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-;-r' ' " 1 ! < The Tillage. On a high lull the buildings stand; Roofs, here and there, the sides invade; Domed maples stretch at either hand, Steeping tho walks in pleasant shade. Two-storied, white, in yards of green, Tho modest wood-framed dwellings rise; Here, ehrubbery with its partial screen; There, trees through which each fabricpriee. r.' *; Yon lODg, piazzed, broad-benched front Tho well-known lower tavern shows; Where gossip-groups are nightly wont ! In crescent-shape around to close. r*r ' Next stands the neat, red corner-store, Dangling with shapes of tin and brass, With glistening dolf and hardware o'er; Cloth3 on the shelves and rows of glass. Next, lifts the tinman's glittering shop, Onekc6n, shrill, jangling, jumbled din Lasting till evening's shadows drop, For morn again to usher in. Near, the shoemaker's crouching shed; Elbows are squared there, soles are beat; Awls pierce and glides the waxen thread: , While leathern soenta the comers greet Tho limb-coiled tailor works beside; fha nnndlfl darts in busv use: I Garments hang around in new-made pride; Glitters the shears and sulks the goose. Next, stands the builder's dingy hut; Shavings lie deep; the plane shears true; Baign jar cf saw and adz'? cut, With split of board and croak of screw. The lame old saddler, perched on high, Tlw curved, flapped seats of leather shapes; Hit bands on rein and bridle ply; His walls, the bright black harnesa drapes. i** The letter-po6t where crowds attend, When the red coach the mail-bag bringB, 8tsnda at tho broad street's graceful bend, Where the up-tavern's Bignboard swings. The smithy next; what roaring fires ! What ringing blows! what strength of limb! Whatjrows of horse-shoes, wagon-tires I What sweep of sledge, what figures grim! And on its knoll the village church, ; ' With spire and bell and sloping roof; Tho parsonage requiring search So f&r amid the leaves aloof. 1 Broad fields of grass and grain extend . At either hand, whence rural sounds; i f _ Kloof or, 1 I.elW Vllcnri Viwwj IKJtw auu i/icav wj * wvuvii) I "With those amid th? village-bounds Oh, many a statoly street I've seen! And many a front of sculptured art! let memory keeps this village green Within the landscape of my heart. ?Alfred B. tftreet. A CKJIETHOUSE. "Dear me!" sighed Mr. Turmoylo, as a burst of shrill, childish laughter sounded from the nursery down the hall > , stairs and into the sitting-room where he was making out some acoounts. " I wish those children would be quiet! Ain't it most bedtime, Tillie ? " "They are probably undressing," Mrs. Turmoyle replied, quietly. "I'll go and see if they are ready for bed." " Do keep them quiet until they are." There was an interval of profound silence, and in about half an hour the mother returned. "They are asleep now," she said. " Tom had dressed the kitten in Bessie's doll's clothes." The aooounts finished, Mr. Turmoyle leaned back in his chair. tc I wish you had some management with those children, Tillie," he said, "I went over to Stone's on business, last evening, ard you would not have known S there was a child in the house. And Stone has five while we have only ' ' three." "Perhaps they were all abed." "They were all in the next room," was the triumphant reply. " Stone is proud of them and well he may be. There is Willie, just the age of our Tom, studying Latin instead of dressing kittens in doll's clothes, and Amy, who will not be four years old for three mrmtjir rfta/lfi waII and knows the mnl tiplication table through. Look at oar savages!" "They are getting along well at school, dear. I think Mark is too young yet to study. The others did not go to _ school until they were five." % "And Tom juBt manages to write a deoent letter at twelve, while Willie is at Latin grammar. And as for manners, why Tom will make more noise alone than Stone's five children all put toi$T gether," Mrs. Turmoyle, being a woman of sense, did not oontinue the argument, but mentally resolved to see Mrs. Stone the next day, and talk with her about the wonderful secret of having five children and a quiet home. " I am sure I can't do it!" the gentle, loving mother thought, with a sigh. Seated, the next morning, in close conversation, the ladies presented a contrast as marked as the atmosphere of their own houses. The tiny, bine-eyed woman, who had no heart to suppress Tom's merry whistle or Bessie's silvery "1 1- 1 J ! - /I _ 1 1 1. j?ugu, ana leu ? iiuiue wuoio uuuowiit care only secured cleanliness, and where childish" disorder was manifest everywhere but in the best parlor, bhe looked at the tall, dark-haired woman opposite her, noted the exquisite morning drees, faced with light silk, spotless and unrumpled, and thought, regretfully, of the marks of ten chubby fingers upon her own, printed there when her boy baby, her darling Mark, had succeeded in forcing a piece of his sweetest i. oandy into mamma's mouth. 8he noted ' * the dainty order of the sitting-room, L where every chair stood primly in its p. appointed place, and not even a thread i* - rested upon the carpet, and remembered ' Mark's stable for his " 'spress cart" and horses under the lounge, and Bessie r 'l -keeping house on the lower shelf of the j.*. - book-case. Visions haunted her also of snippings . x* of paper, bits of string, and odds and * ends of doll's finery, upon the table. ' .Drifting from one scrap of matronly * .talk to another, the ladies came natural( - ly to the care and management of chil; dren, and Mrs. Turmoyle complimented her neighbor upon the appearance of . , her house and the proficiency of her little ones. ^ "Icannot understand how you ac- j "compliah it," she said frankly. ^ ^ "By system," was the reply. "Thei ; education of my children begins, I may say, iu tueir urttues. as noon as mey can walk, they have their own proper Jglaoe in the room, and are trained to .r^erfecfc silence when older persons are present." > ; Mrs. Tarmoyle thought of the noisy - . chorus of shouts, the eager recital of * the day's pleasures or accidents, that greeted papa, aunties or uncles in her , own nursery, and wondered if Tom, Bessie and Mark would be trained to sit - ? quiet in one place for hours at a time. K, ^ j*' At two years of age I teach my ehil :J\y their letters, and after that they ate sent to schooL All of them were entered at three years of age at a private <. school, and at five at a public one. In the intervals of school hours my boys have geographical puzzles, spelling games and problems, and my girh are v. - taught sewing." ; ^ . " Bat when do they play ?" "Their games and puzzles are sufj>' * floient for the boys, and I allow the girls to cut out and fit clothing foj^L liege wax doll" ^ " '' But do they not ha-j^Uhy hours for ^ ^^mmg^balJyfeiferMd other out-door r . "I disapprove entirely of out-door pj?y- It ruins clothing and makes ?< ' ' children rude. They have out-door ; teeroise in a long walk to and from % ' school." > 7. 'la ..>1.. iV. 11 J J I ao ouo opuxxo, iuc uaii'uwr ujjt?ueu I ' quietly and a fall of footstepB crossed V . tne hall to the sitting-room. Five ' children, three girls and two boys, w oame in with languid footsteps and pale faces, from which all childishness ^ . seemed stricken. Spotlessly clean, with shiny hair and polished boots, they followed in orderly fashion the lead of the eldest, who stood before his > - mother, waiting for permission to speak. "Well, my son?" she said, qnietly. . " There is no school this afternoon. ; .The senior class is to be examined," he * said wearily. you some words to study in the c tionary." Silently the five Bat down until 1 visitor departed, uncomfortably c scions of ten weary eyes and five pall pinohed faces. Crossing her own doorway, Mrs, T moylQ was greeted by a merry duet " No school! No school !" Then the tenor bo]<\ " Won't yon make some bobs for : kite, mamma ? There's a splem wind!" Followed by a sweet soprano. " And oh, mamma, you promised I first holiday you would trim my do bonnet." " I 'ant a kite, too !'' strnek in Ma "Oli, let me get my breath 1" cr: the little wooHin. "Where's your b Tom?" I "Ob, I forgot," Tom said, sweepi it off with a profound bow. " He take this chair. And let me take yc bonnet and sacque up stairs. You i tired. Never mind bobs if yon are v< tired." "I'll help make them," said Bessi "and I'll go watch Tom, mamma, if j don't feel like making the bonnet." " We'll eeo, after dinner," said M Turmoyle, looking from one round, r< face to* the other, marking the stui limbs and dancing eyes. To be su the hair of all three must be reduc from a state of rebellion before they wi presentable ?t table, and soap and ^ tor were pleasant suggestions in then ternal eyes. There was perfect hea and happiness, if tbe voices were shi and the boots noisy. "I've been to eeo Mrs. Stone," f said, when, washed and combed, 1 children gathered around her to w for papa and dinner, " and I wondei if I could ever make 'Ay children quiet find orderly A3 her's are." "Willie Stone is a milksop !" ti Tom, contemptuously, "always cryi because his headaches. He can't p! anything, and daren't move, for fear spoib'iig hiB clothes. Wouldn't p! football for fear he would get dust ! bis boots. There's a nice boy for yc He might aa well be a girl at ouce." ;,And mother, the teacher had write a note to Mrs. Stone the day Jo Gray spilled the ink on Maud's apr< Sho was 60 afraid to go home, it \ awfnl. She said hor mother would wl her, and keep her upon bread and wa for a whole day. Mrs. Lee told her say it wasn't her fault, but she said 1 mother would not believe her." "DiDnerl and here comes papa cried Tom. Mr. Turmoyle came in with a gn face. He made no comment on the he day, but stooped to kiss the rosy fa< with unwonted tenderness. After d ner he sent the children to the nurse and said to his wife, who had anxiou watched his