University of South Carolina Libraries
FACTS A3ii) COMMENTS. It is affirmed by the collectors of atactics in regard to intemperance that in the Year 1879 there was paid out for intoxicating drinks l>v the people ?.f Germany the snni of $<>3" "00 000 ; and by thopo of France S5S0 000,000,: of Great Bri'uin, $750 00" 000 ; and of the United State*, ?720,000,000 ; making $2,700,000,000. The arrival in England of a steamer from Australia with 120 tons of meat in good condition, indicates that American cattle raisers must henceforth expect competition from tbut quarter. The distance traversed is, however, f-o great as to give American producers important advantages in the matter of les>slreight, greater security and quicker returns. Few sights at the great industrial fair in Boston attract more attention than the appearance and woik of two pupils from the Hampton institute. One of these is an Apache Indian, who surprises all spectators by his skill in making shoes. Beside the bench at which he sits are two pair of laced shoes, neat and substantial, oi-e made after only six weeks' instruction at the institute, and tho other produced within two or three days at the fan. By law marriage in England, except by special license, :s not legal if the ceremony does not tuke place in the morning?that is before noon. A special license, obtainable on payment o: a certain fee to the Archbishop of Canterbury (that is to one of his clerks), legalizes a marriage at any hour of the day or night. Of late it has become rather fashionable to purchase these special licenses, and to have the ceremony performed in the afternoon or evening. Three years ago the total number of steamships in the Uiiiled States was 4,717?2,221 belonging to the Atlantic ' coast, 310 to the Pacific coast, 913 tothe lakeB and 1,223 to the Western rivers. The number of these engaged in ocean commerce with foreign ports, other than those of the West Indies, Mexico, etc., was insignificant and surpassed by tho emalles* maritime States. Great Britain has 3,000 stealers, mainly engaged in ocean commerce, wii h a total tonnage of 2 500,000 tons. During the year 1880 317 steamers were built in the TT.'i _ v.. i U ill If Li QUI lt?. V./UC UU11U1CU UUU eighty-two of these were for the lakes and Western rivers, anil 141 for Atlantic and gnlf ports. Tko Boston Globe points out a singular feature of the business of building and controlling - steamships which is that Scotchmen in this resi>ect are in an overwhelming majority. Lieutenant D. A. Lyle has eaten grasshoppers out "West, and he lately read a paper before a Springfield science association praising them as food. Although they naturally have a disagreeable smell, he says that when cooked they become pleasant to both smell and taste, no disguise being required. They can be eaten after boiling two hours, with pepper and salt, and thus prepared are not easily distinguished from beef broth. Fried in their own oil they have a nutty flavor. One drawback to their use as iood is the bones in the small locusts, though in the larger ones these can be easily removed. Some residents of St. Louis have tried a dinner of these skillfully prepared, and liked it very well, and after becoming accustomed to the flavor they were considered a desirable addition to the bill of fare by some. These locusts ieea on vegetaoie raauer, ana so may i properly be classed as clean food. The Southern States are awaking to a realization of the riches which exist in their vast forests. The New Orleans Democrat estimates that Louisiana con? tains nnre than 17,000,000 acres of wooded land. The sawmills have made little impression upon this vast supply of timber, which comprises a large variety of valuable woods. Most of it, too, can be easily marketed, thanks to the ba\ousand watercourses with which the State is liberally provided. Since the increasing scarcity of Western timber became apparent large purchases oi timbered lands have been made in Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and North Carolina. It is to be hoped that this splendid possession, th? importance of which the South is just beginning to oomprehend, will be managed with more care than has been bestowed upon the forests of the North and West. This country must learn the science of forestry sooner or later, and now is a good time to begin. A table of statistics prepared by the oensus bureau shows that the judges of the supremo court and court of appeals are elected in twenty-eight States of the Union. Their tenure of office is as follows: In Vermont for two yeurs; in Ohio for five; in Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas. Nebraska, Nevada, Oregon, 8outh Carolina and Texas for six ; in Minnesota for seven ; in Arkansas, Kentucky, Michigan. North Carolina and Tennessee for eight; in Colorado for nine ; in Missouri nnd Wisconsin for ten ; in California. Virginia and West ! Virginia for twelve; in New York for i fourteen ; in Maryland for fifteen; in Pennsylvania for twenty-one years ; and in Rhode Island for life. In all the > other States the judges of these courts ( are appointed. In New Hampshire, Delaware. Florida and Massachusetts for life ; in Louisiana for twelve years ; j in Mississippi for nine ; in Connecticut for eight; in Maine for seven ; and in j New Jersey for six Tears. The majority | of the States elect "the judges of these courts, and as to the length of their j \ tenure of office there KU very great di* \ versitv of policy, ranging from two years in Vermont to a lite tenure in several of tho other States. >, What Causes the IU?od to Circulate.' To what degree the heart is aided by other forces is yet a matter of investi- ! gation. Probably there are several forces assisting. The elasticity of the < arteries increases their carrving capacity. They are firtn, elastic tubes, + which expand under the pressure from j _ ..each heart contraction, and then by j their own elasticity contract and help the onward flow of the blood. In the j smaller arteries the flow loses the inter- j mittent character it possesses in the larger arteries, and becomes a steady i stream. The elasticity of the arteries serves precisely the same purpose as the ttir cut Jiuer 01 uuv lurce-puzap, mat 01 equalising the flow, and so increasing the amount delivered. The whole j force is derived from the heart; the ar- I teries cause the force to act continuously. The veins are las tubes, somewhat i larger than the arteries, and capable of holding all the blood in the body. ' gjffThey convey the same amount of blood as the latter, but more slowly. In the larger veins, however, rear the auricles, the velocity may be 200 millimeters per aecoDd. They are provided with valves j which effectually prevent the blood i /rom flowing backward to the heart. ; Any compression, produced by muscu- j far contraction, or otherwise, will therelore assist the forward flow of venous | blood. This is one explanation why ex- | ercise hastens the circulation. The movement of the chest in breathing ! probably aids the pulmonary cireula ; tion, the blood, as well as the atmos- , phere, tending to fill the vacuum during inspiration. Physical capillary force is not gen- : erally regarded as an active force in the circulation. Bnfc there is an admitted force in the capillaries, resulting from the attraction of the tissues foi^the arterial blood, containing the required j oxygen md nutriment. "The vitalcr>ndition of the tissue becomes a factor iu the Eaiuteijance cf the circulation." j It is this force, primarily, which adapts - the amount cf blood to the varying ! : - need if any orgai:; the nervous system l iegnlates the supply by varying the j caliber * f the vessels. ? . The force in the capillaries, or some other f rce, carries the blood, after death, from the arteries, where the heart leaves it, into the veina. Finding the ? mntv aft^r death crave ri.se to the idea that they conveyed only air; whence the name. It was this belitf which TTarvey overthrew in 1020. ? Popular Science Monthly. How t?he Did It. An Iowa papjr having inserted a | paragraph relating tbat a woman of t that State hil hsJped her hnhbaml to j raise seventy acres of wheat, and notic- j ing the news oopied by its contemporaries nnder an evident misapprehon- ! aion of facta, cow eipin ins tbat the I >. way she helped was t'? stu-d in the) - door and shake a br^ ms l,im when ho sat down to rest, ui.il nr. ying him j Hp other ways. SUNDAY READING. 1 RaU Stntc of Thing*. An old missionary once said to Rev. | John Wauph: Years ago I set cut to labor in In-! diuna. A friend, who Lad been a long resident, was with me to give me such information as might be necessary. 1 remarked that t3ie land around us was low and poor quality. " True," said he, " but wait a little, and I will show yon as handsome a I prairie as God ever made." We rode on, and gradually the land spread out before us, rich in its soil and beautiful in its carpet 01" vetdure. 44 Do you see," said he, " that brick j house vender V J " Yes." " Well, the owner living in it lias had two sons hung You r-ee that stone house ?" " Certainly." " You may think it remarkable, but the builder of it, who lives there, has two sons in the State piison. You cannot fail to see that house on the left?'