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Evening at the Farm. Don (mm the hilhs where the irosh breeze is blowingRich with the went of the resinous* pine; Cp Irom low paotuieo ohero blue ll#g n? grow- j iug, VTbem, 'mong the preen grasses, brooklets entwine, Filled with the gtnesee, intent on bonie-goiug Blow-footed cows are all hasting in line, Filling the sir with their miiking-time lowing, T\ Vv^vl^llr* tlniir (lio IQCI tiim fOVU I V1UUC t*m4Ajr uivu 1U1UIO Uiv auov ouu .u.u , define. Afar in the west tho red sun lies a-dying, Gorgwmc his couch as Aurora's gay bed ; Homeward in ha?te tho late swallows are flvinpr, Dark float their forn'B 'gainst the sky's lading led. Deep in the wood tho night birds are crying, V\ ails lor the day that ip past and dead ; High in the oabt where the faint c'ouds are lying, Cynthia glides ou her way overhead. HE BELLE OF THE " CHESTER BELL." " Yes. sir, in the old hulk that lies rotting theie I've sailed many a 1od*> year. She n*ed to make t-p!eodid runs tetween Bremen aD<i here. A grand olipper j-hd was, a regular ooan beauty in them days. Her name was the Chester Bell, and she rode the *av. h just like a nutshell, f-ir Her capt&inV came was rmliver, nm tniuver; n&eiv you've heard of him. I know sailers, and pretty good seaman, too, that change color at th? very mention ot that mau'ri name. He was a tiger, sir. a human hyeia, a bloodttiiisry, bulty ing wretch, without having even the saving clause of a bad temper. Why, he conld kill a man in cold blood tho same as y^n'd relish a good breakfast, sir. " Manv's the crew ol fine, honest fcl lows I've seen shipped aboard o' her, to be turned into skulking hounds the minute he'd look at 'em. He'd a pretty little girl for a wife, strange to say? them 6ort gen'ly gits such?and sometimes she'd go to sea with bim. If anybody could keep him in order it was her ; but eve 1 she couldn't prevent his cruelty to the men. "With first-rate fieamen he was tyrannical, but, great Cmsarl if a greenhorn shipped, let him look alive 1 He'd as lief take*a belaying-pin to him and knock him in the head as eat his dinner. I've seen him doit, too. It was a young fellow that answered him b:ck, and be just laid bis face open from crown to chin. Ob, but he was a cruel man, sir I "He often took emigrants to the United States?squads of 'em. They cen'iallv Rot serveu middling well. Pay the captain his money and he'd give you the worth of it?so much for his due. One passage he bad rather an nucommon lot ? fire bjudred, I think. youDg and old?a pretty decent set in til Fact is, tht 8ti Geman pajpengerp, even if they are in the steeiane, have their pockets pretty well lined. C mmend me to the German emigrant for honesty aiid thrift. There was families of two and five, and sometimes t. n and twelve?8 good many handsome jonng girls among tbem, too. " The particular passage of which I'm going to speak, however, was in the year '50?a great year for clippers that was. I was busy tarring some ropes when a family came aboard that made us all look alive. First, ihete was the granuiamur, iu me uiu luuuhj uiow, with hair as long as iuy arm and as white as the foam of the sea under the un, He and bis dame were as sweetmannered and fine-looking as you mishi meet in a hundred years. Then came the sone'and daughters and grandchildren. It didn't seem as if they ought to go in the steerage along o' commoner passengers; but they did, though they bore themselves like gentlefolk. "T;en followed, sir, atween two young men?bet b ther and her lover. I we afterward ioui*5. out?a young ?i?l not more than sateen or seventeen. Well, that was the handsomest little cr?ft I ever laid these two eyes on, and I've set i some fine-loosing women in mv dav. hivinir sailed from everv porf. V ?? f * m the world. She was that pretty thf, we christened hor on tne spot the Bello of the Chebter Bell.' " Behind them can e Captain Tim. behaving his level bejt, and there weren't many as could beat biro fcr a fine eye and a RaUant bearing. He teemed to be looking out fur the r comfort?ah, but the little beauty she was ! QaeeiH and noble ladies mieht well envy the red and white of her face, and even the way nhe walked ai d the turn of her ;.ead. It was a rght to s?