olonded face: "Tillie, t met Dr. Holmes on my v home, and he tells me that there h? been three cases of soarlet fever fri the school. It is raging fearfully says." Mrs. Turmoyle turned very pale. "In the school?" she murmured. " Well, among the ctLoIars." There was little more to say, but t heart of each parent sent up a petiti to a kind and heavenly Father, to ke the plaguo from their door. Yet it came. A week later Mark sio ened, and in three days more all thr were down. Tenderest nursing, lovi care and unexpected docility of patiei brought the little Turmoyles safely ( upon the road to health again. The most nauseous medioines w< swallowed if " mamma " coaxed, and t most stringent Btillness was observ when papa was discovered to have tei in his eyes at Bessie's crib. Tho day the children assembled the sitting-room for the first tea drill ing was a gala day, but papa was obse: ed to have a sad face. " While we are thankful, dear ch dren," he said, " for our blessings, us not forget to sympathize with t sorrows of others. Willie and Ma Stone were buried to-day, and Amy vi be deaf for life. The others are si very ill." At b< d-timG, when the children slf the sleep of convalescence, Mr. Turmo; came to the nursery, where his lit blue-eyed wife wajB laying out the mo; ing clothing. "Tillie," he Baid, drawing the lit woman close to his strong arms, " I h n Ia?i? f ol Vr wif]l TTol mOC Q a JLUiig H?XU TTibU JLS A. JLLVAUAVM fcv/ V4 -JJ M I cannot rest till I thank you for o unbroken nursery to-night. Next God you saved the children." "I am sure you never spared yoi self in nursing," said Mrs. Turmoyle. "The nursing was the smallest ps of it. Dr. Holmes says it was not t scarlet fever that billed Stone's ch dren, but their mother's 'system.' T fever found overtaxed brains, bodi weakened by want of exercise, tempe made sullen by a deprivation of i childish pleasure. They were nurs by 'system,' no allowance made f suffering or weakness; and the two th are gone but precede the two now da gerously ill. If they recover from tl fever they will never reach maturi unless the mother sees her error. Y< may thank your wife's management f your own children,' the doctor said me; 'there was something to build < in the sturdy frames of those youi BftVACPR ' " Mrs. Stone could see no fault in hi system, though two littlegraves attest< its weakness. Her children, recoverii] from the fever, found no relaxation home rule, and pale and dull-eyed, we: back to the old routine. Four years passed away, and Tom le homo for boarding-school, a gentlema: ly boy of sixteen, well up in his studic and in perfect health. Driving hon from the station, after starting hii upon his journey, Mr. and Mrs. Tu moyle passed Mr. Stone's handson house, prim and spotless, the garden miracle of order, and no signs of buf little feet on walk or border. "Poor Stone I" said Mr. Turmoyl " he frets sadly for Amy." " It was bard to lose her, the last ( the five," said Mrs. Turmoyle; " ac she was such a patient child, after si had lost her hearing." "Too patient! There will be no ne< now of any system in traiuing. Fi' children all under the sod 1 Oh, Tiili< Thank God we have not such a home the one we have just passed. Tha! God for merry voiccs, clear lauglitc noisy feet, and eveu the crying of o' baby May. May He guard and ble our little ones, and give them go< health, good principles and happinef rather than give us the doubtful blef ing of a i}uiet home." The- Goelet E1 ite. Every one who has been cn Broadw; between Union square and the Fif Avenue hotel, writes a NewJYork com pondent, remembers a large, dingy, ol fashioned building at the corner Nineteenth street, 1't stands back frc the Blreet; the plot is surrounded by high, iron railing; there are many fow about the house in fine weather, ai somotimes a cow may be seen grazing the east end of the garden. This is t! house of old Peter Goelet, bachelor ai millionrire, who owns more real esta than any other man in New York, t present head of the Astor family eicej -ed^ ffiBjga&gr^jto^-^ned u prettT^ell supplied with heirs, is al a real estate millionaire and worth ve nearlvasmuoh money as Peter. T two brothers inherited their proper and have taken excellent oare of it. Th own many houses on Broadway a: aores of land in various parts of t city, but principally up town. It h been their custom all along to les their land rather than build on it. Th charge a rent of five per cent, on t value of the same, and they. sometin: "advance money to the lessee to bui taking a mortgage aB security, T lessee has to pay all taxes and other penses, so the five per cent, is a cl< income. Since the hard times beg the Goelets have become the owners many of the houses erected on th land. ? Since their accession to the thro: King Humbert and Queen Margare have never onoe presented themsel' at a gala night at the Roman theat the king being unwilling^ to beconu * NEWS SUMMARY. ] Eastern and Middle States. i on- ; [id The schooner David H. Tolok went ashore at < ' Baroegat, N. J., and tho bq? b?ing heavy, be- , gan to break up rapidly. The captain's wife , died in tbe r!cgmg, and out of sever) men and : a Voy landed by the efforte of a life-saving , i otjiHnn'B cmw two were dead, while the rest | were in a dying condition. Another man was swept from*the rigging and drowned. . j: j At the convention of tho American Fish Cnlture association in New York, a number of j papers on pisciculture JW9 rcfiu, and Robert , B. Roosevelt wee elected president for the comthe ing year. ] 11'e i To the recent fatal burning of about seventy- , Ave valuablo horses in a New York stable, j w muet bo added a similar casualty, by whioh j . ; forty-throe horses were burned to death. This j Ieu time the stable destroyed was on nrty-inira at, Btreot, close to Fifth *vcnuo, and of the fottythree horeea '.out itt the flames a number were fast trottets. Many of the carriages and pleigbs Do burned were also very valuable. The loss in te, horses alone exceeds 550,000. Total Iobb, over )ur $100,000. A panic ensued among the inmates are of & girls' seminary, next door to the blazing a stable ; but they were all removed in safety. " ^ Peter J. Pintler, said to be 108 years old, died at White Lake, Sullivan oounty, N. V., a 6 > few days ago. His oldest brother, believort to 'ou be 110 years old, iB etill liriixr. Myron A. fiueli, fa'tth hand, haB been eenrs. teDwd to he hUUg April 18, for assaulting and 3Sy murdering his emploj-er's daughter, Catharine M. Richards, aged fifteen. The tragedy took ' > placo near Cooperstown, N. Y., June 25, 1878. M ayor Cooper presided at a large meeting in :e<1 the interest of tenement-house reform, held at Bre the Cooper Institute, New York. It is oharged va- the city's crowded tenement-houses are hot* aa. beds of disease and death, and should give way to more commodious dwellings, built with a view to prolonging, not shortening life. It is now asserted that the result of a second investigation of the case of Birron, the Dexter :he (Me.) cashier, is to indicate that it was a oase ier of robbery and murder, and not of suicide. It aj? is said that the alleged irregularities in his j accounts can be explained, and that he lived inside of his income. 86 J. B. Enos & Co., flour merchants of Water- , ford, N. Y., have failed for over $200,000. \ llcl At the municipal elections in Maine the I ng united Democratic and Greenback candidate ] lay for mayor of Portland was successful. In < 0f Rockland there was no choice. In Bath, Lew- I |a_ iston. Auburn, Gardner and Saco the Republi- i J can candidates for mayor wore elected. i . The great Yanderbilt will contest in New ' IU 1 York has come to an abrupt conclusion through 1 a compromiBu. uy wuiuu, il id uuuoidiuuu, wu to contestants?Cornelian Vanderbilt and Mrs. ,1m Berger, the late commodore's daughter?get $1,000,000 each snd costs, and the will is to remain uncontetted. jjp Western end Southern States. ter The flames destroyed seventeen buildings in to Pensacola, Florida, entailing & loss of $125,aer 000, on which the insurance is 870,000. Major A. M. Hutchens and Thomas McNatl, t j? both highly-refpected citizens of Tishomingo county, Mies., left luka together to go home, being neighbors. Hutchens had drawn $1,700 ive in gold from the express office, sent by a Cin)]j. oinnati house to be UBed in purchasing a farm, jjgo Late in the evening McNatt's horse reached . home riderless, with blood marks on the sadin" die. Thia aroused the suspicions of MoNatt's ry, family, who feared fonl play, and a search sly ' was instituted, which revealed the dead body \ of McNatt, terribly mutilated, about two miles from his home. One hundred yards farther "J I nn ATnior Hntrthfinn' hodv was fonnd in like ive oondition. Dm Ten months ago Charles W. Angell, secretary be of the Pullman Palace Csr company, at Chicago, embezzled $100,000 belonging to the company and fled to foreign lands. He was eventually captured, taken back to Ohicago, tried, feund guilty, and the other day sentenced to ten years' imprisonment, h? J. M. Lunsford and six of his children were on burned or smothered to death while asleep in ep their residence, at Neleouville, Ohio. Only Mrs. Lunsford and one child escaped, k- Tho Michigan Democrats and Greenbackers 66 have united on a State ticket, with John B. Shipman for judge of the supreme court at the head. The platform adopted deprec&teB the its tendency to centralization of power, opposes rat war olaims, demands that all money be made a full legal tender, calls for the substitution of greenbacks for national bank bills, Bays money , enough to meet the requirements of bubiness should be issued, and opposes all monopolies. ed Mrs. J. 1\ Coulson, of Coolville, la., locked its her three children, who^e ages ranged between three and nine years, in the house while she ^ visited a neighbor. During her absence the l house