* " I do." " Well, the residout of that has had ' a son hung, l-urtlier 011, do you see that grove and that bouse pretty well set back V" " Yes." " The man living there has a son in the State prison. Over there you can ' see another residence." "Yes." " You mav think it incredible, but ! the man living there has also had a son hung." The facts stated led mo to ask my informant: " How came these things to happen V The record is black as any I have ever [ heard. Do g!ve me the explanation." " I will do so in brief. When I settled on the other side of the marsh those people settled there. The land, as might have been forseen, proved very productive. They cultivated corn, wheat, oats, and planted orchards. The markets paid good prices. They soon came to be wealthy. The grain mar- i beted in the fall left them little to do in the winter; so they gave themselves ! up to dissipation. They built neither a ; church nor school-hous'e. Their children grew up idle, ignorant end vicious. Their apples were turned into cider, ; and their winter evenings were given up to conviviality. Soon cider was not , strong enough, and other intoxicants came into use. They had frequent par- , ties, and these parties meant dancing, and the dancing meant drinking, and the drinking meant a drunken revelry, the druuken revelry a tight, and the fight, meant too often a murder. These are but the outlines. I need not enlarge upon the particulars." Ucllctoun Smi* niul Norr*. The ljutherans have only twelve communicants among the colored people at the South. There are said to be 30,000 out of 40,000 townships of Fiance opened to ! Protestant preaching. Syria, it is said, has eighty foreign preachers, 300 native helpers, 1,OUO , Christians and 50,000 church-goers. The sale of Bibles has recently been very large in Bulgaria, and there are signs, it is said, of deep religious interest. The Presbyterian churches in Europo , and America have raised a fund of S45, 000 for the support of Waldensian I nnafnrs in Ttfllv. ? The Methodist Episcopal church has five pastoral charges and threo church buildings iu the Black Hills, and is about to build auo.ther church in Dead- ! wood. The number of white Baptists in the State of Alabama is said to be about 76,000. In the last year $7,713 GO wus ! raised for State missions. Thirty mis- | sionaries baptized lt'O converts. The American United Presbyterians | are about to establish an institute iu Sealkote, India, with literary and theo-< logical courses extending over nine < years, five years preparatory and four i years in the seminary c urse proper. The reports from the camp-meetings , held during the past summer speak as a rule of good attendance, well-behaved audiences, aud excellent preach mg, bat the conversions were not con sidered proportioned to the numbers in , attendance. Princess Eugenia, tho sister of Oscar II., king of Sweden, has recently organized a society of ladies at Stockholm who devote their time and means ; to a mission in Lapland. She has also formed at lier castle u sewing school for missionary objects, and also a bazaar which she supplies liberally in order to raise money for missions. The Congregationalist churches in ; the Ohio association have gained 500 j members in the past year. Tho asso- j ciation includes seventeen churches that are in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Kentucky. The total coutri- j bntions for benevolent purposes j amounted to 803,5-1!?, an increase of S27.1G1 over the year before. There are 230 churches in the association?a gain of five. Saved by a Bonnet. The other day Colonel Fizzletop, of Austin, took his wife out for a drive. He was driving a very high-spirited horse, when it occurred to Mrs. Fizzletop that she would like to drive that !: kkid of an animal. She remarked: " I have often heard you say, colonel, that a woman did not know how to ; drive; I want to show yon how badly mistaken yon are. Give mo ihe reins." ; "Not with this bnggy," replied Fizzletop, trembling all ovpr. ' 1 know you can drive splendidly, but wait until to-morrow, aud I'll borrow an old Eecond-haud buggy from a friend for you to practice with. I saw where a woman in Galveston smashed up a new : buggy, so that it cost $10 to repair it, so that it could be used for kindling ; wood. Let us keep this buggy to go to our funerals iu." " So you think I can't drivo." " I know you can drive well enough, bnt before going down the avenue let's : drive back and kiss the children and vortr mnl.li or trnnd-hvo. find limn fro ovpr to the marble yard and j)ick out a tombstone, and then down to the undertaker and get measured, and then?" "Out to the lunatic asylum and leave you there for awhile. Ycu aro talking like you didn't have good sense." 'Ail right. Just, take the reins and give the people a chance to fresco the wheels with their brains." " You are in no danger of losing any . brains. Get up!" siid Mrs. Fizzleiop. as sht? took the lines. " How polite people aro to get cut of the way," sbe remarked, as the near f wheels scraped a flying drummer's pan-s, the end of one of the shafts knocked the hat off the head of a prominent banker, while a life insurance ai'ent was aiding as a brake for the off-wheel, without intending it at all. Just at this moment, when Fizzle top had given up hypes, just as the bug^y was about to telescope a street c*r lull of paaseogers, just as the drivers of other tcariis were whipping up their teams to escape from the Fizzletop avalanche on wheels, Mrs. Fizzletop saw a new hat in a store window, and in spite of the frantic efforts of ihe frenzied animal, held him as in a vise, until Fizzletop had purchased the hat, and thus the danger was averted. When a lady has made up her mind to have a new bonnet, two locomotives cannot pull her past the store window.? 7?xr?s Si ('tings. Alligator Children. A Southern paper gives un account of :i woman near Live Oak, Flu., who was pursued and very much frightened l?y a ; huge alligator. Subsequently she gave birth to twins, both males. They were perfect children down to thenwaists, and complete alligators below tail and all. There are short, webbed ' feet and legs at the lower portion of the alidomen like alligators. They crawl with their hands, dragging themselves about just as an alligator dors. They make a squealing, inarticulate noise. The mother has a large tauk filled with water, in which she keeps them, and j they live nearly all the time in it. They are now fourteen or fifteen years old. Comparatively few outside the imme- j diate neighborhood knew of the case uutil the enterprising newspaper man got hold of if. The mother has re- ! fused large offers of money to exhibit I her children. Nevada's finances are in a bad cond - | tion. Her taxes are said to be increasing, while the assigned value of prop- j erty diminishes. She finds it hard to ! pay current expenses, and has a funded i debt of $357,017, on which Bhe must j pay nine and ojje-half per coot, iot-oreet. FARGO. A Great'Wheat Country. A Fargo (Dakota) correspondent ears: I have justiinisheda ride of many miles over tlio "wheat region of the great Northwest, through the lied River vallev and on west. The great Dalnmple and Williams iarms have been fully described, so I will not enlarge on their immensity, but tell your readers how they start new towns here, and the cause of the mighty inflow of brains and capital. It may be all summed up in the word "wheat," but this does not tell the whole story. Accepting the in* i vitation of friends at Buffalo, forty miles we?st of this point, we drove twenty-tive miles south over the endless prairie, reaching the southwest branch of the Northern Pacific. Here atownis springing up, it being one of thousands ou all the new lines building out of F:ir<rr> Kit mm II10 rn-piit nrairif* : was dotted by the occasional hut of the homesteader?now the black line of the railroad grade stretches as far as the eve can reach. A month ago Sheldon was unknown; now there are two stores, a boarding-house, postolhce, blacksmithshop, etc Andsoitisall over the country. Hundreds ot sections are being sold daily, and the wheat crop is being threshed out by the thousands of bushels. How about tho profits of wheatraising? Careful judges practically agree that, with land at from So.50 to S7 per acre, the permanent investment ready for thefi rst crop will beaboutSU per acre for a section. This incluuos buildings and the ground ready for the lirst crop. Subsequent crops can be grown for 87.00. The yield ranges from fifteen to thirty bushels per acre, of the iinest quality, and this, at an average of twenty bushels per acre, with prices at SI per bushel, pays an enormous interest. This figures on the basis of hiring everything done while the owner pursues other business. If one j gives his own time ami labor it can be done much cheaper. It is such returns { as these for sixteen years in succession : that causes Fargo to have four lines of j railroad, with three more building, that ' lias caused land in the immediate vi- j oinity to increase from $10 per acre to i 85 per lot in three years, that causes ' great blocks to go up as if by magic, : and makes house rents from $20 to 830 i per month at this point, and has in- j creased the price of land all along the j railroad from 82 to 820 per acre. In places I found the black prairie soil ! three and ons-half feet in depth, and the j whole country is being settled by a splen- j did class of people. Wages are from ! 81.50 to 82.50 per day for common la- I borers; mechanics receive from > :'.50 to i 81: man and team. 84 per dav. etc. i Land can be bought in tho vicinity of j the new roads for ?5.50 to $7 per acre, j The Farmer's Fish. This is what Professor Baird, the United States fish commissioner declares the carp to be. He applies this term to it, becanse it is singularly adapted to the wants of farmers, and capable of being raised in natural or artificial bodies ot' water where most kinds of fish would not live. The trout and bass require not only very pure but cool water, and they must have an abundance! of it. Most of tho inferior varieties of fish require water that is, at least, moderately clear, cool and abundant. The carp, however, delights in water that is wairn, and is satisfied with a small amonut of it. Itprel'ersa pond where bottom and banks are constituted of mud, because that substance affords a place of protection during very cold weather, and for the additional reason that it produces a large amount of olants that it relishes for foot!. The carp will eat anything that pigs anil towls will. It will readily devour insects, small reptiles and meat of all kind*, and will also eat nearly all kinds of green vegetables, fruits and garbage. It is fond of boiled roots, potatoes and cabbage, and all kinds of grain that has been cooked. The growth of the carp roav be forced, by affording an abundance of flesh-forming food. It can be fattened like the pig or turkey. The growth of the specimens imported by the government iish commissioners from Germany, only three years ago, has been almost marvelous. Some of them that were brought over when they | were no larger than minnows, now j weigh eight or nino pounds. In the j opinion of several that have experi- \ mented with them, it is as profitable to ; feed grain to carp as to pigs and steers, i There are, however, many articles of i which the carp is very fond, and which j add greatly to its growth, that can he j produced much cheaper than grain. j Cress, lettuce, parsley, celery, tender clover and grass, brewery grains arid I the refuse of glucose factories are all j well adapted to feeding to the carp. The young fish are especially fond of sweet curd and chopped liver. No inhabitant of tlie water, with the j exception of the goldfish, is as thorough- j ly domesticated as the carp. The var- j iety introduced into this country