable to ich, and the work is a complete mnnual of hygiene and ismetic?, the latter being; treated as it science combinx medicine and chemistry. The nrritor jfiros us the laiysis of the vile preparations sold by quacks, and joompanies them with remarks well calculated to inul uny dosiro to use cosmetics coming from auch a intpo. no Volume, 12ino., tnatcfully bound; Price, 81.60. GEORGE DE COLANGE & CO., ;o. H Bond Street, XE1V YORK. \ ) \ WEARWEtt J rue inc GOOD OLD JTAND-BY. MEXICAN MUSTANG LUHME8T FOR MAX AXD BEAST. Khtaiimbhed 35 Years. Always ctirea. Always sady. Always bandy. Has never yet (ailed. Thirty \iWon* hnv? tertrd it. .ila whole world approrea the lorionaold MnitanK?the Beet and Cheapest Liniment existence. 25 cent# a bottle. The Mustang Liniment urea when nothing elae will. SOLP BY ALL MEDJOINK VFNDKR8 BOSTOV WEEKLY TRAISCRIPT \ i * ^HffF -1*318ff^PBWSSSM^^^r viT/t J ?Tc i'rZf** T /. A Hundred Symptoma nnfl Ol^Wfe.-There lb nc areola symptom of any known mieiM which tbe afflicted' with severe IieadaehM, and Ik either constip'at' ?d OC anbject to diarrhoeal or dysenteric dischargee. Enit atgan a*t*un?Koa.af the bodf -sympathizes with the diseased, half-paralyzed stomach. In all snoh caees Tarrant's Effervescent Seltzer Aperient afford* immediate relief: effects. if persevered in, a thorough -renovation of tbe digestive organs, and restores to healthful activity tbe whole animal machinery. Bold by all drtiggiita, UniteiTstateS ... tlmub "E INSURANCE COMPANY, IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK, 261, 262, 263 Broadway. ?OBGANIZED ASSETS, $4,827,176.52 SURPLUS, $820,000 EVERY APPROVED FORM OF POLICY ISSUED ON MOST FAVORABLE TERMS ALL ENDOWMENT POLICIES - iXD ..1 Ljta APPROVED CLAIMS MATOTIlf(jIN1877 iiaaaniioB ?, will BE ujggyu^XES *T 7* OX PRESENTATION. I . JAMES BUELL. - - PRESIDENT. Advertisers % Are invited to invegtigate The American Newi paper Union List of Newspapers?the targut eombina'lon of paptrn in the United StaU*-kn&compare the prltM with other lista. It it the cheapett and best advertMmedium <n th* country. i . . t'' THE AMERICAN Newspaper Unoii List of 1085 ?; Weekly Newspapers, COMPRISES New York Newspaper Union List, Chlcuo Newspaper Unloa IjIm* Mllwankce Newspaper Union List, St. Paul Newspaper Union Ll-t, Cincinnati Newspnpcr Union List, Southern Newspaper Unloft List. The prices of advertising are now abont oneialf of last year's rates and are as follow*: ONE INCH OF SPACE?14 AGATE LINES-WILL BE INSERTED ONE WEEK IN THE N?w York Newspaper Union List for.... 821.00 Chicago Newspaper Union Lift "2........... 