-e. Her brother and Ler lover were both right manly, hmdsome fellows, too, and dear enough they loved her, one could see. ' Well, we set sail, having beautiful weather for the first few days, and the j pretty German ?irl, shewonld c >moout. j sometimes for an airing, generally followed by one or the other of them two cbttps 1 was always looking oat o' the corner of my ?*ye, and I observed that the captain was allays on hand looking . at h?-r in the most admiring manner. I wanted to tell her l<?ver that it would be j better not to show his little beauty so J mach if he waDted to keep her out o' harm's way, for girls is mostly that vain if that handsome! "Came the second week ont, and we had hard wt-ather. I was taking my ob nervations rfght straight along, fox I noticed Captain Tim was always mak- | ing much of the old gentleman and his > wife. The fools! I conld a-told 'em why he singled them out. It wasn't the captain's place to be in the steerage. I longed to tell him so, for I had a pretty kid of my own at home; but I might cave pam ior it witn my me. v ??There wore buf few passenger* in the cabin, one of them a consumptive lady who had not brought her servant. How t wpa done I never knew, bnt the captain maoagwl to get this handsome girl to wait upon the sick woman. Mighty fond of money they must a'been j to let that girl go out o' their t-i /h' and fnto the company of a man like Captain Tim* "After a while I took notice that th#> yonng fellow who appeared to be tho girl s sweetheart grew pale and nereons. He was out on decft oftener, and his face seemed to indicate uneasy, j^alou feelings. I didn't blame him. 1 wanted to warn him?for I could tell how it was *ith bim, poor fellow 1 If ho taw half ! * Noneel fc > repeat bis language?it was d un* b to shake the nerves cf a man of brass He used all the oaths 1 ever iit-anl cotne ont of a whole ship's ertw's lips in tea voyages, ami swoie hed have mv heart's blooil?that he'd send me to the bott< m of the sea, anil such like threats. 1 told hiiu respect inlly, as a petty cffic *r should always Rpeak to bis captain, that I hud <!oue by the gill as I would by my own sister. T /IrtYi't- incf pvilftlv wf'flt T said, but I think words was given, for he looked hard at we, as if he wasn't certain whether he q'ii?e haw through my motives, a*jd wi'li one worse i threat than the list, atjd a mouthful more of dirt oaths lit* wi-ut oft' " But 1 could se^ a oh tuge in the g:rl ; after ttmt tor I was always on the wafeli. : Stio smiltd more seldom and her color , went an ' c:?me too easy. Then her step ! RTew slowt-r, and she would go stand at I the sid*1 of the vessel aud take long gad looks at the water, a^ if sho wus in a ! browu t-tudy. Piettv soon after th.t her eyes bewail to look heavy, und once or twice I found her in an ont o' theway place crying and sobbing like a bahy Well, I didn't attempt to c wIcrt her?sho woaldu't a borne it for as soon as ever she saw ma she would fly off like a scared bird.|| My he irt felt Heavy for her, because I knew there | cuu-t be ? reasou for it, b<3sides the \ growing weakness of tbe poor womau, ! who was d\ing in tbe cabin day by day, j and praying only lo bee lau i before she 1 did go. ' One night, ah, sir, I shall nover j forget that, n'ght?the moon wa<<at her j full, and sat looking at the reflection in j tbe water like a qneen with a silver | crown on, and a veil of white iiglit float i ed aw?y off on the sea, so that, u looked j like a bride wailing for her husband. I For the iirnt, time in mauy days I saw j the pretty German pirl aul her sweetbi-art on deck together. I could not I keep my eyes from her; she looked fnr j all the world like a sweet angel just i lent cut of heaven for a little. It was I my watch, and my duty to bid them beI low; but 1 don't know why it waR, 1 j couldn't do it. They went forward I and sat at the bows. There were barrels there and planks atop, so I uo one could walk back and forth easily. I couldn't hear anything they said, of course, but I eaw by their gestures that they were talking very fast. Sometime he would go close up.tp her, and she would put out her hand and pu-h him away, then cry as if her heait would bieak. This went on for some time when at the last she seemed to grow c Imer. I saw her throw herself into is arms. 1 saw him kiss her again and ifgain; tlen she seemed to wrench herself awny, and quicker than 1 can tell, over tshe went. " I don t know how I got there, or how the who'e sh'p seemed to swarm so suddenly with life. I remember