is i known as the German carp, but it is | probably of Asiatic origin and has been | domesticated in China for thousands ot j years. It was raised iu Italy, in the ! davs of Cicero, and was probably car- j ried bv the Romans to the various parts i of Europe they colonized. It can be ; transposed easier, and will live longer ; out of water than any other sort of fish j that is covered with scales. On this j account it is very valuable for stockir ponds at considerable distance froi. j railroads and other means of public com-1 mimical ion. Carp oidinarily spawn in j May or June ; they are very prolific, a largo fish often yielding 400,000 eggs, j The egers adhere in masses to sticks and j tho stalks of water plants. They hatch ; in a few days ami the young fish grow ! very rapidly if they are not disturbed, j The circumstance that no hatching- ! house is required for propagating them is ; strongly in their favor. The flej.li of the carp is hardly fit to : eat during the summer, partly because I it is the season for spawning. They are not favorites with anglers, as they do not take a bait after the manner of the pike, black bass and other game fish. They are easily taken from the water by means of a dip net, or they may be driven into a portion of the pond from which the water can be i drained oil'. The tlesh of the carp does not rank among delicacies like that of the salmon, trout, ehad and mackerel. It takes its place among the substantial articles of diet that are within reach of persons of small means- It is likely that the carp will be raised in this country with a view to pro lit. rather than for affording pleasure. Farmers | will keep carp <is they raise beef and j pork?for the purpose of supplying their tables and the market. In many I places in South Germany there are carp ponds which are the common property of u village, and the taking of lisli is j regulated by customs or rules adopted ; by the citizens.?Chiwjo Time<. ? Novel Uses of the Electric Light. Seveial jockey clubs of the South are j discussing tliu plan of iighling up ; tlu-ir race courses l?y lines of powerful electric lampi, and having their races i run at night. One great advantage will, result lrom this. The spectators, as well as poor hordes, will be protected i in summer from the broiling rays of j the sun. A company is now negotiating with i the governmt-nt, for a contract to light i tho city of Washington" by placing . around tho dome of tho cnpitol a series of powerful electric lamps, ag- , grefjatinpr several hundred thousaud caudles in 1 rilliancy. It is proposed; in this way to light the city to the distance of a mile in ail directions better J than it is usually done by street g&s lamps. Penrl fishing, it is now thought, can i be conducted with great success by means of submerged electric lights in place of the old mode of employing ; divers. Incandescent lamps of the Edison form will bo let down to the ocean bed, making it us light as the siirfaco in davlighf, while operators Ti ith suitable crapplinc toneues. at the sur.^ce, will pick up the pearl oysters and deposit them in crates sunken for the purpose at the depth of a hundred feet or more. Look out, now, for a supply of these lovely gems, larger I than have yet been se?n, since aged | oysters can be taken from a depth far beyond the reach of the old-time I diver. Two birds almost as big as pigeons are to be set at the back of some of the i Mnall bcnnels to be worn this winter. One of the prettiest models trimmed in J this way is of plush, having a plume- j colored pile on a ground of old gold, ! and the birds used have iridoecent plum- ! age, and are eo dressed that their necks 1 are llexible, and they can be set bill to 1 bill in ti20 most loving way. THE DEAD PRESIDENT. JLuut Mournful Tributes of Respect In Washington. Tlie closed coffin in tho rotunda of tho capitol which so many thousands sought to view last night, is again t-nrroundcd by silont and ? twarful spectators to-day. Tho lino of visitors began to form soon after daylight, and soon extended far outacrof?s the park. At twenty minutes past 11 two closed carriages drove up to tho cast lower entrance of the Senate wing of the capitol, and the occupants alighted and passed up tho private stairway to tho Vice Prc.-idt nt's room. In a few minutes tho little procession emerged li 0111 tho Vice-President's room, and pa-sing around through the east corridor proceeded in thi following order through the silent and deserted main passageway of tho building: Sergoant-at-Arma liright, Mrs. Garfield, leaning upon the arm of General Swaini; Harry Garfield, Mollie Garfield and Mies Kockwell, Colono! and Mis. Jiockwell, and Attorney-General MacVeugh and 51 ra. Swaini. X"t a sound was heard save the soft pattering of feet upon the niarlde lloorsas the little comj.any, robed in its somber garments of deepest mourning, passed silently on to minglo their tears and pay the last t artlily tribute over the co'tin which sealed from view tho form and features of the deaily loved husband, father and frieiKl. Alter remaining about twenty minutes in tlio rotunda they returned quietly an J with the eamo privacy that marked their entrance, and passing through to the Senate wing entered thecamaues and returned to the residenec of the attorney-general. the sceno at the capitol at 2 o'clock was very impressive. The great edition crowned with erape io-e in clear lines of hlaek and white above a mourning multitudehath'-d in the sunliglit of a clear {September day. The spacious park on the c-astein tide ?>t the capitol was tilled with a moving mass of humanity intent upon catching if possible a glimpse of the simple coftin ot the dead President as it was earrit rt down the btoad stairea-e by his brethren of tho Christian church. The staircase, too, was thronged just as it was on the fourth of March, which seems so many years hack in tho past. Within and without wero masses of men and women and little children. It was calculated that 50.00J people stood inside tho pitrk. and inside the rotunda was a dense, pushing crowd. At 3 o'clock llcv. Isaac limit, oc Cincinnati, editor of the Christian Slan<!ard, tho olliciaj or^an of the Christian churcli, opened the services bv pi aver. He was an old and intimate friend ot the dead President. Following the prayer was the rendition by the Philharmonic society of the District of Columbia o f tho an- j them "1*10111 Mendelssohn's oratorio of St. Paul, I "To Thee, Oh Lord, I yield my soirit." Tl:en a short sermon was delivered by the llev, Frederic!; 1). Power,pastor of the Christian church in this city, where President Garlield was a regular ! lUH iuliint (luring his public lit'o in Washington for tho past eighteen years. At its cud the choir sang, "Jesus, Lover of My Soul " Tho benediction was pronounced, and the ceremonies (nded, the choir sinning "Asleep in Jesus" as the cortege passed out of the rotunda. At tho conclusion of the brief and simple j service at tho capitol over the remains of the lamented President, the processioi: which had I been formed in lino for some time previous, I.-, mm-n Tt tv.ni sliortlv Rl'ter 24 n'cloelr Down the steps of the capitoi and along Pennsylvania avehno slowly moved the impressive line until the depot ol' the Baltimore and Potomac railroad was reached. The following was the order of tho procession from tho capitol to the railroad depot: Funeral escort in column of marclu District of Columbia Volunteers. Marines. Foot Artillery. Light Artillery. Civic procession. Clergymen in attendance. Physicians who attended the lato President. Guard of honor. B ? 2 ? . 1-1 5.3.2 rs Tf ? : : y Guard of honor. Officers of the army and navy and mariuo corps. Family of the late President, lielativ'cs of the late President. Ex-Presidents ol the United fcuates. The President. Tho Cabinet Ministers. The Diplomatic Corps. Tho Chief Justice and Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States. me tsemuors oi mu i.imeu mines. Members of tlio Uiii'ed S'ates House of Representatives. Governors of States and Territories and Commissioners of the District of Columbia. Tlic Juuges of the Court of Claim*, the. judiciary of the District of C'olumb;a ami Judges of the United States Courts. Tho Assistant Secretaries of State, Treasury ami Interior Departments. The Assistant Postmasters General, the Solicitor-General, and the Assistant Attorneys General. Organized societies. Citizens and strangers. The guard of honor received the body at tho depot and deposited it in tlic fuucral car. When all the members of the family and the other mourners had taken their place on the train the signal to start was given and the lilo less remains of President Garliehl were on their way to the West. From WnHhington to Cleveland. CUiVui.-VKD, September 21.?Tho funeral train arrived here at 1:30 r. m. Tho second section, on which were tho members of Congress, arrived at 1 j\ sr. There was ono con- I tinuous demonstration of prief all along the line. Stately mansions ami humble log cabins a'tke displayed emblems of mourning. At thi larger towns great numbers of p. ople were asslid 11 -d. At Altoona the number of people assembled in nti'l around the staiion was estimated at 10,000. it Lewis'own tlio track was strewn with llowers. K-peeialiy larjje gatherings of people were noticeable at Huntingdon ami Tyrone. At Pitteburg the bells tolled and minute guns were fired. A post of the Grand Army of the licpubiic j was drawn up in front of the dejwt at East | Liverpool, Ohio, when tho train passed, in the order of salute. A. band of music played a funeral dirge. A beautiful funeral arch spanned tho main street. Tito lire department wax also drawn up in line, and about a thousand people i _ l -I.. were cou.rrcxiueu ;it numm. At Wtllsrillc, Ohio, there was a large crowd, and tlio funeral train stopped for gome time. Ex-Presidout Hayea, Secretaries l!laiac and j Lincoln, ami Postmaater-Gencr.il Jamea sat at upon wiodowa facing the people, antl many shook h inda with them. Home of tlio women took their little children np to tho car windows to have them shako hands. At 0110 of ttio stations a larzo number of tho male portion were in a knceliug position as tho train pawed by. At Saliuorille, Ohio, minors stood in a line, | tlit! lamps on their bats burning. At Maysville, Pr., reached at 10:15 last ; night, Senator Don Cameron's private ear was | ; ttaclicl to tho congressional tiain. Tho car contained Senators Cameron and Logan ami ; ex-Senator Chafl'ee. An oilicor of the Pennsylvania llailroa-l com- t pany says that every