34.50 Milwaukee Newspaper Union List *' 8.00 St. PanI Newspaper Union List < 7.00 CinoinnatiNewspaper Union list " ; -15.00 Southern Newspaper Union List " ] 2.00 Or in the Entire List of 1085 newspapers One Week for 587.50 A One Inch advertisement will be inserted one year in the entire list of 1085 newspapers for $2,275, O about 82.00 per paper a year. OT Send for Catalogue. Address, BEALS & FOSTER, ' (TYniai Building), 41 Park Ttoir, XK1V YORK. " NATURE'S REMEDYrV mimm The PflUT Btooo PuRiriEiv^r Rev. J. P. LUDLOW WRITES: 178 Baltic Stbhtt, Bnooiri/rw, N. Y.,\ Nov. 14, 1874. f H. It. Stevens, Esq. : Dtar Sir?From por?onnl benefit rocelved by lis tise, an well as from personal knowledge of tboee I ho?ohw lii vn annmpH almrtat tnlriru. f lous, I can most heartily and sincerely recommend the Viomxx for the complaints which it la claimed to cure. JAMES P. LUDLOW, Late Pastor Calvary Baptist Cborch, Sacramento, Cai ^amre^remed^v ".l ?S6SflHE> SHE BESTS WELL. South Poxjlkd, Hi, Oct 11, 1878. Mn. H. H. 8teykns : , , Dear Sir? I have been sick two years with the Liver complaint, and during that time have taken a great many different medicines, but none of I hem did me any good. I waa restless nights, and had no appetite. Since taking the Vxorrux I rest well and relish my food. Can recommend the Yzoxtins for what it has done for me. Tours respectfully, Mb*. ALBERT BIOKEB. Witness of the above: Mb. GEOBGE M. VAUGHAN, Medford, Mass. % NATURE'S REMEDY. \ mimm The &?eai Bipod pmnwjs Rev- 0. T. WALKER SAYS: Providence, r. l, 1M Tbassit Stbkit. h. r. stevk.vs, Esq.: I fed bound to express with my signature tho high >, value I place upon your Vhoetine. Myfamily havo used it for the last twoyer.rs. In nervous debility . it is invaluable, and I recommend it to all who may coed an invigorating renovating tonic. 0. T. WALKER, Formerly Pastor Bowdoin-squaro Church, Boston. NATURE'S REMEDY. fteimpB '. tThE Dbeat Bia.qd puririer^/^ NOTHING- EQUAL TO IT. Booth Salem, Mass., Nov. 14,1878. Mn. H. B. Stevsns : '" Dfar Sir?I havo been troubled with Scrofula, Canker, aDd Liver complaint for throe years Nothing over (lid mo any good until 1 commenced using the Veoetimk. I am now getting along first-rate, and still using the Veoetdse. I consider thcro is nothing equal to it for sncli complaints. Can heartily recommend it to everybody. Yours truly, Mrs. LIZZIE M. PACKARD, No. 16 Lagrongo tit, South Salem, Man. f ' NATURE'S REMEWrS^^ The Great Btooo PuMntn.Jr^ ?i?*r i n r nr i m i mwr GOOD FOR THE CHILDREN Boston Home, 14 Ttttu Street,) I Boston, Ai ril, 1878. f n. n. btkvjws: Dear Sir?Vi a foci that tho children in our horns have '.:een o really benefited by tbo Vkoetikkjou i have bo kindly given\u iromtimo to timo, especially thoso troubled with tlio Scrofula. With respect, Mhs. N. WORMELL, Matroa VEGE TINTS Prepared by H. R. STEVENS, Boston, IHass, Yegetine is Sold by all Druggists, - I ? ??? : "HO*.. ">-W opa^Ngg.mg|ga^'<?g - I tCC a werit in four Jin'teJa. Twm afad^fl onii* * B *?Q free. H. flALLETT * CO.. Portland. 3tin*. K ???*??