catching at a dark body that was going over ?her po r distracted brother, and his falling hack into my arms dead as a lo;r, after giving a great cry. That scream brought the captain and two mates. The captain asked, augnly, what was the row ? " * Thut little Germnn girl ia over board 1* 1 6aid ; and if I had any sort of j a wt apon that was dead sure I'd have laid him at my feet. He know how I J felt, he knew, the scoundrel! the villain! His face changed, his very voice was different, as he ordered ' Bout ship.' "One of the boats was down, and we supposed, through some mismanagement, it swamped, for we s?w nothing of boat or lover or tirl; and so that wa^ the end of that. It was a changed company afterwt'td. The shock killed the poor eick woman, and she was buried the same day, for sailors can't bide a corpse on board ship; but I declare to rr vi sir. that, t.hnnch we tra!; weights in that colHn, it stood up ou end and followed us until midnight. I never saw such a si^ht before; I kopo never to at;ain. There it was right after U8, and the sailors watched it with pale faces no one daring to say a word to the captain, who swore if any one but looked at I him. "We all made as if the girl had fallen overboard for the sake of the poor j creatures who were lelt. They coujeo trued everything, as loins win who go wild with grief. But I tbink Ler bro her understood, though he was sick wita brun fever all the rest of the voyage. Her mother, poor creature, came near d.ving herself, and I am sure her heart mast have been nearly broken. It was bird to see that fine-looking old grandfather tottering round wringing his bands end shaking his gray old he?d, while the tears mn and run?may I never see the like again! "Next voyage weshipped a groen baud. | I never suspected till we'd been out three days that it. was the German girl's brother. Then I knew he meant mischief. I told him ! knew him, but h^ t begged so bard 1 kept bis secret. How often since I've wished I hadn't, though it might have been no better for him. 1 was sure there was going to be more trouble, and it r ine soon. He didn't kno-v ihe ropes and I think the captaic suspeo'ed who it was and kept; on bis guard, for be was mighty careful not to anger him. But one day his tem per gavo w.&?t and if it hadn't a bin as it was I shouldn't much blamed him neither, for 1 like good seamanship as well as tne neit man, and the German lad was as contrarv as a mule. The iirst thing we Knew me captain ssrucK me man, ana the next they were struggling toerether on the deck. Well, sir, we saw bloo J The captain bad got at his knife and run the poor fellow through ilia heart Ho never spoke after that, and none of us could say anything, because the cap tain killed him ia self-defense. I was that horror struck that I vowed I'd 1 ever step foot in that ship a^ain ; ar;d never ogam I did, althongh Captain Tim offered me double wages. Sir. t was a God cursed bhip after that. Mis fortune went with it every voyage, and seemed to strike everybody but the captain. That always seemed strange to it e. He lost men and the own rs lost money, but he always oame off scot free. "Well, sir, I am coming to ihe queerest part of my story. I was once inspecting an insane asylum w>th a frit-nd of mine from the old connrry. Ho wished to se? a ca?-e of raving in sanity, being ab^ut to write a bo> k in which he wanted to de&cnbe something of the sort. We bad several cases, when the keeper said, pointing to a doable cell: " 'There in the worst subject in this or any other establishment He is an nld spfurantaiu. whoso madness is ho alarming af about midnight that, iu spite of all our precautions, we expect every morning to find him a corpse. We are obliged to keep him in this closet, the walls of which are lined that hemav not dash his brains out. He has been here nearly a year, and imagines that he is pursued by a girl, aod held under water by her till bis brea'h leaves Ins body.' " Well, the door was unlocked, and there, despite the hideously-altered and haggard face, I taw my old captain? Tim Tullive !' " Then," said T, speaking for the firs', time, 44 at last God had smit ten him." 44 Well, I suppose that's not for us to say," comiuGed the narrator, * for I havea'tcoma qiice to the end of my story." " Some threa years after the little Gc -nan beauty threw herself over in the way I bare told you, I was off duty in a foreign harbor, and stroiliun into a street I found a little shop pre sided over by a woman who was the living image of poor little Gretchen?I believe I haven't spoken her name before. I went in, aud she stared at me, and I stared at her. I felt myself grow pale, but shi flushed a>isv red, which put me more in mind of Gretchen than ever. So I said to her in German, to make snro, that she reminded me of a lass I had once known. 