switch between Daltimoru j and Pittsburg was manned, and men to watch the track had been placed at every half mite on tho route, and rc]>orted to tho conduct ?r of tho j train by lantern signals at every half-mile sta- ! tion designated by the otlicials. At nearly every place on the route bells were heard tollifg as tho train passed, itid at one or t two places dirges were ployed by brass ban^s. ] After daylight it was notice 1 by the passen J;CT8 Willi III" lYOIIlCU 111 lllU uumu.1 uiiwu^ii which the train passed were weeping. Arrival of tlio Remnln? nt ("levelnnd. Cleveland, Septenil>er 24.?Tho funeral train reached tho Euclid avenue station of tho Pittsburg road soon after 1 o'clock. Advance dispatches had given notice of it* coming, and the street* about tho station were crowded houra before the timo of arrival. Tlio long route over which the casket was to b borne was lined with people. Windows and balconu s were crowded, and improvised platforms >:tood upon nviny lawns. As th" train stopped at the station the church bells on Euclid avenue began tolling, and kept on during tho two hours which it took the j funeral procession to reach the square. General Sherman, General Hancock and the others of the guard of honor alighted. They were followed l>y the members of the l?cal committee, which went to Pittsburg to meet the train. T1h-si formed in line facing the train as Mrs. Garlield, walking with her sou Harry and Secretary Blaine, stepped from J tho "cars. She was followed by Mollie, and General Swaim, Colonel Rockwell aud I wife, the members of the cabinet and others of j the escort. Mrs. Garlield and her daughter ! Mollie drove at once to tl.o residence of her j kinsman, the Hon. James Mason. As she entered the carriage with Mrs. Mason, Mrs. Gar- | lield for the lir?t time broke down. She did not attempt to restiaiti her tears, which for a : moment lloived freely. The ri;ie to toe house j was but a bio -it. Mrs. Garfield p issed quickly through the hails to h< r own room, only stop- i ping to muni the silent embraces of her ; friends. Alti r .Mr.-. Garlield drove away from the sta- : tion the casket was lilte I out and carried by ] tlio eiijht marines in blue uniforms and white ! helmets to the hearse. Tie* hearse was mas- ! sively draped with heavy monrning outside and A KW.fl.IMtl * ll'liro 1,. If WOfc. drawn 1 >v (bar jot blank hordes, with black broadcloth nock and bodv blankets. trimmed with deep silver fringe. Each liorse was led by a colored groom, tho animals being held by :i black and white cord extending t'roui tho j mouthpiece. The army and naval oflicers in attendance foil j\ved the hearse in their carriages, as did 1 Chief Justice Waite and his associate justices. Tho local escort was drawn up in position, headed by a platoon of police and the mounted city troops with their helmets ate I showy yellow plumes. As the procession moved slowly down the avenue the band played a dir^e. President Garfield's commandery of Knights Templar? tho Columbia, of this city? matched directly ahead of the bourse, which was drawn by black horses led by grooms. Directlyiifterthe hearse came thedruur corps, with mufll-.d drums. The Cleveland Greys, wi'h arms reversed, followed, and then came the band of survivors ol the old Forty-second regiment of Ohio volunteer-''. tiarlieldV oi l regiment. Tin tattered coLii'f of the regiment were tied with crape, lho carriage with cabinet oflicers followed. At the square the casket was laid upon the black cut in ca'aialquc limlir the elaborate paviliim. The pavilion is composed of four aicht-a forming h hollow equate and simuouuted by a pointed roof, a solid globe, antl a retail'. Tlio building in almost entirely covered ui'h black cloth, and upon the tipper corners are rlack flags looped with crape. At thn lowei corners' arc cannon covered with black cloth, and on every side arc large and graceful plants. Within arc festoons of black The catafalque, covered with black satin, is surrounded bv four high gilded columns, surmounted by white uoves and supporting a canopy of black. On either sido of the catafal pie is an elaborate flower piece. The queen's wreath and the cypress palms lvmain ujon the coftin. At the head of the coflin ia a portrait of the late Prcaid'.ut, together with tlieso words: Life's race well run; Life's work well done; Life's crown well won; Now comes rest.. - 'i - j ; The Day Befm tke Vaaeral.' Clevklaot, September 25.?The scenes at the public square and npon the streets leading to it t a-dny iiavo boen unparalleled in the history of the country. At early morning throngd of people began to gather" about tho gatee leading to the park. The dnlshing touches had bs-cii given tho pavilion during the night, antl as tho morning li^ht fell upon it it stood forth a beautiful and itnpre98ivo creation Around the public square tho guards from the Ohio regiments of Htato troops passed unceasingly. The Knights Templar guarded tlio easfcet throughout tho night. Tho vigil wan shared by members of tho Cleveland Greys. The hour of 9 o'clock this morning was fixed for the opening of the pates anil allowing tho people to pass through. Lonf; liot'oro that time the tbroag at tho woatern ontranco on Superior street, where the pooplo were to enter, had grown to immense proportions. Citizens from every portion of the city came, hoping by an early visit to avoid the crowd which would accumulate later in the day. The trains which had begun driving on the various roads contributed their thousands to swell the throng, by 9 o'clock a line lia<l been formed of persons standing four abreast aad extending down Superior street nearly a quarter of a mile. Precisely at 9 o'clock tho gates were thrown open and tho peoplo were permitted to enter in double columns. The scenes at the catalalque in the early part of the day wero very touching. Women and men, many of whom had known him for years, gave way to their emotion, and sobs and tean were constant. The place of tinal interment is a lot presented by iho eeraetery trustees to Mrs. GarJield. This morning four carriages conveyed Mrs. Garfield, Harry and Mollie, General Swaim, Colonel Rockwell and many other friends to the site selected. Mis~ Garfield did not alight from the carriage. She formally accepted the oiler and cxpioasod her entire satisfaction and approval of the location. Tin grave will be located on tho summit of a hill in a triangular plateau of small area, skirted by u few pine trees, which visitors to-ilay inmost denuded of leaves. At 11 r. sr. the erowd continued no great that it was decided to leave the gates open all night, so that the csiskct will bo on view continuously until 10 a. it. to-morrow. The Itcmnlna Laid (o Ue?i. CLEva.AND, September 26.?The niarveioun exhibition in the aquare wont oq all night. Silver reflectors threw the rays of electriu lights full upon the towering pavilion from all sides. A light hung fiom the ceiling directly over the bier. A dozen more lights f ounrl the square mado the placo brighter and inoic weird than day, and an interminable line of people six abreast filed steadily all night long past tho closed casket. Strangers without shelter walked tho streets with lnr.ch baskets, waiting for tho day. Tho nltropiuc; and parlor cam at the railroad stations were converted ir.to hotels and rented at a dollar a chair. Every train in tho early morning deposited its hundreds in tho city. The excitement in tho streets and especially about thn overwhelmed eating housed and hotels was great. Many persons who had no lunch ba?Ke':s went without breakfast. At 9 o'clock tho guards at tho square crossed bayonets, and tho line, which had been moving lor twenty-four hours at the rate of 5,000 an hour, was stopped. Hundreds were standing in lino in Superior street at tho time waiting their turn. Even at thw cat ly hour the line of march was cleared * by tho military pickots. The sun was excessively hot, and the air was close. Tho guards, who had had long hours of vexatious duty, stood at their posts quite worn out. At tho south of tho pavilion wa^ a stand for 1.500 people. Generals Sherman, Haucook Sheridan, and others of the guard of honor; the justices of the supremo court, tho con grcHsional escort, the governors 01 states ana mayors of cities eat there; and besides them there woro tho singing societies and the newspaper correspondents. Tho funeral car was drawn into jtosition near tho western entranco to tho pavilion at 9:30. Tho bier upon it was draped in black, and white plumes were upon its top, while at tho four comers were the tattered battle-flags of Garfield's old regiment, the Forty-second Ohio. The car was drawn by twelve black horses, four abreast, wearing black covers, silver fringed, and led by eix black grooms in mourning dress. Tho family arrived shortly before 10. Thoy were preceded by Bishop Bedell and tho Episcopalian and Piesl-yteran clergymen of tho city. Mrs. Garfield walked with Harry, her oldest boy, and Irwin, her younsest. James supported' tho feeble steps of his vcnorablo grandmother. Tho brcthor and two sisters of the late President followed, and Miss Mollio walksd with General Swaiui. Other friends and relatives followed, and then ox-Governor Hayes, Wni. M. Evarts, and the members of the cabinet entered tho pavilion. Tho family aat by the caxket. During tho exercises which then followed tho multitude was kept, without tho square. Tha heat of tho sun at this time was overpoworing. Tho vocal society sang a favorite hymn of tha President, as follows: Ho, reapers of life's harvest 1 Why stand with mated blade, Until the night drawn round thee And day begins to fad*; Why stand ye idle, waiting For reapers more to come; , The golden morn is passing, Why sit yd idle, dumb'( Thrust in your sharpened sicklo, And gather in the cTain. The night is fast approaching, And foon will come again. The Master called for reapers. And shall Ho call iii vafn; Shall sheaves lie theroungathered, And waste upon the plain ? Mount up the heights of wisdom, And crush each error low; Keep back no words of knowledge That human hearts should know. Bo faithful to thy mission In service of thy Lord, . And then a gulden chaplet Shall be thy just reward. I Mishop Bedell then road versos from the I Bil?k\ During tho cxorcises there were heard tlio tolling of church bells and the booming of minute guns. | Two armchairs draped in crapo designated the seats to be occupied by the wife and the mo:her of the d?ad President. The brother of the President, who wan toated near Mrs. Garfield, and the mother, why was on her left, were coimilsed with grief an the mournful ceremonies proceeded, but tho wife, whoso nurao has become tho synonym of fortitude, sat calm and heroic through it all. Tho Rev. Dr. Charles H. W. Pomeroy delivered tho closing prayer. Iinmediatoly afterward tho rod-coated marine band, which stood without tha pavilion, played with sweet and touching effect, " Nearer,"my God, to Thee." The band then played "There's a beautiful land over there," and "Safo in tho tfrms of Jesus." When the caskot was lifted from its restingplace and borne on the shoulders of the guards, i here was a suppressed moan which seemed to enmo from tho lips of Mrs. Garfield, but it was choked back as it' to ca'.m tho sobs of the child 'tfollio, who wept con dsivelv. The inarim s carried the casket slowly to tho fiint nil car. The Knights Templar and the mounted city troops, preceded by the n arino hand,* escorted tho car as it slowly moved off. The carriages then tiled np, and I.an, the Pre.