was burned to the ground, and the three IK" lUiln rtn/.n nnwi in fViA flo moa I UllJU UUUD ^QUOUDU 1U WUV UUUiLO. ? ^ Five lives have been lost and all the business T part of Reno, Nev., destroyed by fire. The 6 ll- fire started in the morning at the west end of e let the business streets back of the Masonic block, he A strong gale was blowing, and it leaped from F j house to house and block to block with the ! rapidity of lightning. In three hours the \ 'ill whole business portion of the town was in J ;ill ashes with the exception of the Masonio bnild- J ings. Among the buildings destroyed are three j freight depots, Bander's bank, the postoffio?, J Y Shoemaker's drug store, the Pollard, Interna- * [j tional and Arcade hotels, the depot, Davidson's 1 "0 and Frederick's jewelry stores, Penninger <fc ' 71- Oaburn's drag store, both telegraph offioes, r Wells, Fargo & Co.'s office, the railroad and ye baggage rooms, the Baptist and Catholic a , churches, Hammond 4 Wilson's stable, the a academy of music, Barnett's Prescott's and F na Grey & Isaao'a dry goods storeB, Abraham's ? ur and Nathan's clothing stores, and Manning 1 to aud Dock's farmers' co-operative association J grocery stores. Two or three Central Pacifio p trains, including the lightning train, were also 1 ,r* destroyed. The loss is about $1,000,000, and l the insurance only about $150,000. The five 1 irt lives known to bo lost are those of Mrs. John a be Beck, John Riley and three tramps. A number 0 i of persons were injured. Several farmhouses r * two miles down the meadows were set afire by ? "0 the sparks and destroyed. After working un- ' es til exhausted the whites forced the Chinese to ? irs work on the engines. 1 ill ^ i From Washington. t 0Q y An altercation in the 8enate lobby between a ? Donn Piatt, editor of the Washington Capital, g ia? and William McGarrahan, who has been promi- 0 11- nently before the country in connection with a ie ^rgo silver mine claim, led to blows. Piatt r was knocked down and badly beaten in the c ~ face. The parties to the row were opponents ? 3U in the claim referred, and just before the & or trouble a bill in MoGarrahan's interest had D to bien laid over in the Senate, upon Senator Mo- g jn Donald's objection. c 3g The President in his veto of the Chinese em- o igration bill, says the measure is virtually a a denunciation of the whole Burlingame treaty o j with China, and that thero is no emergency tl 3d demanding such a step. o '? The secretary of the Smithsonian institute P of has received a cable dispatch announcing the P Dt discovery of a new planet at Marseilles, France, d The public debt statement for February ift shows : Total debt, less cash in the treasury, , _ March 1, 1879, $2,020 207,541.66. Cash in the * treasury $447,292,498 48. Increase of dobt ? !B during February, $311,411.23. ?, The total number of bills and joint resolu- a tions introduced in the House of Representa- p r" tives during the Congress which baB just ex16 pired is 6,826, and in tco 8enate, is 1,936. The a principal measures which have become laws a 3V during the last session in addition to ten of the e] * regular annual appropriation bills are : The j bill reducing the tax oa tobacco and otherwise 0? amending the internal revenue laws; the cen- f, bus bill; the bill to aid the refunding of the jt 3f national debt by authorizing the issue of small w treasury certificates; the bill to prevent the introduction of infectious or contagions dis- g 16 eases, and bills providing for the payment of v arrears of pensions for service during the war 5(3 of the rebellion. 0 ve ! Among the measures which failed of enact- 0 a J meat by the late Congress are the following: li aB The legislative, executive and judicial appro- & v priation bill; the army appropriation bill; the r bill to regulate inter-8tate commerce: the I !l'> " steamboat bill.' the Geneva award bill; the c nr bill to establish postal savings banks; the bill q ps l to repeal the specie resumption act; the bill p . > 1 granting pensions to survivors of the Mexicau V I war; the "sugar bill;" the bill to restrict Chin- v JS> ese emigration: the joint resolution proposing c s8- - a constitutional amendment to prohibit the a payment of "disloyal olaims;" the bill to pro- e vide for the enforcementof the eight-hour law; h the proposition to transfer the Indian bureau I to the war department; the Mississippi levee li bill, and the bill providing for a commission a on the improvement of the Mississippi; the ii ay bill extending the time for the completion of t th the Northern Pacific railroad; the Brazilian t mail sen-ice bill; tho bill to regulate the trans- S I t.rt-lndnn n# nnlmala kh I I a C? a fhfl Hill tfl O I , ipviwvwuui n.uiujo.in ?-T .... _ IU" | devote tho procoeds of sales of the publio lands a of to educational purposes; the bill authorizing t >m railroad companies to construct and maintain i a lines of telegraph for commercial purposes; f ?js the Burns:de committee'* army reorganization a . bill; the bill to revise the patent laws: theJa- a Jl| paneee and Chinese indemnity fand billR; the v at various measures reported from tho Ilonse be committee on banking and currency. 2 Foreign Newt. ^ te TremendouB fctorms_ are. reported in the ? he Bouth of Ff&Eoe, "fchere hundreds of people r )fc.JJlfife^een thrown on public charity by the de- j. _ jf Btruction and inundation of their houses. In j Spain the tempest lasted four days, with much 80 damage and loss of life. Various villages and j. ry farms in the Navarro and Astnrias were de- c he stroyed. A bark was wrecked at Corunna, and c ty thirty persons were drowned. < eY Senor Cirilo Antonio Kivarola, ex-president t n j of Paraguay, was set upon by flvo assassins in t ? the streets "of Asuncion ? the capital of the t k? country?and stabbed to death. i ias Charles Peace, the notorious English burglar ! tee and murderer, was hanged at Leeds, England. 1 ey His many crimes and escapes from the clutches ' he of the law wooia nu a volume, uu ud km ?u 1PR sidered one of the moet remarkable criminals 1 } j of the age. Just before bis execution ho oon- ' I"' feseed that be bad mnrdered a Mmoheeter ' 'he policeman in 1876, for which orime another 1 'X- man ie undergoing imprisonment for life. 1 3ar A Yiepna dispatch says twenty-one persons 1 ran were killed and nine houses destroyed by an ' '0f avalanohe, near Marburg. The British ship Adriatio stranded near Dun- t kirk, Ssotland, and out of forty-nine persons i on board only seven were saved. The disastrous storm whioh visited France 1 tf e, and Spain burst over Italy also, doing inoal- 1 itta culable damage. The whole ooast, from Geneyea va to the south of Naples, was strewn with i wrecks of small craft, and many large vessels * * were seriously damaged. At Leghorn two i 5 a English steamers broke from their moorings J and caused much injury. At Folionlsa Biz yes- ' Bela were wreoked?four Italian and two English. At Puagginolo the campanile of a church was blown down while the people were at mass, killing two priects officiating at the altar and three other persons, and wonnding twenty-fonr others. A similar catastrophe occurred it Aontanro, where tho vault of a ohuroh yielded to the force of the storm and killed a priest who was oelebrating masB, and injured i number of the congregation. At Rome the roroe or mo wma was uiiparttueieu. k 1 Daring a riot at JSIOBae*-, Bracil, the commander f*nd chief magistrate of the town were Spoiled by the military, nine persons were rilled, and many publio and private Btores Tore sacked. Weston, the American pedestrian, failed in tiis attempt to walk 2,000 miles in 1,000 hoars ilong the roads of England, delivering lectnres n the principal towns on the way. When the thousand hours expired he had covered l,977i niles. The mayor te-r'Aid, said at a seeling that m oiio uutriot of that town there ire *,uuu persons aeeuiuie, ana suu uuuuiea ire actually starving. A publication isBned by a Russian secret press declares that the governor of CharkofT, who was assassinated, had been condemned to Jeath by the Russian Socialist party Tor Inhuman treatment of political prisoners. The act >f nes^ssinatioh was consequently executed by )ne of that party. The publication clurges ;he governor with beating students nearly to Jeath, and concludes with the declaration of " death for death, terror for terror. This is jur answer to all threats and persecutions of Lhe government." The viceroy of India telegraphs that he has received a letter announcing the death of Shere Mi, ameer of Afghanistan. The letter waB trom Yakoob Kahn, 8here All's son. The iron Spanish steamer Guillermo, bourn1 from Baltimore for Liverpool, was sunk by a iollision with a British vessel off the south wast of Ireland. The captain and several of :he Guillermo's crew were injured, and a numjer were reported missing. CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY. Senate. Mr. Kdmunde, of Vermont, from the com mittee on the judiciary, reported, in acoordince with a resolution recently adopted by the 3enato on his mctioD, a bill further to protect :he constitutional rights of citizens and to ->nntaVi Trinlatinna f\t flit damn Tt. VM nla/Wll I i>n thocalendar....Tne conference report on :he internal revenue bill was agreed to. By ts provisions the tax on tobacco has been reduced, and the tax on luoifer matches regained The consideration o.' the deficiency ippropriation bill was resumed, the pending question being on the amondmunt appropriatng $250,000 for court expenees and for ex; penses incurred under the enforcement act. md, after a debate, it was agreed to, and the sill passed. A.t the eveaing session a large lumber of relief and pension bills were passed if tor which tho Senate adjourned. The majority of the Teller oommittee of investigation into alleged election frauds preiented their report .... Mr. Morrill reported !rom the finance committee an amendment to Kfl Kill mubintr nn ftni?rnnrift.fcinn fnr frhft nav aent of arrears in pensions, which provides 'or the issne and sale of four per cent. bonds a the amount of $18,000,000, or in lien thereof the issniDg of government certificates of deposit .... 