44' Oh ! Bhe cried. ' I was sure I couldn't be mistaken?you were so k;nd to me one \ when I was on board fv dred(;ial Chefeter Beil.' "Tnen," I said, completely astonished, and catching my breath, 'it is really Gretchen !' 414 Yes, indeed, I am really Gretchen, and my husband is not yet at home ; he has gone to look after our bit of land ; but sit down, he will bs back in a moment ; no, no, come in here, dinner will be ready before a great while.' 411 followed, like oneia a daun, and found myselt in a neat, pretty little parlor, lot kin? out on a garden crowded with flowers, and beyond thit the shingly Leaob, and further the deep sea In a corner at one side of the tiny tireplaoe stood a wicker-cradle wherein slept a lovely child. "'That's my little Gretchen,' the said, with a happy and proud smile. 114 I've got three nice children, the pldest quite a lad.' 4,4Then, please tell me, for I am! aearly dying of curiosity,' I naid, ' how ' comes it you are here and not at the M bottom of the sea?' 4 Oh, thrt was an awful night I" she ! paid, a shu ow cropping her face. 'I ! threw tuvpt?)f over beeausn Haus, who was cj nelly j -alou-i, wouldn't believe my word, for, yon see the captain whs very 3 wicked and I had found him out, and joi j Hans would not listen, which drove ag 1 mo desperate, and I did not ' j care if I died But the poor ab I fellow had suffered: for. though I * | huted the captain, 1 was too easy to pe I let him admire me But Hans fonud ca, ! me. tbi-ogh I was half dead, and then ] ho kept, the boaf in the shadow of the | ship Mil all tli'1 rnsh and fright wt.fi i over, f. r lie mid he would rather die with dih in an open boat on the Btatban put me in the power of that bad captain. And so we should, perhaps, have ,n perished, bnt a ship c^me along in the mornii'f and picked us up; and Hans ?F would never co to America after that. Hh found good friends and fettled down here.' Rr But your people?' wl " ' Oil, tiiey all come out here?all but tu my poor brother?we never knew where he went; so you soe we were qu:te as well off a-> if we hail gone to America, 'It and I never thought to meet you again sir, nov^r ; are you still on that dread- l?j i fulship?' ai " I to d her all but the tragio fate of tb her brotaer. which I thought was better in suppresned ; but you Bee, f>ir, there was th i no real hunzting, but the poor old c?p w tain was be>e*; hy hi;? own dreadful $] imag'natiou and the sting of his con, science, for, no douht in his heart, he V( had willed to do murder and worse, j,, . And so theie you have the story of the Belle of the Chester Bell."?Mrs. Den- tj iso"- __ p, it Story or a Bedstead. ? Tt was night. ? ! The boardm^ house was wn jt io tl tovebroua gloom. faintly tinted with C an odor of kerosene. tc Suddenly there arose on the air a tl yell, followed hy wild ,bj irgttions and tr jur ous aaawiemas. ei Then there wa< a elankin* and rat in tling, us tif an ovorturned picket feace, ju un<l another yell, wiih more anathemas. f0 The tatted bwdera listened, and, ghostly clnd, tip toed alonz to Baflfum's t0 room, he of Buff.im & Bird, secondhand furniture dealers. As they stocd ^ there there was a whiz, a grinding, a rattling and a baug, aud more yel's. 1 Tiiey consulted aui kuockoJ on the door. N "Cjaie in " '() en it." i,( " I can't." w Convinced that Buffum was in hi ' last agouy they knocked in the door with a Ir bedpost. di Tlie sight was ghastly. Clasped be- tv tween two sturdy though slender frames in of walnut, Buffum, pale as a ghost, was n six feet up in th^ air. Jtfe couldn't ca cuovo. He was c/ught like a bear in a log trap. m "What on earth is it?' thsy said. ^ ? Bedstead?combination. New pat- 0( ent I was tellin' you about," gasped BuiTum. fo Hi.s ntory was simple, though fearful. He had brought it bon e that day, and after using it for a writing dtak, had ' opened it out and made his bed. He cc was going peacefully to dream land, ** wiien ho rolled over and accidentally touched a spring. The faithful inven: 1 ? 