<id?tn's faithful l>ody servant, mounted tho coach in which Mrs. Garfield and her boy Irwin entered. Mrs. Gartici 1 walked lirmly to the carriage upon narry sarin, snowing no Hgn<s of breaking down in htrgriofftrifkou hut hravo face. The agjd mother of lVedlont Garfield tittered'foobly as she leaned on the arm of her grandson James and Goneral Swaim. .She appoaro-l to bo overcome with her sorrow. Miss Moltio and tlio brother and two sisters of the deal man followed. Then came the others of the family relatives and fric-nds. The generals of the army and the cabinet ministers followed. Hardly had the last person of the funeral train lelt the pavilion when the peoplo without sought to enter. During the afternoon thousands who were unable to liud places to view tlio procession on its march, or could not get to tlio district cemetery, tiled through tlio empty pavilion to view the catafalque and gather as mementos the faded and withorod flowers which had failen to the ground. The grand procession passed out Superior street and Euclid avenuo to tlio entrance of tlio cemetery. TUe sidewalks of the beautiful avenuo were crowded with peoplo, many of whom had come to the city from places many miles away. The citizens* distributed 20,000 sandwiches and 20,000 gallons of ico-water to tho civil and military visitor*. The crowds along tho avenue were so large tl at in some places they occupied the private lawns. Barrels of water were placed at short intervals along tho way for the uso of all. Tlio entire line was patrolcd by soldiers of the Ohio national guard. The Boston Fusiliers, which headed the procession, and the (societies of all kinds and creeds which followed next, started for tho cemetery somewhat ahead of tlio moving of the funeral car. They reached the cemetery. Jive miles away, before the last carriage hud left the pavilion. Tho fuurral car did not complete tho slow journey until A o'clock, although s arting at noon. About two miles of the procession was made up of Catholic, Bohemian and German societies. When they were halt way to the cemetory thero was a rumbling of thunder and tlio rain i iriMirniir.'. flic llags at the royal pahcex were i .'it half-mast and the Minds were drawn down. ! Many public offices were cloned, and services i we i a he.d at Westminster Abbey and !.?<!? it ore. | In tiio evening the Archbishop of Canterbury j paid a high trilnito to the sterling qualities of j President Garfield. In the provinces public | meetings were heltl at which re-olittionsuf con- ! dclence with Mrs. Garfield were passed. President Grevy attended a memorial eervieo io Paris. A tkiple allianco is shortly to bo established I : between Germany, ltussia and Austria. I Is Ireland thero have been wholesale ovlc! tions at Mitchelstown, county Cork, on the j estates of tho Counters of Kingston. 1111 lightly, it was givttciuiiy received, as rue men wore sn tiering greatly from the bent. An officer on horseback rode hurriedly along the I lino with the order to close up and march men rapidly. Tho storm was overhead and ready to break. When it came it was a deluge. The rain fell straight downward. The people in the streets ran hither and thither for shelter. At the cemetery women and children huddled for shelter cloee to the tomiis ami tall monuments of the cemetery. All through the shower the funeral car and the carriages which followed it proceeded on their way along the S Uoodc<l avenue, on either hide o! which the i hands and escort wore huddled utid'-r trees. After lifreen minutes of rainfall the clouds : broke and the line whs partly reorganized. Hall j an hour later the rain began again, and a^ain i there was a stampede. Jiut the funeral car moved steadily on to the cemetery. Over the grand i archway at the entrance were the words: "Come i home to rest.'' On the sides was the iuscrip; (ion: " Lay him to sleep among those who have i loaned to trust him." ! X ) sounl was heard as the funeral car drew ' near. Its wheels passed noiselessly over tho I earth. The grooms were finding it difficult to I restrain tho twelve black horses. Tho artilleryi men still marched by the side of the car. Col| ored men held the canopy by cords running down from the cornets of tho cornice. The immortelles around tho pillars had been ! soaked through and through with rain, ami the old colors, furled and draped, ! were dripping. The palms of victory I ad slipped from tho top of the eoltin to the tloor of the car, but the wreath sent bv Queen Victoria was vet in its plaec. A great piece of ! tarpaulin was at one* laid upon tho carpet ol !?evergreens and (lowers, and an inclined phiik was placed at the rear of the car. While the artillerymen were getting ready to lift the body - - " ?<%?-- - r> e* ! i'rom tiio car, tlie white horses 01 mr*. nanii-m * Cdrriago walked up to a spot just in front of the door of tlio vault. The window of the rarriafte was lowered. Upon the bank neat were I'residt lit Garfield'* wife and mother. The venoral-ln lady's sad face appeared for a moment and ! was then withdrawn. Then the President's: j widow drow back her veil and looked out | upon the beautiful carpet of flowers Upon j tho box, l>e-ide the driver, sat Daniel Sprigs, the faithful colored (servant of the dead man. Dr. Iiobiuon walked to tho floor of the ! carriage and spoko to those who wore within, i Then Hai rv Garriold an.l James Garfield opened I the dooj- agd .stepped out, Daniel stepped igjra from the driver's seat and stood by tho rat' wheel of the carriage, his hat in his hand, and his head bowed in griet The clergymen and eopne others came under tbe pall before the door of the vault and awaited tho removal of the body. The artillerymen marched tho length of tho tarpaulin, countermarched, walked up tho inclined plane and stood on tho car bosido the. coffin. It was lifted, carried out oi tho car, and then placed on thoir shonlde'ts: Slowly they bore it down and then over tlio evergreen carpet and under the pall to the door of tho vault. The mother and tho widow of tho lato Presi lent watched this mournful journey from their carriage. Tho artillerymen bore tho body into the vault and placed it upon the supports prepared for it there. It had readied the house of silence. Aa it passed between tho iron gates the President's mother looked fixedly at it and then drew down her veil. Tho President's widow covered her face with her bands and wept. The marine band, stationed near at baud, played "Nearer, My God, to Thee." Ah the beautiful strains wero hoard tho venerable lady whose son had been placed in tho vault looked out, and her faco was radiant. Tho ceremonies at the tomb wero brief, but impressive. A profusion of somber iliapeiy over tho receiving vault was relioved by a graceful distribution of flowers. Hie path from the carriages was strewn wirh evergreens and (lowers, and tho vault itself had been made a bed of roses. Mrs. Gartield did not alight, but scanned closely even* detail. Chaplain Jones,of the Forty-second regiment paid a last tribute to their dead leader. Tho German vocil society sang agnio, the Rev. Mr. F.rroit ottered a final prayer, and all was over. Tho rain, which hod interrupted the progress of the procession, deterred the occupants of eairla.-es <? *ir*InmU n?4 fhnv \v<ulM JlifUl am 1 wuumuft ?mw otherwise havo done. The oIBc-ts of t lie :< rniy. in their brilliant uniforms,' were conspicuous iu the somber surroundings. Re-entering their carriages- the mourner* drove hurriedly back to the city to avoid another shower, which was threatened. The military and Masonic escort left tho cemetery in thu same order in which thoy entered if, and kepi in line until tho eatafalquo was reached, when) they were dismissed. General Smith, tho adjutant-general of tho State, will furnish a gunrd as long as tho body remains in the vault. NEWS OF THE WEEK. East and Middle. Great damage has been done to houses crops and other property by forest fires in WcbU cm New York. The fund started in Now York for Mrs. Gar- ' Hold and family has reached $287,000. King K/lakaua arrived in New York the other day. a teiibiftc hurricane, preceded by an earthquake, did an immense Amouut of damage iu about two minutes at Ekcir.i, N. Y. SwAKTnitoiiE Colleoe, at Swarthmoro, Pa., has been totally destroyod by fire. The college j was owned by 2,000 stockholders, all Friends, I and tho total loss is about $300,000. ' " ? TTT Tfm-n a novfnrv lAflnr fn t.hfl I UtUUUii IT. UUiu, a | Tradors' National bank of New York, after J twenty-live years' faithful service, lias been dis; covorod robbing tho institution of sums aggro* j gating $17,000. The wifo of Jacent Cox, a resident of Florj enco, N. J., was bitten -by a fc'pitz dog aboul j seven weeks ago, and tho other day, after much suffering, she died of hydrophobia. Dcrin'o Lor last trip from Glasgow to N( >v York the ocean stuam-thip Anclioria camo into collision with a small vessel and sunk her with all on board. The Pennsylvania Democratic State convention, hold at Williamsport, nominated Orange Noblo for State troasurer. A reunion of veterans of the Union and Confederate armios from Pennsylvania, Maryland aud Virginia wa< held at Carlisle, Pa. The Massachusetts Prohibitionists havo nom* I inatod a full State ticket with Charles Almy for governor at the head. A fit.n'd has been started in Now York city for tho late President Garfield's mother. A dispatch from Gloucester, Slags., says | that tho schooner Guy Cunningham, absent on the banks of Newfoundland on a halibut trip since Jnly 13, has been given up as lost. She had. fourtoon men on board. West and South. While a passenger train waB being trans- j ferred across the Detroit river the transfer J boat ran with such force against a dock as to throw tho sleeping-coach iuto the water, and beforo tho people inside could be rescued several woro drowned. ' Mrs. Garfield and her family returned i from Clevefand to their homo at Mentor. The Garfield Monument Fund committee j linn is?nerl mi anneal to tho COUUtlT for SUb- ! i seriptiona for tho erection of a monument ovoi j j tho grave of tho lato President, contributions ; | to be sent to tho Cleveland Second National j J bank. The fund for tho monument is growing i i rapidly, and subscriptions aro solicited of $1 ! I or less, which will be registered. | 'y'rPHo-xiAL.iRiAL fever, bilious colic and ! j pneumonia aro playing sad havoc among tho j pei 8ons rendered homeless by tho recent forest ; j fires in Michigan. Many deaths have already j I occurred. A fire in tho outskirts of Aidalia, Mo., de- j I btroyod tho residence of iVilliam Gibbons, and j I lour children, aged from thrco to ten years, ! perished iu the tlarnes. A c.vi; load of gunpowder exploded with ter- j rili : ofl'ect at Council Bluffs, la. Tho concus- i aio: i demolished .the railroad company's round ' house, repair shops, brick and freight houses) j and about forty or fifty freight cars, and dug a ! 