300,000 copies of the agricultural resort were ordered to re printed .... The bill naking appropriation for the payment of penlion arrears was taken up. An amendment vaa agreed to, providing that pension agents ihall reccive for their services thirty cents for >very payment, and appropriating $30,000 to neet each expenses ; also that the pension arears act shall extend to pensions granted by ipecial act of Congross Resolutions in honor >f the late Representative Douglass were adopted. Adjourned. The oensus bill, with the House amendments, ras reported to the Senate, with the reoomnendation that the provision added by the louse be non-concurred in. Consideration of he question was postponed The Vice-Presdent laid before the Senate a letter (from David T. Corbin, withdrawing his claim to tho eat now held by Senator Butler, of Sonth Carolina The consideration of the bill makng an appropriation for the payment of arears of pensions was resumed. The first tight sections of the amendment, providing .'or the appointment of pension Burgeons and I slerks, were rejected. The next seotion was imended so that pensions ahall begin from he death or actnal disability of the person >n whose account paid, and adopted. Mr. Morrill then submitted his amendment for the 86ue of four per cent, bonds, the proceeds hereof to be applied to the payment of arrears >f pensions. Pending discusE'.on, a recess was aken till 8 p. m. After reoess Mr. Morrill's amendment was rejected, and one offered by klr. Shields, making the act granting pensions o soldiers of the war of 1812 applicable to the kloxican war veterans, was adopted. The bill vas then passed Mr. Windom called up the inndry civil appropriation bill, and its consid(ration was proceeded with. After passing the sundry civil bill, at midtight, the Senate proceeded to consider the egislative, executivo and judioial appropriaion kill. Several amendments inserted by the louse were stricken out, and at 4 a k, the >111 was paeBed. A recess was then taken till I p. m. Sunday, at wbich time the river and i&rbor appropriation bill was taken np, and a arge nnmber of amendment agreed to. Tbe >ill was passed at a late hoar The vote by rhiob the pensions arrears bill was passed was econsidered after some debate. Daring the Sunday night session of the Sen,te a debate oocorred on the pensions arrears .ppropriation bill, the vote by whioh it was laaaed having been reconsidered. Mr. Hoar ifTered an amendment excepting Jefferson )avis from the benefits of the clause providing *ensions for Mexican war veterans. Agreed o by 23 to 22, and the entire clause pensionng Mexican war veterans was rejected, after fhich tbe bill was passed....The post route till was taken up and passod The committee .ppointed to investigate Sonator Matthew's onneotion with the Louisiana count made a eportexonerating him....At 7.20 a.m. areess was taken till 1 r. m. On reassembling he Teller committeo was authorized to sit luring the recess... .The Houee amendments o the census bill were agreed to, and the bill lassed Oonference roports on the fortiflcaion and deficiency appropriation bills were ubmitted and agreed to, after whioh the Sente tookarecesa till 8 p.m. At the evening ession the conference report on the sundry ivil bill was taken up and adopted. At two o'clock in the morning Mr. Windom eported to the 8enate that the committee of onference on the legislative, executive and aaici&i appropriauuu oiu uau uccu uuauio w gree. The point on which the oonferees were nable to agree was the proviso of the House xlng the pay of jurors in the United States ourt at two dollars a day, repealing the test ath, and aiso so much of the revised statutes 8 provides for the appointment of supervisors f election. The House took the position that be only condition on which an agreement ould be made was that the conferees on the art of the Senate should recede from that oint. The latter could not consent to this con ition. After a long political discussion a moon that the Senate sustain its amendments to tie bill was carried by 29 yeas to 24 nays. At 1.80 a. m. the Senate went into exeoutive sesion, and amid considerable disorder and at>mpts to rush through private bills the Viceresident's gavel fell at twelve o'clook noon, ad the Forty-fifth Congress was a thing of the ast. Home. The national census bill was passed without, division. The bill provides that the enum ration shall begin on the first Monday in une, 1880, and the returns shall be forwarded ) the supervisors on or before the 1st of Joly allowing; and in any city having over 10,000 ihabitants. the enumeration shall be taken ithin two weeka from tho first Monday in June, 'he President, by and with the oonsent of tho enate, is to have the appointment of the superisorB of the census, whose number is limited a 150, and who are to receive a compensation f $500 each. The sum of $3,000,000 ($250,00 of which is appropriated by th9 bill) is mited as tbe maximum cost of the census. Lfter discussing the sugar bill and the internal avenue bill, the House adjourned. Speaker Randall, calling Mr. Carlisle to the hair, rose to a personal explanation. He noted from a letter printed in the Philadelphia Ledger, signed by Special Agent H. L. Williams, in which it is said that appropriation rarrants were illegally signed to get money to ontinne operations of the bureau of printing nd engraving, which was directly in the interst of Mr. Randall, who waa said to be a stocktolder in tho paper mill which Bupplies the mrtau. Mr. Randall entered tbo moat absonte denial, and offered a resolution for the nnnlntment of a select committee to inaaire to the factH of the accnsationa. The resoluion was adopted... .The conference report on he internal revonue bill was adopted....The leward contempt case waa then taken np, and, ifter ranch opposition. the resolutions for the rrest of Minister George F. Seward, as a conumacious witness, were agreed to An evenug 8bBBion wan hold, at which several reportB rom tho ways and means committee wero ,cted npon?Tho bill regulating protests and ,ppeala from decisions of collectors of customs ran passed. Adjourned. The House discussed for two hours the Brasubsidy propoBitionrmnJ-tueu- re-" |l^^P^33iolt>7. It also rejeoted the new uail matter classification Echeme.. .Mr. Bew,rd was brought to the bar of the Hjuse, but efused to produce his bookB or testify, and lia case was referred to the judiciary commitee, which amounts to bis discharge. The Senate amendment b to the deficiency >ill were non-concurred in, and a conference lommittee waa ordered The consideration >f the sugar bill was resumed; but after aome liBcussion it was withdrawn, and after the ransaction of some minor business the yellow ever bill was taken up. Mr. Young offered a inbstltute for the Honate bill, which waa tdopted The question then being on the uLHH&sre of the Senate bill, with the substitute, t wan defeated, and the Houbo took a reoess ,ill 8 p. m. Ou roassembling the House, after jonsiderable dinouBBion, laid tho bill on the ;able....At 10.50 the Presidents message vetoing the anti-Ohinosebill was read, and a vote aeing taken on the paasago of the bill over the ireto it was rejeoted by 109 to 06?not twothirds in the affirmative. At 1.10 the House took a recess till 9 o'clock Sunday morning. At that hour the House met again, and without transacting any business took another relees until 9 p. m. During the evening several recesses were taken. At 12 a. m. & recess was taken until 10 the next morning. Mr. Hewitt reported that the oommittee of sonferenoe on the army appropriation bill had been '.unable to agree. There was only one point upon whioh the Senate and flonse disagreed?the preaenoe of troops at the polls. On one side the House conferee;; insisted that the time hadoome when it should no longer be lawful for a soldier to be at polling-places. On the other side, it was insisted with equal force ' i imirf ii i " - X ?? ?i?irnmrn^m that the provision of the statutes should be e maintained, and that the power shonld remain t in the executive to order troops to the polls ] on the day of eleotion, if in his judgment it j was neoessary to preserve the peace. Debate . of a political nature then followed....The ] unanimous report exonerating Speaker Randall i from oharges recently made against him, wis j adotped.... At ten a, ii.tbe Eoasere assembled ( aftet.a reoeftf. snd tho arrears of pensions bill was r&sned amid much uproar. At three minutes of twelve o'clock Speaker Randall deliv- 1 ered a valedictory address, the gavel fell at 1 twelve o'clook, and the Forty-fifth Congress j wau uwiaiwi aujuuriiuu wnuuut u?j. POTTER COMMITTEEllEl'ORTS. Report of the Mnjorlty^ The majority report of the Potter committee, which has been adooted by a vote of six Democrats to three liepnblicans (Mr. Butler being absent), says that the confessions of conspirators who have become dissatisfied are worth little, but points to the fact, not generally understood, that in regard to the essential features of the election and canvass in Florida and Louisiana there is no substantial dispute between the members of the committee?the Republicans having called no witnesses in Florida and only a few in Louisiana, except as to the conduct of the visiting statesmen, and incidentally about intimidations. It dismisses entirely the testimony of Anderson Jenks, Mrs. Jenks, Weber, and that class of witnesses, and deals with the case upon what it regards as the general and controlling facts alone. The report then reviews the election in Florida, declaring that the State voted for Tilden, but was illegally counted c for Haves. It then deals with the conduct of the visiting statesmen, and par- ^ ticularly that of Mr. NoyeB, as contrast- c ed with that of General Francis 0 . c Barlow, whose fidelity to all his obliga- c tions, and integrity, independence, fair- ]j ness and truth the report especially x oommende. 