111)11 ilDJJJL'Umu' ly ucuauitj a uuuuio crib, aud lurned Buffum into a sqnalling wafer. Then he struggled; a aud was reaching aroucd for the be spring,when the patent becjstcad thought sc it woull shov off eome more and fe straightened out aud thol up in the air aud was a clothes-horse. Buflum said D, he didn't like to be clothes, and he J{ Wiuld give the thing to anybody that Q! would pet him out. They said they ^ would try. They di-ln't want any such fire-txtinftuisher as that for their trou . i?le, but they would try. Tney inspected ljg it cautiously. They walked all around ' it. Theu the commission merchant laid m his little Auger on the top end of it. 76 The thing snorted and reared as if i: 08 ! ? tlorknA/1 rixrat* TDifh a iitvi uccu rujv, <rivU t? bang and became tin extension table 8t for ten people. When they recovered from the panic they came back. They ha fo'in i the -iomamaion merchant in the ii o truer trying to ?et brea:h enough w to swear, while he robbed his shins. Bnffum had disappeared, bnt bt they knew he had not gone far. The invention appeared to have taken a , fancy to him and incorporated him into 1 the firm, eo to spea?. He was down a' underneath, straddling one of the legs pi: with his head j-immad into the mat- ou tress Nt body dared to tonch it. The lumllady got a cmb and leached for its tal vital parts, but could not find them. ot She Hammered her breath away, and ldl when 6he pot through and dropped the ^ club iu despair .he thing swung out its Sa | aims with a gasp and a rattle, turned wi over twice and slapped itself into a bed ; a>. ain, with Bafl'um peacefully among At i "he sheets. He held his breath for a fn | minute, and then, watching his oppor on | (unity, made a flviLg leap to the floor aj I f/v natfA Ki n\Ofi1 f f rnm Koin f? . JUJM. >U 11LLIT7 L<J OJID ?"*** jQ j a folding screen. th A man with a black eye and cut lip j told the JFisp editor about it yo terI (lay. H < said he owned the patent and lg' j B affnm had been explaining to him how Fq ! it worked.? Wa?p. I BU *'Cranks" in New York. 8i[ | A New York correspondent avers that ex "two of the promineut citizens of Now B? i V/??lr (iva r?/\m nraT^ovnllv tr>nn7n fn Via in. X vir\ 4*1 u uu?? auunu W?J iu f-ane?not hopelessly, perhaps, but posi- Vt tivelv. One is a lawyer whote sorvioes .{ are eo mu'?b in demand that he has been [jaid a $50,000 fee within a year for phaj in court since his reason went astray. Re holds a prominent public 'c offiee. The other is a bank president D ami a most, capable financier. He ha* 1 not walked a block in the strpet for six } ears, for he imagines that he is a cherry Ar and if he is exposed the birds will eai lljl him! In this delusion he is immov- mi able- and ac-ordingly he always rides *n to and from the bank in a close car- va riage, and never exposes himself out of doorM. On all other matters he is perfectly sane, and his counsel is taken in Nc the investment of millions on millions. ?< ; To a visitor from the "provinces" it hy mubt seem as if a good many New V i\?lfnro n va inconn MntnVt Am horo T jl? I I '1 A U I O Ul V lUilftUD. ilUHUViU * Oil ever f-e^a so many people who indulged ba in that cmious habit known as talking px to themselves." About every teuth person you meet on the down-town ti? sidewnlKs practices this self com- jl( mnnion. Every hoar of every day you pt>1 will notice men go hurrying by, looking neither to the right nor left, talking iu excited tonosaudkestieulating violently. I ? have seen men in un omnibus carrying u on a liVrly dialogue with themselves. 111 an<! Jaaphiug vociferously at tho "hits' 8el made, as unconscious of tbo i reeence of others an if thoy were alone in the nv moon. The same queer phenomena are ml fr? qaently seen in glimps.-s through carmgo doors ? men with faces all 1,u aglow, swingin their arms and exclaim wo ing in loud voices?driving a sharp rui bargain with a wholesaler, maybe, or ?li< wildly and hopefully bidding for the inh stocks that ure to go up ten per cent. ( to-morrow.'' . (It The Population or New York City. tut A special table has heen prepared by Qt the census bureau showing the population of New York city by ages, soxes, ' nativities, ete. The tot 1 population, foi ^e: 1880) is 1,206,029. Tne unlive white 01 population c insists of 349 250 males snd 859,158 females, making a total of on 708,408 The fcreiRn white population ^ numbered 231,458 males fiiul 245,7o7 of females, inatnng a total of 477,165. Uh** colored population consisted of 9,530 J males and 10,920 l'ema es. The num cot her of childr -u of hvc years of age and 'J und?r is us follows: Native wh te, males, vei 8'? 