110IJ in the ground tifteon feet deep and forty- j five feet in diameter. Largo windows in all part3 of the e:ty wero shattered, and damage was done in all directions. Even in Omaha, on the opposite eido of the river, largo windows wero broken by tho concussion, and as far as the Missouri valley, twenty miles away. The loss will amount to hundreds of thousands ol dollars. Most of tho Apaches wlio wero concerned jn ' tho recent attack upon General Carr'a troops ! have surrendered. The Wisconsin Democrats have nominated ! a full State tickot headed by N. D. Fratt foi : I governor. | Tai: Minnesota Republican Stato convention i put a full ticket in tho tic-Id with L. F. Hubj bard for governor at tho head. I Two cousins named McDonald, who ha<? i i murdered two lialf-brem Indians at Menomineo, j I Mich., were taken forcibly from jail by a crowd ! of 500 men and killed. The ship Alice Buck, from Now York, was j I wrecked on tho California coast and ton out o! j i tho twenty-four men on board wero drowned. In an affray at tho magistrate's court in I Ilnrke county. Ga., Charles J. Walker wounded j j Michael Smith, who then killed Walker, shoot | ing him through the head. Edward rainier , | then shot and instantly killed Arthur Smith, ' The conflict grew out of "a horse case." The Garliehl niouuuir-nt committee at Clove- i land is receiving letters by every mail containing contributions iu largo and small | amounts. j From Washington. Ki.no Kalakada, of the Sandwich Islands, j turned up tho other day in Washington. j FitEsmnxT Ar.Ttitni will nut occupy the ; I Wliito House until tho building lias been tlior- \ ! oughly cloansod and put in complete repair. i I Minister I.owkm. cabled to tho stato depart- i. liient that he had received tlio following tele- j j gram from Queen Victoria: ' Would you ex press my sincere condolence to tho lalo l'resi| dent's mother and inquire after her health, as > i well as after Mrs. Garfield's? I should lie j j thankful if you would procure me a good pho- : j tograph of General Garlicld." To this Mrs. j Garfield, lrom hor homo ut Mentor, 0., sent I tho following reply: '"Pleaso roque.it Mr. | Lowell to express to hor majesty the queen the j grateful acknowledgments of tho mother of 1 Gvnoral Garfield ami my own for the tender ; i womanly sympathy she has hron plea.ied to 1 j send; als > that hor majesty's wish will bo com- j '< plied with at an oarly day." I Pitksiof.nt Airmen has directed the removal ! J of Sol Star, the postmaster at Deadwood, I)ak., 1 1 for confessed complicity with star route conj tractors in defrauding tho p;>stoilieo departi mcnt. A man named JJayley, an attache of tho Army ; [ Medical museum, has made a sworn statement j to the Washington poli^o that, v.hilo lying it: i lied at his room tho other uijj'it, ho heard two men, who were standing in front of the house, 1 J plotting the assassination of President Arthur. 1 One asked the other if ho would swear to do it, j and the other answered that ho " would kiil | hirn within a month." Mr. Bayley says ho | saw tho men as thoy walked oil, and can fully ! recognizo thorn. i A Washington' dispatch says that tho mem- j i l>era cf the lato Pics dent Garfield's cabinet , j were requested by President Arthur to remain j in office at loast until tho meeting of the Senate spatial session. i Foreign Mown A TEnninc galo on tho Danish coast has caused great destruction of property. M<>ro ' tiian thirty ship 4 and smacks aiv rep.u ted lost. In England tho day of President Gariicdd's : funeral at Cleveland was observed ns a day of 1 As International Socialistic congress has assembled iu Barcelona, Spain, with 500 deleg.^** attending it. Tho president and secretary ol the congress have been arrested for expressing approval of tho proceedings of the Nihilists. Ciio' eba has broken out among the pilgrims at Mccca, Arabia. At Aiden there were fortysix deaths in one week. The Cuban authorities havo suspended a number of newspapers. Earthquakes have done great daniago in several provinces of Italy, over 1,000 houses having been rendered uninhabitable, and fonriifths of tho population being shelterless. A fike in Moscow, Russia, destroyed twenty warehouses, doing dainago to tho extent of about $2,000,000. The Swiss government has been requested by Russia, Germany aud Austria to forbid tho proposed socialist congress at Berne. Foxhall, Mr. Keone'ij American liorso, won the Grand Duke Michael stakes, tho municipal event at tho Newmarket races. Five persons were killod and about twonty injured by a collision between two trains near Aylmer, Canada. Alderman John Whittakor Ellis baa been elected Lord Mayor of London. Town Versus Country. The London Agricultural Gazette, in speaking of tbe rivalry of town and country people, says that tbe assumption that country people are necessarily of less refinement and narrower mental resources tlnn the dwellers in cities is not generally true, whatever may once have been the case, and goes on to say: Bat leaving ti e professions, and coming down to the wage-earning classes, is it possible to declare that the artisan paid by the week has a larger stock of "know" than has the skilled agricultural laborer ? It was once pointed out what a really accomplished man an allround husbandman of necessity is?how much training of eye and hand goes to guiding straight a plow and turning a proper furrow. But this is the smallest part of what a horseman on a farm has to be master of. lie has to so far assert his command over his brute comrades that they yield implicitly their strength to his will, and obey instantaneously tbe tones of his voice and the bending of his wrist; and he has so far to familiarize himself with tho effects of rain and frost and wind upon the special soil which he cultivates that he can tell when labor bestowed upon it will cause the clods to crumble into a mellow seed-bed and when it will only tend to convert the top earth into a hasty pudding of mud, and he has, too, to become acquainted with the various seeds, so as to recognize how fast they will run through the colters of the drill, and how much will be needed to furnish a sufficient plant. Nor is this all. If It a 1 In lrn i r? olinwn in li A* HO ?jd iv/ Lane; uio ouaio iu utuu \y uxa besides mere following the horses he has to learn how to feed and keep in health, under purely artificial treatment, the various kinds of live stock; to know at a glance, in chopping out tbe root crops or trimming hedge-rows, which plant or bow to sacrifice and which to spare. And all this in addition to the ordinary weather-wisdom, which, even in olden times, was admitted to be the prerogative of tho husbandmen. This rough sketch will show that although the sum which represents all that the townsman has learned may very possibly seem larger than that which would express what fills tho mind and memory of the rustic, yet if one were to be allowed to deduct from th3 store of each what each has of barren, unpractical acquisition?of that sort of which it may be said that " it was not worth going through the trouble which it took to learn "?then it is exceedingly doubtful on which side the balance of mental wealth would be found to bo. In short, borrowing, with a variation, tho conclusion of tho policeman in tho "Pirates of Penzance," it is pretty safe to say that, "Taking one consideration with another, the ^rustic's head is not an empty one." A Mild Winter Predicted. A mild winter is being predicted by some meteorologists. As the excessive^ heat of the summer is attributed to the* increase of solar radiation, and that increase is due to violent disturbances and the sun's atmosphere, where spots of vast magnitude, following a periud of quiescence, began to show them selves in May, and fiave continued since, it is argued that the temperature in Arctic latitudes is and will continue to be above the average, and that comparatively mild currents of air will be wafted down upon us during the winter months. Art and Oil. The Norfolk Virginian, of January 1G, 1881, refers to the remarkable curfl ?flVcted by St. Jacobs Oil in the case oi Professor Cromwell?known the' conn< try over for Lis magnificent art illustrations?who had suffered excruciating torments from rheumatism, until ho j tried the Oil, whose effects ho says wero j magical. He was a grave and reverend college j professor, and ho was enjoying the air j on one of the wharves. " Do you catch j many mackerel this year?" he asked of j a hardy fisherman. " Well," the son of Neptune replied, "we seine some." " Pardon, young man," exclaimed the > man of letter?, "you mean we saw! pome." "Not by a hornful," replied! the fisherman. 4' Who ever heard of ; sawing fish? We split 'em, sir, we! split'em, but we never saw 'em." The i 1ULIU IlULil tuc nctrntu xujoviuvui ) He turned away and sighed at tlie ig- j norance of the times u (Rural New Yorker.) The best people will vote for the best man every time. And we judge by the number of the St. Jacobs Od constituency, that it is the best remedy foe I tho rheumatism known. Professor Tice, of St. Louis, among others, says so. When the clouds thicken, and the hour grows dark, and hope retires be- i fore the onset of despair, 'tis then tho \ wretched ingiute recalls with keenest agony the friends driven from his side and lost perhaps forever; for friendship stung by ingratitude rarely re- j covers from the blow. "Mm! Itltf T.irn!" Not so fast, my friend ; for it you would soo ; tho stroucr, healthy, blooming men, women j and children that have been rained from beds J of1 suitciing and almost death, bv tho use of Hop r.ittiiv. you wor.ld say, ''Tnitli. ;|nrirrtw truth." 