1 The report drawB attention to the fact f that such a wrong might be repeated t in any State at any presidential election, c by the canvassers withholding the an- n nouncement of the result of the election ? until the day fixed for the meeting of ? the electoral college, and then declaring fc V - 1-5 1 J.. J I s persona wno nau never ueen vuteu iur to be electors, when, acoorJing to this decision, such electors would be entitled irrevocably to cast the vote of the State. It therefore recommends a law provid- . ing that where there is dispute as to a who are the real electors of any State, t the judgment of its oourt of last resort, . if oertified to Congress before the meet- ' ing of the two houses of Congress to receive and count the electoral vote, shall be conclusive as to the right of ' the disputing electors, and which vote from the State shall be counted, unless . the two houses of Congress shall other- ? wise agree. ^ The report then takes up the case of jj Louisiana, comments on the powers of the returning board, speaks of its trick- " ery in getting np false affidavits, and , refers to the registration frauds in New Orleans, and the alleged Republican 2 conspiracy in East Feliciana. The re- x port says that the returning board would never have so outraged the people but ? for their encouragement from the visit- 1 ing statesmen, and the support which ? they and the troops gave them. Then : follow details as to how some of the visitors were deceived by the local man- 1 agers, and innocently co-operated in f the frauds of the returning board, while others did not. It refers very briefly to 0 the alleged bargain by which Hayes, ? who had three thousand votes less than ? Packard, got counted in, while Packard ? went out; and mentions Mr. Sherman's ? offer to prove intimidation, but says 1 that whenever the committee offered to r receive it the evidence was not produoed, ? and they were met by some sham excuse 1 for not producing it; how they had ex- 0 amined many of the witnesses that were a before the returning board, who, in al- ? moBt every instance, recanted and ex- 'r plained how they came to make their 1 false affidavit in the first place, and how a sucn statements ag tney maae Deiore tne returning board were totally unfounded. D Befereneo is then made to the Sherman F letter, in regard to which the report ? simply give3 the facts as they stand, ~ stating that a letter was actually written * and largely influenced political action in ? Louisiana, whoever signed it; and draw- f ing attention to the attempt?charged to 8 be in the interest of Mr. Sherman?by ? Mrs. Jenks, whose husband and brother are employed in the treasury depart- ? ment, to induce the committee to pro- Y duce a forged letter. 11 The report closes with a reference to 8 the clanger of returning boards, and the a greater danger of controlling elections ? and protecting canvassing boards by 11 federal troops, and, above all, to the crowning danger with which the ooun- F try is threatened by reason of the enor- 8 mous patronage centered in the presi - ? dency, which makes the presidential office a prize so great that in order to control it tne grossest irauus ana violations of the law may be expected on the part of those who desire to profit by 8 that patronage.. It concludes with the 0 finding that full effect was not given to c the electoral votes of Florida and Louisi- F ana ; that Noyes, Sherman and others ^ encouraged this result; thi t the second F certificate from Louisiana v, as forged as * to two of its names, Kellogg and Clark ? being privy to the deed, and that Til- * den and Hendricks received a true ma- jj jority of the electoral vote and were the ? real choice of the people of the United j? States at the last presidential election. k r The Minority Report. S The minority report of the committee t is signed by the three Republican mem- t bers. The report compliments Ohair- t man Potter upon his fairness and equit- c BD10 IUllUgH, UUL UlBtteULB HUJii 111 an J v of the views presented in the majority p report. The report says that the c Republicans confined themselves to the task of trying to make the inquiries instituted by the majority something more than a Democratic in- ' vestigation of Republicans, so that whatever was put before the world might have some of the elements of an examination of both sides. The original subject of the investigation was the honesty or dishonesty of the election in Florida, Louisiana and South Carolina. For two years prior to Ootobcr, 1878, the report says, Mr. Tilden and his agents, in season and out of season, had iterated and reiterated the charges that the canvassing boards of the doubtful States had acted fraudulently and corruptly in the discharge of sworn dnties. If these charges had been fortified by any proof, the characters of those who mado the charges would be of no consequence whatever. Rut in fact, the whole investigation, with the 3,000 pages of hearsay and falsehood, c had not afforded the slightest proof of f what was asserted. No man, the report J states, had come forward to say that any bribe was accepted, or that any member of any canvassing board had indicated any desire to betray his trnst. Every t intimation of that kind had been traced < to some Democrat and there ended; and 1 that : emocrat had never been bronght before the committee. ?j.The report sajs Mr. McLin, to whose testimony Mr. TilJen referred, although J goa'ed by eicfenaes and imaginary i wrongs, never for a moment admitted < any improper condaot at the time. He < ??ffn*.lrnnTirlA(1(7n f.liaf, ( oniy LiiiiiAD Hum uivoi-I?MVU.V.0. lie may have been mistaken. Genera < Barlow, whoso conduct baa received tbo compliments of tbo majority, aftor full knowledge of tbo workings of Mr. Cowgill's mind, admits bis bonesty of purpose and that of all tbe others. As to the South Carolina board, the report says, the fall, free and uncontradicted testimony of Mr. Dunn satisfied every man who heard it of the absence of fraud in South Carolina. These charges, then, of fraud and corruption with which Mr. Tilden and his agents bad filled the air, says the report, were nothing except the unsupported assertions of litigants against whom the courts have decided. The tribunals in the three States decided in t?? 4-V.zvTTn olant/mi Hfraiorhf.wav iavux ui mouojoDWivww*Mi * the defeated party, with his agents, set ] up the assertion of wrongdoing. To 1 bolster up that assertion by proof, the i report oharges, was the object of the i original constitution of this committee. 1 The oommittee toiled until the first of August, and found no evidence, Regarding the investigation of the cipher dispatches, the report scouts the idea that Oolone^Pelton, living dfij&a i house of his unolf^^^lden^JHbiiyL have ' -.. -.',s r-,/J : ' - ^ - -- ' - inch large sums without word or h: o the man most deeply interest* Precisely what the arrangements w< jy which Mr. Tilden was kept posted :o the doings o( hie agents, and yet 1 n a ppsition to make a general denia * Vi^> woo an Wf?thft rflnnrt aavs t committee probably shall never knc In regard to Louisiana affairs, the port devotes the most attention to I Sherman letter. The majority repc it states, fails to say explicitly whet) the testimony Bnetained the charge tl 3uch a letter as Anderson and Weber 1 testified to had been written. The min ity deflates that it doe& hot, and t! the palpable perjuries of both tho v leases named justify a feeling of d< JisgnBt that they should be trusted capable of oreating a serious attack i >n the character of a man who has bo: i high character in the most respor Jle settice oi tne oountry ior nve-aj ;wenty years. The oonduct of the visiting statesn: it New Orleans is then considered ;he report, and that of Messrs. Sh nan, Garfield, Hale, Kelley and oth s declared consistent and frank. As to presidential elections, the rept ia;s the inahner of choosing eleotort )y the coilstitntion so exclusively co nitted to State legislation that it s< 10 method of Federal interference. 1 >ropoBition of the majority, that I ilection of electors should bo past ipon by the hignest court of each 8ta s regarded by the report as impraoti >le, because Federal legislation cam leal with the subject In conclusion, the report says the 'estigation is incomplete, because 1 ircular of the Demooratio campai ommittee of 1876, advising the pars >f armed olubs on horseback for t inrpose of intimidating the negro Pas ignored\ that neither Mr. Sherm ior Mr. Hayes is implicated in any i iroper conduct or corrupt proceedini mt that the cipher dispatches have be onfessed to be systematic a ad delib te efforts to corrupt the returni nd oanvassing boards of the Sfcs'jes Tlorida, South Carolina and Oregon, ribes offered in the shapes of gri ums of money. General Bntler's Report. General Butler, in his separate rep< ipon the Potter investigation, conolu< rom the evidenoe that there was no f nd free election in Louisiana, and tl he electoral vote of that State ought i o have been counted; that the major >1 the votes actnally cast in that Sti rere for Til den and Nicholis; that if 1 ote of the State is counted at all, < otes of the bull-dozed parishes w< rithin the just exercise of the jurisd ion of the returning board, to be : ected in the proper exercise of its jut neat; that in the remainder of the Sti he majority of votes were oast for Pa< i ? a Li? i ,ra ior governor, una a pornou ui i Widen eleotors, leaving two or mc layes eleotora uneleoted; that the d laration by Congress that