739, females, 79 875; foreign white, hct males, 2,318: females, 2 384; colored. J miles, 1,<?12; females, 9(52. Total cot tua.'es, 84,069; females, 83,221, or a tiia tTiiid tota> of 167,290 children five by years and under. .Between the ages of \br five years and twenty years the figures ^ were rts follows : Native white, male", Qy] 138 399; femaieo, 145.103; foreign j. white, males, 18.729; females, 22 016 ; colored mai-s. 1.722; females, 2 0 ?1; t ?tal males, 158,850 ; female", 169.130, ? 1 or a grand total of 327.980 Of the per- # sons ninety years old and over the native white numbered 18 males ami 48 females; the foreign whi'e were 63 r males aud 200 females, and the colored were 1 male aud 16 females, mafcing a tc:al of 346 penom rep >rted to be 9f) yeats of age and over. The oldest na j t ve white man was 98 years, while there were 3 native white females reported at 98, 1 at 99 aud 1 at 100 years. Of the Da foreign white population 6 miles and P * 13 females were reported at ll/O or over. The oldest colored man was reported to ,io be 94, and 9 oolored women were re b? ported to ba 100 vears or o?er. S01 ' Tei Rev. Jj. S. Webb, D, D.. of theM. E.. Cal chuicb, died lecently in Brooklyn. the EWS OF THE WEEK r ! Eastern and Middle StatMk Lewis H. Redfield, the oldest printer and 1 imaliet in New York State, died at Syracuse. v ed eighty-nine years. J Three Area, which broke out in Now York at ont the same time the other night, doatroyod u storehouse near the Battery, a building in arl street and a factory near Canal street* using an aggregate loss or $590,000. President Barrios, of Guatemala, Central < nerica, arrived in Now York the other day. i 3 has come to visit bis family, and secure the od offices of the United 8tates government in j ttling the boundary line between Guatemala i * " i a mujuuu. A National Temporanco Cnmp Meeting" 1 it-nod the01 her day at Ocean Grove, N. J. i Georoe Woodruff, of Dorby, Conn., aged teen, bent over to watch tho motion of a ain-cradle swung by his father's hired man, I ben the Made struck him in the throat, cut- 1 iK the jugular vein and causing instant !ath. A rmzi: fight with gloves in Gilmnre's Gar> u, New York, between Johu L. Sullivan and Tug Wilson," an Englishman, was witnessed r over 12,000 persona, who paid each $1 or $2 ImisMon. The conditions of the fight wero lat Sullivan was to knock Wilson out of time four rounds. Sullivan failed to knock out e Englishman in four rounds, and tho latter as awarded the victory and something like .0,000. TnE New York Grcnbftck-Labor State condition at Albany adopted a plat'orm teiffirm ig tho one adopted be tho convention at Chiigo Juue9,1SS0, contlomning tho railroads f i leir conduct during the strikes, as wi-11 as the Hial codo and the prison system of the State, ( fmanding that incorporate capital should le j-tricte I in power, that all public officcr* , lould be elected instead of appointed, tha' ie thirteen specific demands made by the ntral Labor union of New York city wer."> be approved, and declaring tho party to be le original anti-monopoly party of the couny. Epenctus Howe whs nominated for govnor on the first liallot. James Allen foi . utenant-governor; S. J. McParlin for chiel idge of the court of appeals; S. J. McDonald r congressman-at-large. Great damage wan done to property in Bosn by a heavy stoim. Bv tho decision of the highest tribunal in jnnecticut women are now entitled to pr.icco in the courts of that State. On December 16 the ship Theobald, Capiain . L. Waierhouse, sailed irom Philadelphia for in Francisco. Since that nothing has been sard of her. and she and hercr<-\v of ninctocti xu are supposed to have beeu lost. Miss Fanny Tabskll, sitter of tho noted ish laud ieague leader died suddenly uf heartsease at Bordentown, N. J. Miss I'arncll was lenty-eight years oid, had been conspicuous , tho afTaits of tho ladies' laud league, an i equeutly made appeals in b-.