8oo "Truths" iu another j column. TIio growing custom of putting the I choir at tho pulpit end of the church j has the very serious drawback that it ; prevents a man from turning round and [ looking up at tho organ in a critical I manner just before tho contribution j plate approaches his pew. No Woninii XimmI SiifTei* K'irln..v iuul T.irer fur*. can be so easily obtained and so salcly used. Hoot clippings act as fertilizers, as j tliov contain ammonia. Female Weaknesses. No hotter remedy in the whole maler:.i nvdi.a ha? ; y? I lu-en compounded for ili<* relief en I cure < j lVm:ilo Complaints r.f tl:?? ordinary kind, than , Vkijktise. It seems to .vet in then" eas.-s with tin woiiti-d certainty. and never tails t > r.ive a new at 1 Itealliilni tone to the female organs. to r. move reiaxed debility and nnhealtliy seerctious, and re.-to:t> a healthful vi-'or ami elasticity. Due of tlw n.'?-: Mini >:i i.i there .omp'.aitits :? ? noorrlnf ?, or Whiles. which :ir broil,.:,t <>n . ith'T !?y 1 pr-senc. ol Sero.'uia in I lie sjsb in. or '<> srmc; alfeclioii of the womb, or even by general debiiiry. lor ail tlie.-ie complaint*, and wh<n ditni:?-r begins to threaten ! woman at the tnrti "t in- Vi ..i.tim: oati be com- j ?n*-nd?'d without <|U:;lilication. I lie ?r> at prevalence r.f the.v; disorders, and their cure 1> Vi i.ntxr.. Inn amply .' liov.'u that the sure alleviating a.. lit remain* not yet toll - discovered, imt i? already Luown. and in a favorite with American ladies. Too loiiK has ;t ; been the custom to i rose rib- nau^catim; and uncertain remedies in plac - of what pleasant.. tlb-arieiis and cheap. Try Vi:hi: . in::, and do not d<mbt its powt r to carry yon safely tbloiiK'li danger and disease. A Splendid Medicine?Heart and Kidney Disease. Female Weakness* Cif.ioohvir.i.r, III.. Jul;. 187,.. If. II. Srr.vi'SS.Jlo-ton?Jiear >ir: ^ I w?? a!!l:eie.l Willi JIIIM Ili'Kir; ..Ill ...i.-i ......... \\\nl Mcv .v (mi! ii<?'tor<-<l \vi: li M-vi'wi i'h\ ?i"'i:ilisai!il riT< jvi'd iii> In'ii'-rii uuiil 1 ti'iol your Vi aii'l ait. r taking tivo ImtlKs I w;us !<-i? ly ami li:<v< i>t'i-;i ;t lirallliv \vi?m:i:i cm r -iin'c, :i!I!kiii^1i 1 am in inv ijiitli ji-ar. I <1? !i?-arMly tvriiiiiiiHml it a? a S|i|fli<liil iii?'ili''ii|i' to all a:llirlril :i" I ! : %<' In-wi, ami I likss tho <l:i> tb:it it ! !! itil"> piv li.?ml-. All.S. MAUI A 11UUS0N. Vegetme. riiLPAiiTD uy H. R. STEVENS^Boston, Mass. Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists. " Newspaper Dans, Here is how a brother journalist puts it: We presume thateome people think that newspaper men are persistent duns; let a farmer place himself in a similiar business position and see if he would not do the same. Suppose that he raises one thousand bushels of wheat, and his neighbor should como and buy a bushel, and the price was only a small sum of two dollars, or les?, and the neighbor says, "I will pay you the amount in two days." As the farmer does not want to be small about tho matter, he says all right. Another comes in the same way, nntil the wholo of the one thousand bushels Of wheat are trusted out to one thousand different persons, and not one of the purchasers concerns himself about it, for it is a small amount they owe the farmer, and of course that will not help him any. He does not realize that the farmer lias frittered away hi3 large crop of wheat and that its value is due in a thousand little driblets, and that he is seriously embarrassed in his business because his debtors treat it as a little matter. But if ali would pay him promptly, which they could do as well as not, it would be a very large amount to the farmer, and enable him to carry on his business without difficulty. The above compaiisou is too true of the difficulties that the newspaper mau has to qpntend with. Wp1M)efrti?p. To a criminal neglect of preventive medic*ti?->n may be ascribed a majority of the ailments which att'oct humanity. It is a well-ascertained f.icr, veiling on tho experience of over twentylive yfar.-s that a course of Hostetter's Stomach Hitters will uut even a naturallv feeble svatem in such a stato of defense that it will bo competent to resist the most prevalent causes ol disea-o, such as tho malign influence of mUsma, uuwholesomo water, excessive lieat, damp, cold, sudden changes of temperature, etc. Yet there aro thousands ot persons living in perpetual peril from one or more of thei-o causes, who recklessly omit to avail themselves of tho absolute protection which this famous vegetable antidote a fiords. Intermittent and bilious remittent fevers, rheumatism, general debility, nervous weakness and irregularities of the stomach, bowels and liver, would bo comparatively unknown, if this palatable specilic were ia universal iwo in tho districts where they principally prevail. "TI10 mainspring of Italian musio in the eighteenth century," eay4 a recent writer, " was the exclusive an.^ passionate worship of the human voico." But Italian music has experienced a caange. Its mainspring is now in a box, and is worked with a handle. Not ft IJrvrrasre. ~~ "They are not a beverago, but a medicine, . with curative properties of the highest degree, containing no poiconona druRs. They do not tear d-wu an ahcady debilitated system, but lmiid it up. One b:>'ttlo contains more hops, that is, more real hop strength, than a bar.el of ordinary beer. Every druggist in Rochester sells them, and the physicians prescribe them." ?Rochester Eoening Express on Hop Bitters. The United States has nearly fifty per cent, more paper mills than any other conntry in the world, and it consumes about as mnch paper as the mills manufacture. Don't Din In the Iloanc. AhU Druggists for "ltongh on liata" It clean out rata, mice, roaches, lliea, bed-bugs, loc. Veoctixe.?The great success of the Veoetixk as a cleanser and purifier of the blood i* shown beyond a doubt by the great numbers who hftvo taken it, and received immediate relief, with such reraarl.ablo cures. Pure Cod Liver Oil made from selected livers, on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard A Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have decided it superior to any of the other oils in market '25 Cents Will BnT" a Treatise upon the Horso and hia Diseases. Book of 100 pages. Yaluablo to every owner of horses. Postago stamps taken. Sent postpaid by Now York Newspaper Union, 150 Worth Street, New York. The only natural hair renewer is Carboline? a deodorized extract of petroleum,prepared without distillation or rectification with acids or alkalies, containing no mineral or other poisons, and as clear and puro as spring water. tfjj-Pocket Scale, 2oc. Howard Mfg Co., N. Y. RESCUED FROM DEATH. William J. CouRklin, of Somervillc, Mass.. says; 'n the fall of 187GI was taken with blooding of the lunjf, followed by a severe cough. I lost my appetite anlflesh, and was confined to my bed. In 18771 was admitted to the hospital. The doctors said I had a holf in my Inn? as bis as a halt-dollar. At one timo a report went around that I was dead. Igavo up hope, but a friend told mo of Dr. William Hall's Balsam youtub Luxes. I got a bottle, when, to my surprise, I commented to feel better, aud to-day I feel bettei than for three years past. I write this hoping every ono aillicted with diseased luugs will take Dn. Wil liam Hall's Balsam, and be convinced that consumption can dp. crnED. I can positively say it has done more good than all the other medicines I have taken since my sickness. WARRANTED FOR 3t YEARS AXb SEVER FAILED To CTRE Croup. Spasms, Diarrhaa, Dvsenterv and Sr.i Sickness, t ikon internally, and GftAItANTEED perfectly harmless; aiso externally, Cuts. Bruises, Chronic Rheumatism, OKI Sores, I'aius in the limbs, and rlio.it. Such a remedy is Dn. TOBIAS' VENETIAN LINIMENT. C?r-Xo one o:fre trying it >vlll ever bo without it; over 6Ut) physicians use it. S<5 CeniK will Buy n Treatise upon tlio Horse and liia Diseases. Book of 100 pases. Valuabio to every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. Scut jK)fltpaid by NEW YOliK NEW8PAPEB UNION, 150 Worth Street, New York. (This engraving represents the lungs lna healthy state.) A STANDARD REMEDY IN MANY HOMES. FurCouslis. Col (Ik, ('roup, nroucIiitUand all oth?-r affections nt tin- Throat ami l,l'X(iS, it stands unrivaled and utterly beyond ail competition. II CONSUMPTIVE CASES It approaches so near a specific that " Ninety-five" per rent, arc permancurlv cured whew the directions are strictly complied with. Tiiesv is no chemical or other ingredients to harm tlu* young or old. AS AN EXPECTORANTTr HAS NO EQUAL! It CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM! J. N. HARRIS &. CO., Proprietors, CJXt 1NXATI, O. FOR SALE BYTCL DRUGGISTS. N V X U?10 " BOYS AND QIRLS. I at lajt. Best AnSn-jrapli \H??m ?*\vrofwi*a to t!ii> l\ S. i ul)lii\ Donna in imitation lied liussia i,-atti.-r rovers, (iiided ed^es, < 1 >i;i11 <i with Scrolls, Birds I'erns ct<\, and >lir? ( containing over ]i)n i'!:oicv selections of i>rosentid poetry suitable Jor uv ol album, oulv :>oc. Order soon. 1,. CONIt.\Y? Ili'xliurv Sta!ion. Conn. C 7 9 A WEEK. $12 a dav at home easily made. Costly v ? & i luftii iroc. Acid's TtU'K k Co.. Augusta,Maine. W A T'PTTTX! Catalogue free, A.l.lrcij, Suaaord I V J r'j vJT.L XaO Aiuerietn VatcliCo.,I>it?b,jr<;h,Pa. /O^TTcTQ Jlovolvers. C*t?ioi'j? frev. Jijil.-t.i, I C7 tL' J.'J .'3 Or??t TT ft. Gun l'ituburt!.. r?. Cpi }r> C9fl 11 vdav at lioni*. S.tiiii'li's worth free. v v?U .ViMrissSi'SsnN .Vt'c'..r.'irl:llfl,Mal^O. Bo You A S1*IU\<; SCALE THAI CAX B] THESF. CUTS UlE 1TLT. SIZ] M1BHNTHTHSTJ i ?r Stile by all Druggists, Statio If you cannot fiml one in your towu xend tw crni 1-v _ llOVVA It I) ! CTEffl I ' 1 "in""M '? I iwveti 11r.i:<i?1?a /???*** * I i -cfivii.; T> ? I tva?c< mHlrJ ' : i'jv .v. I: . t:r.$ I.r lrr*iu ; ji>y auiTiitnirs i-J f \ .y. jr. ! V ? ??!.! r<wJ.? ju<! h?rt8 CM CilFIE i-r ASTHMA ?* CATAI V- *>*. 1 i. * tufs L.nlu;i:c4ii <! )-* M i?