the State Louisiana should not be counted 1 ither candidate would have been the b tosaible result to the country, becai t would have taught the lesson tl lections cannot be carried either orce and intimidation at the polls, or rand in the returns; that under ther ogs of the electoral commission eve ncouragement is given by reckless p isans totwrry their State either by fo r by fraud; that the electoral comm ion has afforded no practical solution he constitutional diffculties attend] he count of electoral votes in dispul Itates, and that an exigenoy again ar ag like that of 1876 will surely lead evolution : that the appointment of \ leotoral commission was wholly beyc be constitution, and its determinati Tight to have no legal force ; that I ppointing of the judges of the supre ourt npon this political formation 1 lone great harm tojhe cause of justi< hat the result has shown that it gainst pnblic policy and tends to bri lements of corruption into politi methods of action to send semi- offic lartisans into States for the purpose ontrolling or advising how votes sh ie counted ; that the counting in of B laves was obtained by a series of gr< nd unjustifiable irregularities a rauds; that if any title to the govern hip of Louisiana resulted from the li lection, it was to Governor Packar bat the act of Mr. Hayes in appointi nd sending the MacVeagh commissi o Louisiana for the purpose for whi t was sent was unauthorized by the o< fjfnfinn an/1 panpsvinllv ronrAhonmh s it was to carry out a corrupt politi ompact ou his part; that there neitl ) nor ought to be any title to any exe< ive office which cannot be reached roper proceedings, authorized by G( Tess to be taken and heard nltimati efore the supreme jndicial court. Itijorlty Beport on the Cipher Dispatch The report of the majority of the P sr committee on the cipher dispatcl ays that the Western Union Teldgra ompaay seem to have exercised d are in respect to the preservation a rivacy of their dispatches, and t heft and publication of certain d latches did not seem to be their fan it the same time they oould not t uspect that Mr. Orton, the president he company, who was an earnest a ctive Republican leader, forwarded < [ispatches in the custody of the com] ty to a Republican committee of! Senate rather than to a Democratic co aittee of the House. He had a hown his bias by allowing certain he dispatohes to be withclrawn. 1 ranslations of the cipher dispatoh Via ronnrf flavo rlifiO.lfiRfl Docotiatic in the part of certain near frier >f Mr. Tilden after tbe election, eunre the electoral vote of the Sta >f Sonth Oaroliua and Florida. Th persons seemed to have apprehend hat the eleotoral vote of those Stat phich they believed belonged to 1 Tilden, would be declared for Hay .nd to have regarded themselves as j ifled in endeavoring to defeat this c upt and fraudulent action by snbmitt o the payment of moneys, which, tt vere informed, the canvassing boa lemanded by way of blackmail. 1 tommittee did not in any way just heir action, and considered it a gr vrong. But these negotiations, the jort asserts, were not authorized by lational Democratic committee, or i >erson entitled to speak for them, he persons who had been connec ?ith the negotiations, so far as the c( nittee had secured their testimony, slared that in no way were they autb zed by Mr. Tilden; and Mr. Tilden J limself voluntarily appeared to corr t.liflt, nfcatament on oath. sLarge from any sourco whatevor hac: my time attached to the name of ] Hendricks. The Extra Session. The following is tbe proclamatior ;he President convening Congress jxtra session : By tite President op the Uxr States of America. a proclamation. Whereas the final adjournment of Forty-fifth Congress without making jsual and necessary appropriations ;he legislative,- executive and judi< jxpenses of the government for the sal year ending June 30, 1880, and wi jut making the usual and necessary i sropriationa for the support of the ar for the same fiscal year, presents an ;raordinary occasion, requiring President to exercise the power ves n him by the constitution, to convi ;he houses of Congress in antioipatior he day fixed by law for their next m< inc. INow, therefore, I, Rutherford Bayes, President of the United States, 3y virtue of the power to this end in rested by the constitution, convene b louses of Congress, to assemble at tt respective chambers, at 12 o'clook no an Tuesday, the 18th day of March in ihen and there to consider and del mine such measures as, in their wisdi bheir duty and the welfare of the p pie may seem to demand. In witr whereof, I have hereunto set my hi md oausod the seal of the United Stt to be affixed. Done at the city of Washington, this day of Marob, in the year of our L 1879, and of the independence of United States of America the 108c R, B. HAYES By the Bre^idenl: int Brailllan Indiana James Lautz, of Norriatown, Pa., one ~~ of the inrmon of the OollinB expedi J? tion to Brasil, thus describes the Indi ana of the oountrj: 1 Several of our mec ? -r v fTTL T? V were KHiea Dy ine linuaafl. xueee mdiaD b are a degraded race, quite small in stature and go entirely naked. Id the wet season they work at gathering ~r rubber, which they sell to traders, bul in the dry season there is none to gath er, and then they put in the time making md war 011 68011 otlier' They do not oulti-*ate the ground and have no settlements, but wahdet about ih small bands; Bowi ^ and arrows Ate their chief weapons; [" They have nojflre-arms, and are so much P afraid of them that a man with a musnn , . .j !_l. j.t__ v:??t iiec couia go mw iui uiggeou ut ~?' campB and they would nevfer harm him; .e They arfe too cowairdly to fight whifc i" men, but they will hide behind bushei and kill a man on the sly. The trib# near San Antonia falls are called gariby ' Pamaa* Ar A Tliaie Rivaling in Yellowness That of a "heathen Chinee," ff belonging t< ers cneof onf race, can Bcai-eely be described ai attractive, fiat worse than this, it is the indei ^Jrfc cf a disordered liver?of a liver that needi } jB aron.-ing and regulating. The ramedy is ai hand, prompt, efficacious. A course of Hosm* tetter's Stomach Bitters will expel the mis 3ee directed bile from tbe blood and divert it intc 'he the proper cbannol, open tbe bowels, rnmov< }je the dyspeptio symptoms whioh invariably ac . j company biliousness, and counteract the rap , idly-developi'jg tendency to dangerous conges re> tion of the liver, whioh must always exist wher oa- tbe skin and whites of the eyes assume thii lot yellow hue. Tbe pains through the righi lower ribs, side and shoulder blade, the nansea fnrred state of the tongue, and uupleaaan v~" breath, whioh indicate liver complaint, ii he short, all its di.-agreeable concomitants, art gn Boon remedied by this sovereign corrective ,de which, in addition to its regulating properties Jjq is a euperb invigorant, and a pure and agree' able medicinal stimulant, appetiser anc eB> nbrvihe. an Paahlonnble Foolt?hne??, m- There is no modern fashionable notion quit< grS bo absurd as the generally-received idea thai ,en to be beautiful and attractive a woman must ' possess a wan, tpiriiuelk face and a figure ol er" sylph-like proportions^ fragility in nine casei D8 out of ten the result of disease. By man] of fashionable belles, it is considered a specia by compliment to be spoken of as frail and deli3ft t oate. They forget that the naturally delicate faoo and petite figure are very different fron the pale and disease-stricken faces that mee' ns in the city thoroughfares, look out frou the iuxoriant carriages of wealth, and glij< ort languidly through our crowded drawing-rooms les diiiease were unfashionable, as it ought t< nii be, not a lady in the land but would take ever] * possible precaution to secure ho fresh, bloom iat ing face and well-rounded figure that onl] Jot health can give. Ladies should remembei it j that much as gentlemen may profess to admiri ite the faoe and form paled and emaciated by dis .. A ease, when they ohoose a wife they prefer i , blooming, healthful, buoyant-spirited woman ilie Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is tbe ao 3re knowledged standard remedy for female dis io- eases and weaknesses. It has the two-folc r6_ advantage of curing the local disease and 1m i parting a vigorous tone to the whole system 'o" It is Bold by druggists. . The destructive progress of that insidious fo< 3K~ to life and health, Scrofula, mar bo arrestee ;ne by the aid of SooviirB Blood and Llrer Sirup )re & botanio depurent whioh rids the system o e_ every trace of ecrofalous or ayphilitio poison * and cures eruptive and other diseases Inaioativi . of a tainted condition of the blood. Amonj tor ^e maladies which it remedies are whit est swellings, salt rheum, carbunoles, biliousnesi 186 the diseases incident to women, gout an< rheumatism. by Probably there is no better Judge of muei v ^ cal instrument*, or of the opiniona of mosioian Y respecting them, than Theodore Thomas. Hi says the Mason and Hamlin Cabinet Organ )iy are muoh the beat of this olaaa of instrument ar- made, and that mnsioians generally agree ii rce jg_ A Congh, Cold or SoreThroat requires imme i of diate attention, as neglect oftentimes result ing in some incurable lnr>g disease. "Brown' led Bronchial Troches " will almost invariably giv "ia_ -tlin# Tujontr-flVP ?. bo*. AO- 1VUVK * ?t ? ? to CHEW the The Celebrated mr} " Matchless " : Wood Tag Ping r" Tobacco. the Thb Pioneeb Tobacco Company, me New York. Boston, and Chicago. 108 Jadie for YoaraeK. ,e . By sending thirty-five oents, with ags, height ' ' oolor of eyei and hair, yon will receive by rt . turn mail a correct photograph of your futur in? husband or wife, with name and aate of mai cal riafie. Address W. Fox, P. 0. Drawer 81 iial Faltonvillo, N. Y. of Don't take medicine nor Bnpporter for femal ajj weakness. Write Dr. Swan, Beaver Dam, Wis, for free pamphlet. 