*'' 312 $5 lo teoa?wtiaa^i(!aaig " w fitfrte. J.IB. Gaylord <t Co.. Chicwro, 111. &J/ MA GivEMCTTIMEPIUgBV Hetml fc'SSaWSiSft" L|t?vy?olf.l MtwlWmfclrSratpS Heary Gold filled, warra&ml >:o yeara. AlJMw ' <> gta tend itam p fo r catalogue.. Vax<s Co.. Chicago. SAW.Mill Owner*. Gang Lath MI!U, w'th lisftla c?ntine aaw *ttachwent, aJeo Gan#r Edgars, boat and chaa py'lC. MclHTTEK, M?nfr., FortEdward. JT.Y. C TV'A^Lvjn^IORB QoU????For both wee: ondei Jo care arFriendg7 All expenses cortred bi 1$3f>0~* Boar. KwffctH. Mianx. A.M.. PrtaC.S^arthni^re.Pfc "RTlVnT.V I'T? TVaa Seven-shot rerolrer JClXIr X rCu with box cartftdirat. W? J.JboTOwt 8on, m & lkWood 8t.PitUbiCT.Pa! tffc COOl Mafle by irAccnts ln Jah?)7with 5 5a 37 M EMffi zsmj&te wfcUWW'Irtll.J. Worth dt Co^ BtiLo%i*yM4, T. : TKKKITffRY FOR SAI,E.-Territory for the Improved Bosom Stretcher ud I mini Board?MB i? be manufactured by any carpenter?large profit#?lar*e sales?lands and town property taken in excb&Age. Addrew Haedt & Co., AyU. for the U. ftj Ablajton, Ml*. ^ AGENTS, READ THIS ! . We will pay Agenta a salary of 975 per Month and Expenses to sell our New and Wonderful Inventions. Address, L. 8. 8HKRM AN A CO., Marshall. Michigan. GIVEN AWAY. A ' TYPE .WRITER" wnt free to e*ch of the f'*tSt00.00 btaivtj&ssayw out tnjarj, ?r ?UI forftll JUS r"- PnaTy miil, 11 SJORT EDWARB Collc?inteInHtI<?ife, >'.y! ' 1 Fifteen Toacbeni. $50 for Fall t*rm of 13 week* 1'" gtanioir Mepr. tt, for board. fneh, vraahiog end Com' -' mon English. Specialties?Classics, Bamnew.Oratory, Mnslc iind Paintmir. One. two *nd thrte years. Graduating. Courses for ladies end rent lorn etui Address "CfSTITUTB." Fort Kdwabb. X. Y. (in tn toe $1U lU $uD sra^sfflfusjs: ???? ?j8<feiTMiSaa Catalogue free. J. II. BUFFORD'8 SONS. 1 Boston. [Rat&blished 1830.] . ! OIHO VOHd'WO , ) 'SINVIllIM "1 Ml msm -eo*l<I ?nj? jo "STARTLINC" ' jtmmoQ navg ivmrr^u iutj cyi'nnjjqyiuotifjA so oioqv jo hjiavjia OJ n japan Sni^roi joj roononjjtoj tin; UJIM adreooy JO 'P!*0 ?**Jdx9 '3|;ioq;aij -pmp<i|qtia erai? jmij?ipotuai niipoj p|Ot>V p??39?ii 8jb sJjun'j (uo<vu'i>qyno0 woias jo; iua;) a?|j uop|reqwfuoiivpatiojXa?^lv3iiw ao|idain? -aoo :p?19!B? r%l|n UV IC ' aq? jo; mag poop (nJWi lAflWjJLq H fVERYIEW ACADEMY, POUCHKEEPSIE, N. Y., 0TI8 BISBEE, A. M., Principal and Proprietor, Nambars its alumni by hundreds in all the honorable walka of life. Pupils range from twelve to twenty year* in age. Next session open* Sept. 13th. Tnoee wishing to enter should make an early application. TTEEP'8 HHIRTSrotilf opeaMlito^TbaBMt. . tV Keep's Patent Partlv-made Droee ShirU ' Uan be finished aa ?*???aemmln* ? BwdkercM?f. pie Wbegt, ?kfar $7.00. An elegant set of g?nmne Gold-plate Collar tad fileevo Buttons given with each half doz. lusep'a Shirt* Keep's Shirts are delivered FREE on receipt of prioo In any part of the Union?no express bargM to pay. Samples with full directions for self-measurement. ..t Sent Fr?e to any address. No stamp reqaired. Deal directly with the Manufacturer and get Bottom Prtoee. Keep ManufactariagOo- 166 Mercer Bt^N.Y .u; 4flt wmm mmm mmm is rtoteasfly earned in thtW^ times, bat it oan bemade in ? MMM threo months by any one of UJ m m - m either sex, In any part of the ' * rn m country whoir willing to <; ffork steadily at the employment that we furnish. X6U per week in your own town. Y*>d need not be away from uuuitJ uver U1|UU j.uu uw m?o;vui huwid fuuoivwjv