> 1. " i / I i f .ilio': c*ii r?!t??m tt?c r?pn &!,- .v'A ' I f F?IEE OJ (? . r.i-a'.i.i- I'f. Ihepii o*i|,Cl %1: < " Atrial ::.MAqp. Hi; uu f." PETROLEUM J j Used and approved by the leading j CIANS of EUROPE aqd AMERICA. y Tho moot Valuable && WOT DISEASE! OATAaRH, SSKOBBHOZl Concha, Cclds, 8ore Throat, Croup u XTTry them. 25 ud 00 otit dxM of 6BA591RX1L AT THE POTLABELTHLi UliYKB Witfc A* XJU PJJII B . These Camlllar words recall to the former and others interested, the unfortunate nece* . sity of sometimes getting rid of Stock that is not otherwise salable on account 6f blern- ishes or imperfections. To improve upon this method, by showing how to restore your Stock to flret-class condition, is the plan herewith presented. The signal benefit of the Great German Remedy to mankind very reasonably induced its application to the sufferings and ailments of the dumb creation, beginning with the Horae. People who tried It were more than surprised- by its results, as attested in the speedy and permanent cure of their Stock, and they gladly announced their experience by word of mouth and by the public press, until to-day Farmers and Dealers, Stockmen and Breeders, the country over, are using St. Jacobs Oil with delight, satisfaction and profit. The others who raistako of lose . thinking that Stock by a anything Is eI'a ; J miserable efgood enough W\|j| fort at cconfor a Horse ..ITxXag tV omy. There is made by * are others who humanely regard the welfare of their faithful dumb creatures, and provide for their comfort with good food and shelter, and for their health by a constant supply of St. Jacobs Oil,?the safest and speediest relief for Diseases of Horses and Stock ever discovered. Whenever there appears any evidence whatsoever of disease or Injury amonsr Animals, they should have the best possible treatment, as It never pays to defer attention to Stock. Inasmuch, then, as it is the part of common prudence to use the surest curative means in the beginning. every Stable, Farm and Stock-yard should be abundantly supplied with St. Jacobs Oil, which is used and recommended by the best Horsemen in the country as an article which will relieve more promptly and certainly the ailments of and Injuries to Stock than any other remedy known. For Spavin, Ringbone, Wind-Gall, FleshB Wounds and Galls of all kinds, PollEvil, Splint, Swell- TIBBf lugs, Tumors, Fistn- rrfim/ii - " Una. ll\, Laiacoesilt niiuunsni vs ampn VIA ?IW i?w*cle, Acute and Chronic Founder, Mange, Corns, Whitlows, Jiroken Knees. Cuts, Colic, .Sore Throat, Distemper, and many other Diseases, especially Foot-Rot in Sheep, St. Jacobs Oil affords Instant relief _ ,. and a sure cure, and costs but Fifty Cents. Pamphlets containing full directions for' home treatment of diseases of domertla animals, 6ent upon application, by ? A. VOvJELEB & CO., Baltimore, Mi ' Jlgg MANUFACTOBY ifPlll ^ MesaIe w |?|| 4-65 FULTON ST., BROOKLYN. Imtortaiit to tlie Invalids or America. * / The MOST MARVELOUS INTENTION in the > WOULD is tho "W1LSONIA" MAGNETIC GARMENTS. They cure EVERY FORM OF DISEASE known to man, without mcdlcinc, changes of diet, or occupa. tion. 200,000 PEBSONS, once HELPLESS INVALIDS, are now rejoicing in tho blessing* of RE. STORED HEALTH. All checks and poatofflce orders for " WILSONIA " onitsnmatbeniatlepavable to~WM. WILSON, 463 FULTON ST.. BROOKLYN. Send lor circulars, price list and other memoran<la regarding the "WILSONIA." We Rive fcorn the list of thousands of " >/ILSONIA" patients the foilowine REPRESENTATIVE REFERENCES: Hon. Horatio Seymour, Utica, N. Y.; Hon. Peter Cooper. Hon. TJiurlow Weed, Comniodoro C. K. Garrison, General 8. Graham, Judge Levi Parsons, of N. Y. City; J. B. Hoyt (merchant). Spruce St., N. Y.; D. V. Fairweather, (merchant). Spruce 8t., N. Y.; E. B. Stimson (merchant), Spruce St., N. Y.: Thomas Hall. 184 Clinton Ave.. Brooklyn; Colonel Bayard Clarlr, M E. 49th St., N.Y.: Hon. John Uitchell (treastirer), Brooklyn; Mrs. R. Robb,S96 Wyckoff3t.,B'ilyn. you are a man UnV II yon arc a v of business,weak- man of let- ^Bh B ened by the ctiulnof mf tent toilingoverntld your duties avoid h nltrht wok, to re? Ktimulants and use W to ie brain nerve ami H Hop Bitt?rs. waste, use Hop B. ' If yon arc young and I suffering from any In- B discretion or dlislpa tlon ; if you are mar- H rled or single, old or young, goffering from poor health or languish Ming on a bed of aick- B ness, rely on Hop! Bitter#. Whoover you arc, xCb, Thousand' ule an whenever you feel J?H nuallyfrom some that your system 3*1,13 form or Kidney netrfs cleansing, ton-tHHJdiseaso that might B Incr or stimulating, WU have been presented ' with out infoi'/eaf/ni/, IMJpy a timely use of tako Hop HopBlttera Bitter?. aLrn_ri-?. Hare you dyspfpim, kidneymsLi-jj iS D. I. C. or uriuarycoin-WJ ' plaint, disease _____ .n^SSSSlJ of tho stomach, 9 IT AT) ?."d L i^f? tefcJiSft 1 nU r SftSKtK intrornervesj nj use of opium. You will be a ; niTTrnn tobacco, or cured If you use 9 111 11 III1 narcotics. | Hop Sitters J K f K\ If you are aim- I Ul MU,U JMd tarto* ply weak and a t,C\tCD ^ti Bcndfor low spirited, try | NEVER Circular. lti It may S .. hop Brrrns save your | t A II life. It has Ml IA I L fWt#'? Saved hun- 4j tUtbeUrr, s. T. dreds. \f> A Toronto, Out* Payne's Automatic Engines. Mil Rellahlo, Durable and Economical, tdll/urnlth a Uornt jmctr xclth H few/"*' aiul water than any othti Engine built, not fitted with an Automatic Cut-off, Send for Illustrated Catalogue "J," lor Information A fcricea". H. VT. 1'atxk & Sons, Box 800. Corning, N.Yj Cyclopedia War. The great Ijlbrnry of Universal Knowledge now completed, large typo edition, nearly <0,1)00 topics in every department of human knowledge, about 40 percent, larger than Chambers' Encyclopedia, 10 per cent, larger than Appleton's, 20 per cent, lntvor than Johnson's, at a mere fraction of their cost. Fifteen large Octavo Volumes, nearly 1:1,000 page*. complete In cloth blndinc. Slot In half Knssia, 8v!0; in full library sheep, marbled edges, $?5. S|*clal terms to clubs. $10,000 REWARD ingTho months of July and August. Send ortick for specimen pages and full particulars to ABIEBICAN BOOK EXCHANGE, John B. aldkn. Manager, 704 Broadway, N'cw York. new m .Bioom Parson*' Pargntlvo PIIU mako hew Rica Blood, and will completely change the blood in the entire system in three months. Anv person who will take one pill each night from 1 to 12 weeks may be restored to sound health, if such a thing bo possible. Sold evfrvwhere or sent by mail for 8 letter stampe. I. 8. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass., formerly Hnngor, >lc. 5,000 A?Ciil? Hnult'U lor l.ile of GARFIELD t contains the full history of his noblo and eventful li'e and dastardly assassination. Millions of people are waiting for this book. The best chaneo of your life to make money. Beware of "catchpenny" imitations. This is the only authentic and fully illustf*ti./l 1 itv? nf onr niartvreil President Send for r"iir(liars and extra tonus to apents. Address NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.. Philadelphia. Pa. Fac-Similfls o( II. J. Treasury and national hank bills. * Consisting of nino exact Imitations of United State* Treasury Notes, and nine of National Bank Bill?. 18 in all, of various denominations. As a rare and instantaneous means of detecting counterfeit money they are invaluable, Price, f-> a package. L. A. MAYHEW Jk CO.. New York City. P. 6. Box 1201. I . cory of England. t2nj;. Literature I l'jjc Hi uritiitt I I * l'*? Hmo voli. I I IStuo vol. bKtiilBOiuely 11 catrifjn "c!otb:oul? bouml. for only iOt-N. /">?. HXXJUTJAK BOOK 00^14 W. ntli tit. S.V. f.O. tox ?M0. YAKIMA VALLEY, IMMIGRATION CO. A choico Farm and free faro to Washington Territorv, aa premiums to Class D. Subscription On* Dollar. Remit immediately, or send two preep stamps for "Our Resources" to H. C. \\ AI.Tfc.lt3, Manager, Yakima Citv. Washington Territory. AGENTS WANTED fl I T1 P T P T T1 president U A It f 1 1j L JJ l ull and accurate account to date. Steel portrait. Well illustrated. Ttrm* liberal. Outfit 50c. Address It. UlRcltall ?fc Co.. 25 Great Jones St., N. Y. TEISITU " wx"' Tb-'-ortin m4 -?r?. ! ntl I n pro'. MaKFI.ntb.Onu //8fck\ >?rr ?ai Wia*n! ? II for 'JO <?qu wilt mr, / MMd \ cofcr of f*??. and lock ot hair, sen I a coaaaeT/ __ | ricrcm of your futurt Luibtnd or ?if?. WTC?u>lopi<*rij J . vilb cane, tiaa aai pace of iztanar, and <!?: of mamarf. Uogcj retaread to all not ?aii?flad. \9SwjBftr AdJraaa Prof. L. Martial, 10 Maai'j PI. fruton, Maw. &OO *?* MDNTH-UGcNTS WflNT?0-?O be. I in / sellfnKarticles tn the w or!d: 1 sample fret. .w.^tFA'ldress Jc3> Bronsnn, I)< rrult. Mich. 1 7 1 A YEAR AND EXPENSES TO f f ? AGKNTS. Outfit tree. Addn-M BUM 1*. O. Victory. Angu?ta. 31c. A T PQMT,'!\r U A NTEH to i?e!l Stationery Goods nn commission. Send s:^::i;' for terms. PHcENIX I'i'B. CO., Warr"n, Pa. U* ANTKD.?Kvorj* one to have lots of fun with one oi tlios>- ruystf lying Chim se Puzzles. Sent to any r.ddrcss for :ic. sUuip. Excelsior Blue tind* favor in ovt r': '.r.^fhold. Ada's B. I*. Poor. Becninjton, Vt. YOUNG MEN would 1-am Telegraphy in J , 11 tout-months, and lie ccrtatnof a s.tuation. a.Mre?s Valentin* Bros., Jancsville, Wis. V I.LEX'S Brain Fond-curesNVrvons Debility & ?\ iMirtiessr.t <ifiKr.it i v.- < inrans. {81 -all tlr.i??i*ts. " j.'l ! iri 'tivulac. .\lieii\?_ Piiiniiticv.MlS fc'ir-t av..S'.Y. i (JENTS \Y.\ NTED for the Best and I'astrsS j X S lliuu Pictorial Hooks anil liibles. I'riees reduced :<" I r <t. National Publishing Co.. Philadelphia. Pa. Sfi6 " >f:'.lr ""'11 town. Terms and outfit 5?? :ive. Add s 1J. it M.i.i;ri .v f....l'orilaud. Maine. roit?i7t:i.iuv:fl.l's s\. L.Bow.t.ten. Boston. " m~ I wane K CARRIED IN THE L'OCKET ? II III POCKET Bllll iiev/i and Hardware Dealers. h i<i i?o*?nso >nnt>n?t r.:nl wo win fr-U'l ii wnrue ?r(). CO.. 3K1 lirnnihviiv. N.m% VqiI<. ETErBHfitj 1,1 IV,i:, ASTHMA or PHTHISIC, ?r?tci byeniiorni riijkl-jA dci U.g ti.e i.itt llv? y 'hi a 01 Juy IUii*-3d to si: on i;iy ca* ? w[ u?-io r? yoit.j dr?iTlp<ion. In r I txpcftinmte I cragj i! is? Hi* iwAiciu*. tt?l fortunately di?covcrr lU 1RH, wirrcatrd to rt'ileri* tLo ino?tf;uhl*>rn?',c ot >i?*t arid sleep com fort ally. Any person not ful.y set i-Ocl W in iT to the proprietor alJ ti-s money vM be icfuo.lol, orW F CM4RGE. Suouli) ynnr i??>t k-p fb* 't'Cur, I f; j )m IVreulo by all D;iurlit9. au.Lkj I). LA.\ti*XL, I*ro?r i >r Orn<N?% Now Ycrk <1t*. N j "a -^^S^vuellao-tuch m J&ti&P* Posada Vaariia^ *^_ ?w w Vuellc* Coid Crcoa, irrJSwSiw VaaeEno Compter Ic* Vw8li2e Toilot 8cac3, IB, tMlliBl.tl^B, artaiferitr ( u/ ilall&reauew sTaTaE^ VASELINE CONFECTIONS id Diphtlari*, ?to. AnurrmMeforacfUbtil nr ?et& tag Viae Una iflUrcaHj, ~ 23 CZHT8 A BOX. ' lEXPoirnoM. i m i 11 ii mraav odLQASSftCOr^