38g Cbew Jackson's Best Sweet Navy Tobaroo. ,nd or- The Markets. ate j ns-w to**; d*> ??> lUUva 9 ft 09J _ ' T?xm and Ch?rok'?,. 9 18 n6 I V.ilOD Cowi 80 0) 0?4S 00 10D ! Hogs : liivo MX? 04! ;ch Dr?*?ad'.., ut | 0<: ~063p??. . ...? ? Ifl, oa ? ce; le. Cotton?Middling COK0 '9, ?Di r'.oor?Wettsrn?Oholo* to Fancy... 41# <3 6 7) cai etita?Fair to Ohoio ^4 08^ ?6f0 ler i W.l<!it?NO 1 KHm^mihimihin I ?? ,n White State, 113 9 118. J"' Fj??Stele - 81 0 83, Dy birl9yMfitit9anMi ? * ? > ' 88 0 W )n- kJarlay Mait...... 100 9 100 Qi_ C^atA?Mixedeetfarn........... 82 9 W "7 porn?Mixed Weatern Ungraded.... <8 0 *7 Cay, perowt..... BJ 60 Btraw?per owt Long Bye..... 4J 9 8C dopa Good to Prime, New Crop. 17 0 18 Fork?Extra Family Mew 10 58 010 8J ot- Lard-CityBte&m ...,08,90 0 08.1 ,pa Flih?Maofcerel, No. 1, Biy It OJ 018 00 "r " No. 1, Prince EdwttSO 00 0SO E0 PO Dry Ocd,perowt..... 4 00 0 4 38 UC Herring, Scaled, per box 14 0 18 _ j e&trolenm?Crude C8H0''8X Beflned, 09 ?a Wool?California Spring SO 0 J8 ;ne Teui " ...? iltIM SO 9 74 iH. Australian " . ?. 17 0 S8 7 State XX.... 8t 0 18 11?. 0aiter?State Creamery 18 0 38 >ut Dairy 12 0 20 nt Wettern Oreamery,... 18 0 81 f Factory. C8 0 30 HQ moim?? t&te ? ? OS 0 19 ho State Skimmed 0> 0 04 WMtern 03 0 08, Pa~ Egga?State and Fenn?ylT?nl??30 0 31 'h0 PKHNBTLTANU. m- B>af Cattle: Extra * M8 CI 0 OS lan Hhtep.. 04 0 07 lB? Hop;*: Dreeaed 08X0 06 Of tflonr : Pennsylvania Extra 4 78 0 4 78 'he Wheat: PennaylyanlaBed 1 07 0 1 07 a? By? '4 0 M es? Oorn : Yellow. ...... 44 0 44 )QB Sail Mixed. 44 0 41 ,fiH Oata: Mixed 38 0 39 " Petroleum : Crude O7K0O7J< Beflned...19. to Wool?Colorado. 20 0 38 tfifl Texas.18 0 80 California............. ...... 30 0 28 EBe Ohio and Pennsylvania XX 37 0 23 'e" BOUOB. I A. i.i nd VA nn ?5C, uroi --/l *T ? ,Tr dhiv-p . 01 (9 04, * SO|{l?a#.iai?i%ta**?M*i*t?*<?lMt 08 04; 68, Flour?Wlsoonsln and MInue?oU.... 8 50 9 8 CO ns- Oorn?MJied 48 ? 80 0?U- 83 ? 88 or" Wool?Ohio and Pennsylvania II... 14 9 M ing Oslirorcl* Full ...... 14 % 30 L6V B3ISETOI, Mill. r,3Q Btt/ OlUUfitnatttiai,.. 08% # 08 ;,UH Bheep.... 08*? 0# ;he Lamb* 04 9 CI lify ntxfi 08*? 08 OHfl IIAPPY VOICE*. (Oopyrfghled.) re- Tb? toioM of ohildhood il.n Ring out on the air luD In kW?el ?l>ei7 accent*. JDV That know nanglit of aare; . n Thoirglad happy roice*. All f.ike i?Nt baubath belli, tfl,l Ov*r tbe bll and the vale* lou The glad ?toi7 telli )TH- Ofthe<iItF.*TOKKEHol the UTAH PAW Ol 1q OHUAN CO., Of Washington, New J.rsey. W.i <10- to them. Lowest Price* erer ret offtrrd. lOr- "V NKW BOOK FOR FRUIT OROWRRS! "1 l?,i A. Klliott'* Krni -Growers' Hand-Boot. Paper, J u?u 60j. Bound, $1.00. Klliolt's Practical Landscape O. qI). deoer, 8,o , bound, 11 50. Adapted to all climates, ai .. useful to everybody. Agents Watted. Specimen hook JNO oironlara and certificate* of ogpncr. aer.t by mail < I nf reottipt, of J1 0J. Address D. M. DKWKT, Kruii Pin I Publisher, Rochester, N. Y, Mr. Bankrupt Stock ef Splendid Masonic Boo A and Regalia. Bought at auction, and w w be sold at auotion pi io?*. A rare chance f 7^y\ Reddinc. ? (Jo., Masonic Pnba.,731 Broi ' ~ > way. New York. Bowareofspurious Ritual 1 ?' Burgess' Genuine Eradicate 1D For extracting Grease or Paint from Olotbing, Silt , Lama, or any kind of fabrio. Unequaled for oleanli I Jewelry, Silrerwaro. <to. Sample Box, 15 oenta. So CTSD everywhere. Agents Wanted. BUR(5 K3S A CO. 103 franklin Street, NewYor 3 ^YKSS'BEARD ELIXI til 6 O "*, TV tllG H / U Vikr o] V 1 L. L.SMI for f3. i PINAFDRP Ktbi7 popular Imelody in the Ope jlQl I illni ihiu arranged an an Instrumental I'lipoun fin- oomp'etn in Htoddnn'ii Opera Merlrn, ".Hunlci ... MlirurT." Only 10c. Mailed on receint of pre ith- J. M. BTODDART 4 OO..Pnba.,737 Uh?stnnt8t.,Phil [ID- "IVrKW KARK! VAIiUABIiE! K t loril r 11 Milletand White Japan Corn. Moat prodnotiie H. my I nnd Grain crops yet. introdnced. Price 25c. each, p p__ | paokage. Add'a J. W. Resse, Fresno City, Oaliforni I OUTTIir MACHINE!!* ANI> TIR the | 1/FHETTEH. A oouiDUte bUk fcrl 1 of all kinds. For circular, photographs and price lis ,l/CU : address JA8. F. OLARK. Morenci, Lenawee Cfo.. Micl ,m0? VOUNC MEN iSftiffSSToB month. Small aalary while learning. Situation fa 3et- | nished. Addreas R.Valentine, Manager, Janeerille.Wi I /"^"D A TW A"'1 Hlano AcrumpunImri ? ! I ^X1/VTjCjLX1 To Voice or Violin, played wil -t>. I KIcii'n .Tlimlc C'hurt* Price 81. Agent* Wanto do i w- JonKtOW A Oo.. No. 5 Coleman St.. Pin.. O. SBoERlsMmtoESi lei" | ??Mm i /hM A DAY to Agents oanyasaing for the Flrenld Jk7Visitor. Term* pnd Outfit Free. Address V* P. O. VIOKKRY. Angnat*. Maine. Av^YTTMf llnblt MblD DllflatSN, Thoi r" I 1 r* I I I lYI sands oured.LowaatPrioee.Bo not fi 5fQ VX A U 1U to write. Dr.F.E.Marsh,Quinoy.Micl eo- HEARING iPflH Madison, Ind. Mid "DOCKET DICTIONARY, 30,OOOti, and Woi ana ^ Ur. Foote'n HealtH *lonthlT,onB7e*r,ft0 ites mimbat Hill Pot. Oo., 120 E. 88th St., Hew Yorl T,-rn PAY.?With Stencil Outfltt. WTaat omu 4th ?i4 the OuDU AJjr^ia JAY BRONBON, iktroit. Mfch.^ A Real Blessing to Wortien. ff Mrs. Walter Hinckley, of Ootnit 1 Maaa., called, in company with her has- I band, on Dr. David Kennedy, of Bon- I dont, N. T.t the proprietor of the medi- g cine lately introduced into this place, happily named FAVORITE REMEDY, and made the following interesting statement: 11 For many years I had been a great sufferer from what was called a fibrous tumor; had secured the assistance of the best accessible medical men and used many of the patent medicines recommehded, btit without obtaining any relief. On the contrary, I grew worse, until 1 b&d given up all hopes of recovery. Our neighbor, Mr. John M ETon/ln noma Imm Rnnrtanf, find brOUffht i 5 me a bottle of your FAVORITE EEM- 9 ' EDY. Before I bad used half of it I H experienced a marked improvement! and all my neighbors noticed the great > ohangei I hate taken some fonr or fire \ bottles, and am entirely free from pain; I 3 gained flesh, appetite good, sleep well? K t in short, feel like a new being. I have H recommended the FAVORITE REM- Q " EDY to many of my acquaintances, and || j all, without an exception, are loud in its ~ praise. To say that I feel thankful is H expressing my gratitude in the mildest J form, You are at liberty, doctor, to re- th j fer to my case; and I hope all will bet lieve me when I say that the FAVOR- - , , ITE REMEDY has proved a real bless ^ t ing to me, and that no woman Buffering from any of the complaints peculiar to JT ? our sex can afford to be without it. But, > I mnaf foVo mnrfl nftinfl to tell Th" UVWbUl) JVU utuav vw?v j~ __ ' the people how to avoid the mistakes 1 they have made. To this end, request b them to remember that your name is Dr. David Kennedy and the medicine is ^ called (what it is, in fact) FAVORITE la REMEDY, price only one dollar, and a.i that yon are a practicing phvsician and surgeon ot RONDOtJT, N. Y." THE NEW YORK SUN. & DAILY. (pxM. 65 cU.? month;86,60arMf. ? a .?n>nu. JJJ 1 Weekly. U7?r. "" 3 THE SUN bu the lartaat circulation and la tha cheapest and moatlntareatln# paper la tha UnlUd > S^HE WEEKLY 8UNi?amphaUoaU7thap?>pla,a lDT 7 fMnUy W. BWOLAWP, PoblWhar, V. T. 01 ty. F CURED fFREE! c. An Infallible and nneioelled remedy for fit*, Kpllepi? or Palllnc SlekniiM warranted to effect a speedy and A PERMANENT enre. I I II "A free bottle" of my j= 9 I renowned ?peclflo and a m X P A raloable Treatise aent to I I | M any (offerer seeding me his I I P. 0. and Express address. * I Da. H. Q. ROOT. 183 Pearl Street. New York. SCROFULA.?Persons afflicted T with Scrofula, Hip-disease, Ulcer* tU ous Sores, Abscesses, White Swell- L-' ing, Psoriasis, Goitre, Necrosis, f Eczema. Diseased Bones, will please E b send their address * Dr. JONES. Chxmist, New Lebanon. N. T B ' " 1 mi i MOLLER S "p CCD-LIVER Oil - ; I 18 perfectly pure. Pronounced the l.-c*t l y'.!:< ! a\ ? " est medical authorities in the world. Ghen )i vim ft Q award at 12 'World'* KxpoNitionH, and tt J'cr h, IsTt I Sold by Drugylsto. W.n.SchlgBcliii & to..S A ? i- BPWTfSyWASNEEBRO'S COSSETS 1 %L ?21 I''i Mm recri,.-.i i:.? 111:n?t M^xUi h.r?c?nt I 8 PARIS EXPOSITION^ Zm 8 wBSr&uSr PUDCiniJMIIPCOBSET (130* Bones) Jm4tWjgB nt? mtih p*rfc*t nm, and la war- h 0 ffPyJ/ ffflnfM itkVTCD not t o l r?*?k do * n ov*r th? hip* Jftl'/'/TI,rlr HEALTH CORBET with Ha 1m- K Mfllli i llllimK proved Bunt, i? now * f rmur farorltc f ? M II [iggjAthan f vrr. Their N UK Ml NO CORSET It fjj \IIIIBIIII lUr Pnr f?ia lijalllrnitlN^ marehanU. yrj \|(P^WABNEB BROS., 351 Brotdway, N. I- 9 Soldiers?Pensioners, n Wo publish an Aght-page pi^r?"Th* NiTlOKAI 111 rulBCSF." de-ot^d to ib" inUrettaof PanMoQeri. Hoi Ik itier? and Sulori ?n?J tiiei. >?u<: alio oon'fiai internet BJl* t in* family leading. ^ Price, Fifty rruf a year?ipeclal iniaceireote It ?? >* o'abt. A proper blaok to ollrci amount due under M? o AttBKAl>? i v P>s*:0.1 Bill, furnished yraluilotuly t, regular $\J,'cr\Urt o.il'j an.t ? .cb oUitai died in Peu?k)' Office without char'jt J>m-t?rj nniiH.nr ?? apecimt 1, oopjt free. 8 n.1 fo. it. iiEOROK R. LEMON A 00 Washington, P. 0. Li>ck B.i \ii ,, e TC AC lAiffl , y U V The ?ery beat good* A H Li M - direot from toe lm- // m m " portari at Half the L araal cott. Beit plao ever offered Co Olnb Acenta and r _ large bnjera ALL EXPRESS CHARGES PAID. fa - New terms FREE. TheGreatAmericanTea Company 1 31 and 33 Veicy Street) New York. y * P. O. Box 4235. 1 ; HOMES IN THE WEST * Excursions to Lincoln, Nebraska, V i !.???? New York nnd New England the Third * Tueadny In cvrrr Month nntii December. ttxcnraion No. 5M leaves NEW YOBK, TUESDAY, ? MARCH 18.'70. Fare about half regular ? Rate*. Fast trains and first-class accommodations u Rutrsntoed. For deicriptive Land Circulars, In for ma2 tion about Ti?keis,etc.,send address on a Postal Card to ? PUN V MOORE. 