work, or only yonr spars momenta. We have agent* who an making owr giiO per day at the bnainesa. All who 1 engage at once can make monpy tut.. At the prevent , time money cannot be made no easily and rapidly at any >ther business. It ooata nothing to try the bnsinee* '' Terms and ?5 Outfit free. Addres* at once, II. HAKLETT Si CO.,Portland, Maine. $1.00 $1.00 Osgood's Heliotype Engravings. : The choicest household ornaments. Pricw One Dollar each. Send for catalogue, ,.j JAMES R. OSGOOD & CO. L, . . . BOSTON# MASS. . $1.00 $1*00 IMWM1 I A ponlive remedy for Urou>y anil all UiKUCJ of 1. the Kidney*. Bladder and Urinary- Or*!*' Itrant. HvnV* Keacdy U purely r*S?abl*andl prepared expro*aly fur the abore dl?e*jc?. it nasi cored thou?and?. Every bottle warranted. 8?id to TT.w" |?. Clarke, l'rovidence, U.I., fur Itluitratedpamphlet. m ^ ri 1 0 mam V- WKMtQa. ' ' Dunliam & Sons,1Manu?ctorers, Wareroo ms, 18 Eait Hlh Street, [Established 1834.} R2W Y$ML Send tor RU&roUd Cirtular and Price List BABBITT'S TOIIET SOAP. ; or U?e Vn^V^Mureory t t . Wflrti Un tlmetiu ant lo irerj moUitr mil toll j IpCErUUfWfa. Buspla box, rost?lnftig-3 <*kw of ? on. e*eh, wot frwtc?ajr id j,ri ^iwa^K *i BJ1 PV A J'. Wm/NMFf&SMLECO. ' 1 265 BROADWAY. NY. g GLOVE-FITTING 5 1 CORSETS. ! M -^ggaar^-. Tke Friends of thi? 2 Hj^^^OE^^^UNKIVALLEDCORSET 3< Sb^nxacasSfSnlr^'^wfi a"1 no-# numbered by jWW?^ MILLIONS.' ? ??\\VWWv Uw hor?much rriuccd u si vfl\vA\ In ikll/fiy medalreceived B 8^ I'lfiia- m MM 'WtKbeware of imitations, f? y^dm askaho roil ? ijry/flmt h )\\\thomson'? I/mM fifilY \\ V/ UMIXEAKABLE SHE IS S5 \7 //Mi|||| lr\\l vjr The b?t goods made. ?| xl U III HI I Uttlv/ See :hai the name Of 'jk Thomson and the 5 \vr TradeMdrK.aCROwN.ara m Nl/stamped on every Canet*5t?t1. B 1 IN VfflO VERITAS.;;; After nine rears experience we have decided to offer oar pare California Wines and Brand; to familiqt by the gallon or single case at greatly reduced prices. Tbeee Wines are aelicions for family nse, while their strict punty renders tbcm invaluable for medicinal and ucn mental purposes. A trial is only necessary to .show thehr superiority orer adulterated foreign Roods, 'r("row* I'rinre,'* the choicest Ammicna champagne, a specially. Send for circular nnd prion list to OHAMBFRMK A CO.. -to Murrey st.. N?w York. SANDAL-WOOD : f* ~ A positive remedy for all diseoies of the Kldncy?i Hlnddrr sad Urinary Orgunx; also good In Dl o|>*irnl Complaints. It neter produces sickness, is certain and speed; in ite action. It i3 fast anperseding all other remedies. Sixty capsules core fn six or eight days. No othar medicine can do ibis. Bcwnre of Imitations, for, owing to iU great success,man; have been offered; some are most danger l?t:M>AS DICK At fO.'S Ctnui,,, Sq/t Cap ?>iIrt, cotiiitittttiy oil <>/ .' atiitaliriKnl, mhi at all ''rug Worm .i'k tor rirrtihir, ur "h*t J<-r ?? lur K6 and 3 ll'iMMfcr Strrtl, Krw )'mi;. ,'t ,? M N Y N 17 * So. 34 WiU.N witrriNt; to A?VKKTi?iiH?, pivnnft MIV tttui rn*?PTrih? *dTer*l?^udm i? mi?