317 Broadway, NewVork. I WANT A LIVE AGENT f * IN E \CH TOWN TO 8ELL MY ARTICLES. _ NO MONKY RSQUIKKD till sales are made. I will send ail outfit, wit:i pamphlots to advertise, by mail, postpaid. This is a good opportunity f.>r agt-nts to acid jn some' hing to their income without risking one sent. fa Write fur particulars to m W. H. COMSTOCK, Morrlntown, N>. I.nwrcnre < o . N r \r YorU. Healthy Child Food insurer robust manhood. Feed ^ your children on Ridge's Food, Ask yoar draggitt for it. Trial Cans 35 otnfs. I * SAVE A DOLLAR! I H Th? EcfPiInn Fever, A*ue nnd Liver Pad is E without exoeptWn the I est had in ex stence, and the most wonderful medicil disoovnry of the age. Ask for 0 this Pad and tak-) no other. Muled to any addreaa on R receipt of price, Ooe Dollar. Pamphlets mailed H free. Hen d f >r on". Address J'lSEPH FLEMING, fl ff 84 Market Sc., Piltabnrgh,_Pa. Sold by all Drnggisis. (j Mason & Hamlin Cabinet Organs, a Demonstrated bf,l by UIOHRHI' HONORS AT ALL HI WORLD'S EXPOSITIONS FORTWELVE YEARS, "c fc Tiz- at Paris, 1>W; Vienna, is<j; mhuw, ao,?, u PhilaD! lphia, 1876; Pabis,1878 ; and Gkand Swedish ? Gold Mkdal 1878. Only American Organs ever j. awarded highest honors at any inch. Sold for omah or * i-.staliments. Illustrated (Jataloque and Circulars with news yles and prices, lentfrcn. MASON A HAMLIN OR'i AN CO.. Boston. New York,or Chicago. AN EXCITING BOOK!! 20,000 SOT.D!!! , The 44 VY'lltl Adventures" nnd "Triumph*" oi ? STANLEY?IN?AFRICA 4 ? This only authentic nnd copi/ri<jh!e/l clienp edition is S? * selling flutter than any other book in America. Gives a A< full liisi ory of his44 Down the Con?fo." AGENTS ? WANTKIf, For full particulars and terinN address M HUBBAJU) BROTHERS, PublUhers, Philadelphia ,Pa. NtWlS to AIIOuiol\hi)lPl,OYME.\T. Wewitl lend free by mail toany one desiring plsaaant and profitable employment, a beautiful Ubremo and confidential circular of the American and Earop?an Ohromo Company, showing bow to make money. We bays something ectirel; new, such ss bss never been offured to the publio before. There is a lot of money \ in it for agents. Address, inclosing a 3 cent stamp for return postage on ohromo, K OLKASON. 4 8 Summer Street, Boston, Mass. ' Wo will pay Agent* a Salary of fluu per month and 3 sinenses, or ullow a large commission, to sell our new I ana wouderfiil inventions. We mrnn uhnt u* ?<ty. 8nm- A pte free. Address SHEKMAN & CO., Marshall, Mich. _ ,, /? PIANDSI /^\ ll IHIwUOprlccs?i.iKlie?t honors ? 1 ' MatliuslitVs scale for squares?finest up. 1 - ii?hts in America?12,00 In use? Pianos Ri r -*?icent on trial?fatnlosiuo tree. Ml.xnrLS- ,, V. > - - sohx J'iaso Co., 21 k 15th Street, x. V. 11 Id -TRUTH IS^fienTY! I '* f \ B?w i?4 Viitri ?tU (w HO 3D / ^ ymr KO^fki, sa4 / ^ 1 lis K^Tw/iufcfwTwr?>^U wanr- | ill *rjcgx.">r n.. B.O.. ii..fc fw.,.,1-^1 toy" s ?r TYTTT*TTI mn A 0? AjrenU Wanted e?arywliero ? 3" PIJK.jj I KflX to aril to famiiea, bote's end I J-tJ_l -LJJxitJi |ar..B consumers; largest I ? ?tock in the ooontrj ; quality anil t<Tm? th* ben. Conn- I ir trritorekfieperu ahouln call or ?r. ir? Til K WKLLS TKA G ' COMPANY: 201_ Fallen St , N. V. P O. BoiliS*'. J i? TSR-.CKAHJ'.s KIIJM.% ri'KF, forall KID|5 mJ ISKY DISKASKS. A sure Remfdy; failures an a known. Send for circular Noyes Br.'*. & Cutler, St. k Paul ;I/ord, Stouibure A fo , Chicago; A. Smith, Lon~ doa; W. Mad ox. Ripley, Ohio; K.l.'nr*, D>*s Aloines; F. i R Steams, D?troit. Tim mowt popular tocdicinaof i he day, tin (n Cinnn in Wal1 St. Stocks makes e k'J (JIU IU vlUUU fortunes erary month. Book sent 9 >.. free eipl/tinin* e?erythinit. Addre.g BAXTKR & CO.. Bankers, 17 Wall St.,N.V Tb Ynnnn Men 1 H?re isaouiHteinff you all wactacd y", ra lUUIiy | n#4.d. Sur- to pieiao. Kverybody de- f'! ,i Anri MoiHonc I liKlit*"1- Packed and postpaid for '? V Ana iviaiaenst only ;ldim?s. K. Chase. Bethel.Vt p a.' /'IHF.MIOAXj ANALYM'.S OF ORKS. Waters, Fartil- ? "JJ lzers, coaK&c. P T. Aqsifn, New Brunswick, N J. jjj ij (2iP7T a Month nod expense guaranteed to Agent* N er ?3d I i Outfit fr*>* Shaw * (;o.. ArouHTA, Maine Ac A GENTS?Send for Catalogue?reduced price*?n?w Tfh E jflLatock. Continental Chromo Co..'JS Warren St.,N.Y. Jf ik __ r* 3_. Id a 1 GEO. P. ROTfi d. - Conduct an Agency for tho Reception of Advertise complete establishment of the kind in the world. _ open to inspection by customers. Every Advertiser without any additional charge or commission. A saved trouble and correspondence, making one c< a! thousand. A book of one hundred pages, contain a? tiona, religious, agricultural, class, daily and com ? specially valuable to advertisers, with some informi on receipt of ten cenfc. Persons at a distance wisl Towd, City, County, State or Territory of the Unit H Canada, may send a concise statement of what the) I" ment they desire inserted, and will reoeive inform to decide whether to increase or rednce the orde j , Z Orders are taken for a single paper an well as foi 3 larger nun. Address, GEO. P. BP WELL <fc CO. Tribune mustang! Survival of the Fittest j L FAMILY MEDICINE THAT HAS DEAIEDH MILLIONS DURING S3 TEARS! g raui img idhmeitj % BALM FOB EVEttY WOUND OEM MAN AND BEAST! W~~ rHE0LDE8T&BE8T LINIMENtI EVER HADE IN AMERICA. I SALES LAEGER THAN E7EB. I The Mexican Mustang Liniment hasH been known for morn than thlrty-flveH years as the best of ull J.iniments, forfl Man and fieast. lis sales to-day arc? larger than ever. It cures when oUBI others fail, and penetrates skin, tendon? and muscle, to tho very bone. Solflg everywhere. ?j ?T?n 10 IE GREATEST MUSICAL 8DVOUS OB THE DAY I? i. M. S. Pinafore! hasattraotadlarffaandisnoeinlfhtaftatatabMBd week after week, In *11 the principal oiuee.sea in* easy matle, Mid needing bat simple tMunr,l| iM extensively rehearsed br uutwn iiMiiim aaooees U merited bj it* pcfNttrlUMal wtt, Irxiy words end good mnsie. T17 It whlls it le BMr( oopies with Masio, Word* and Iibtstt* led for 91.00. Per doaen, 80.0G< <no* <t nidtn'i HIGH SCHOOL OHOXB.. SUM ' V OREL WREATH, bj W, 0. PtrhUt 1410 ' : fttrttCi SCHOOL SONG BOOK JO0 1 three of the T?rj beet books for Seminaries, Sanaal 1 High Bohooli, *0. Octavo Choruses. '%i splendid itookof these onhaadiocatbntOIOlO , each, tad Bach oontains a favorite inthaw, Glee, ktorio or other Ohoroa, (Joartet or Put Bong. Thsf maohoMd by Choirs and Sooietiee for oeeMMMM [inc. Trr a dozen? Send for list, oc MM lOatfc oar fall Book Ostaiogns. eet 6 oU. for one Maaieal Beoord, 0* (9 tar a|Mf, OLIVER DITSON & CO., Boston. H. D1TS0N & CO., 711 3c 843 Brmtdway, New T?rib E. DITSON 4c CO., 922 Cheaft Street, Pklladel, HE SMITH ORCU1% First Established! Meat Sneeeaafal! HEIR INSTRUMENTS hare a standard vain the ? * A Tl WT Bfflfl Ci^-UJJNU' JBLjUUkHAP OF THE WORLD J rarywhere recofnUed u the FINEST IN TONS* OVER 80,000 ide and In ue. Now Doticni ooasUatly. Bw rkasd lowwt prlo??. 0T Send tor A CfeUlOfw. ar* eiontSt.ojp.yaltliam St,,Bostoii,Bag. b , IHI ^y u Ail" jl fl JiS |fl^?Oin^ ngSBR^v l'> i BFiJM^b^ Wy J 4 M | lill : B1 Isl fivj j I IJ&AH!^. |AJ ^BfcyVoi mrmfm^kw*?* B 9 ] m^Fm 1 ^M: IUBrBVHhA. c/lilillXiA!l!ili!flll la tk? Old CtuwiniMl Lrt 'OR FAMILY 80AP MAKING. sssKorsrssa? IT U FULL WMJQMT AJT9 KTMMS9TX. Th? Mwb> Ulowtodwtth ?MdM>OjMMiWjli ' vblaklTadaltmM with MltMdMta. iii n^i, i i *4F* MOWMT, AMD MWT VMM SaponifieR KADI BTTXI VtauylTftalft S?lt Jfanafg do,, . JW TO fl!T TH?fc inthe beit^pvto f tie 'We. 6J)0<),000 P AGENTS wan i tu run int i ICTORIAL HISTORY""* WORLD tt contains (>7- fine historical ergranng* and 1 ZOO ge double-column pages. and i? the most complete jtnry of the World erer published. It Belli at tighL < nd for specimen p?ges and extra terms tu Amenta. Jdreas National Ppbubhinq Pp.. Philadelphia.Pa 1.1; . A' J 'i--; |i >! , >is>: 11 it !) ?.. y.'v .('nuti'iii mn VI I List of Medicines the e are none AT IIIIID 'hat are tqoal to HUNT'S III I H p. U Kill EOY for coring Drcmtr, is .a. J[jLJLl Bright's Disease,*Kidnty, Bumdar and Urinary ('omplaiuta. n??A* M HUNT'M KE.IIKDY cures f II IIT Tl Kzcersife Intemperance, 0?a* W U 111 L er?l Debility. Gravel, Diabttee, 17 letlllll Pain in 'he Back,Side or f oina, IV MaWJUJU snd all Diseases of the Kidney, adder and Urinary Organs. Phy?fcians prescribe UGIIHIIV. 8end for pamphlet to 1 A " WM. E OLAKKK. Providence, it-.t. wm" masonic" HBj^^^Snpplip.s for Ixy'iRrd, Chapters, ^^ Br and (. ornmandenes, manufact^^^urcci by .V. C. I.W-v A Co., Columbus, O. Send for I'rire Lists. WW ??"Knights Templar Uniforms a Specialty. wr Military, Socioty. and Firemen's Goodt. 'AMENT^YANTED- FOR BACK FROM the MOUTH OF HELL." B'/ one trho ha* been there t RISE and FALL of the MOUSTACHE." li'l the Burlington Hattlteye humoriit. amantha as a P. A. and P. I. Ii'j Jon > ah A lien* ic(fe. id three bright* at and be*t-sel!in* books oat. Agent#, a can put tbps? nooss m e-nrjuuon". !><* . ren. Address for Agency, AMEHIOAN PUBLISHG CO., Haitford. Ot ; Chicago. III. 1AT) CJ A T T7*?Stock and Future# of a uated in th? moat d>-?ir- drug store, In locality of the flourishing Villa of Glen* Falls, Y. (J.tn he bought tor Ca?h at a Very Low Pno?. Idreta Lock Bo* I ;{3. Glens Falln.War'en Cfl,N7, 8~ A DAY PKOKIT. A*?atV Sample, Hoentt. "THK NASSAU DKLIOHT." Naaaan. W. V. rELL & CO. ments for American Newspapers. The most 8,000 Nowepapers are kept regularly on file, neat is taken at the homo price of the p&per, ** ?'? /laalinrt mi'fh fhfl iffflflAV il ,11 OtUVCI blOOl) 1U UVWiU|j nivu vuy Bgwuvj) ? Dntract iDstead of a dozeD, a hundred or a aing lists of the beat ptpers, largest circulaatry paperp, and all publications which are ition about prices, is sent free to any adiree ling to make contracts for advertising in any ed States, or any portion of the Dominion of r want, together with a copy of the Advertise ation by return mail whioh will enable them r. For snob information there is no charge, a list; for a Binjle dollar an readily as forajj 8 Newspaper.Advertising Bureau,