-half of tho Irish iuse at land league gatlieiii.gs. ni/viritat. m. M_ Citutis. a Federal covern ent employe charged by iho Nov l"ork Civil :rvice lie form association with receiving from her otlieeis and employes of the Federal iveiumcnt money lor politic >1 purposei*, was and guilty by tlie United States circuit Court id sentenced to pay a fmo of $1,000 General [irtis will appeal to the United States supreme iurt. The case has excited much iuteiest in ' ilitical circles. Booth and Wen. Two farmers named Jackson and Ichor hal difficulty at the house of tho latter in flThitostrough, Texas. Jackson was shot and killed id Iohor fatally cat. A. farm boy who interrod was also bidly cut. Fibe deitroyed the ontiro business portion of lyton, W. T.; four buildings in Fayette, Mo.; aven buihling3 aud stores in Owen Sound, it.; aud the Catholic church at Dunviile, 111. ie losi aggregates about $500,000. Dispatches from a large number of points iu o Sjut i and Weat ah )w that the wheat, o.iro, .y aud cotton cr,>pa will bo bountiful, and in any places will far exceed any previous harsting. Farmers are now gathering the gieatt creal crop e?er raised intha West. Two thousand no e?of grain have been deojed by a eto m in Dakota. United State; Senator Buown, of Georgia, ,s giv.-n to the Georgia Stato univer:y lor the purpose of educating poor young =n. An impromptu duel was fonght noarWedderiru's, Va., between Joseph Addison, of Baltiure, aud liicbard Garland, & re-idcnt of luenburg county. The duel was lought a diatauce of six feet AdJiaou'e jtol huns: fire four times, and he ly fired once, the bullet striking Garland in e wrist. Garland fired five times, ono shol king effect. Addison died from the effects the wound. The duel resulted from Garjd telling a young woman who lives in inenburg county, to whom Addison was engo l to bo wanied, that Addison w<is flirting ib her. Mas. Mahy Lincoln, wifo of ex-?re?idenl ). ahitn Lincoln, dioil in Spiingfldld, 111., >tn the effects of a paralytic stroke received the evening previous. She had bi'en ill I'oi ong time. Mtj. Lincoln was born about 1815 Lexing on, Fayetto Ojunty, Ky. tihe was e daughter of Doctor Robeit 6. Todd, a actising phy?ician well kuown and greatly jpocted in that rogion. She was man ic J in 12, and was at her liu^biud's sido in ird's theater, Washington, when he was shot ' the night of April 14, 18G5. Mrs. Lincoln j ffered such a shock by her husband's a*sas- ( lation that her mind became to a certain tent affectod, and it hecamo necessary about k-en years ago for her friends to take legal 3 usures to have her placojl und>r restraiut. ider modical treatment sho recovered sulli- , ntly to be released from restraint, an 1 she , jreupon sailed for Europe, where she re lined unti the fall of 1380. Mrs. Lincoln's , l*.at and only surviving sou is tbo secretary war. Caukfui.lv gathered roports from Ohio, diana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Kansas, kansaa, Louisiana and Missouri show that 3 wheat crop which is being harvoited in my places ?ili he much above the average d that the corn crop has bet n greatly adnced by recent warm weather and light in*. The stoamer John Wiloon, plying betwoen iw Orlcau* and Atclufalaya river, struck a ag at 11 o'clock p. si. and rapidly sank. Six a were oat. At San Francisco 250 Chinese clgarmaker* nek because three of their fellow countrymen d Ucn Oiidurged. The strikers were smptlv paid off. ruB strike between the boilermakera anl ir employers at Cincinnati has been ended, 3 men resuming woik at an advance of ten r cent, on thoir former wasei. rwo yearn ago Dr. Roberta was l:il'ed a' 1 ilville, Mo., by Dr. Keys, a young jihysiciau. ' ys was twice tried, tlio second trial resulting ' a plea of insanity being sustained. Il'i was it to tho insane a-ylmu at St. Joseph, but s released recently as carol. Upon his ar?1 in Millvilio CharlcB Roberts, non of tin; ^ irderod Dr. Roberts, was told of his prosce. He left his shop, secured a revolver and nted Keya up. lie opened firo on him, undine; him in tho breaar. Keys slartcd to J 11, but Roberts followed, firing two more .its, both taking oi'eot, and Koys died almost itantly. Roberts was arrested. Dscar Goodwin, cashier of tho Loganspori ill.) national bank, ?toi-. ?;.j,000 of the insti\ inn's funds and thee disappeared. I At tho Texas Democratic State convention ii ilveston a telegram was received from Gu\ uor Robens declining to bo a candidate fo j nomination. John Ireland was nominate*. , r governor by acclamation. ( A PARiY of three women and four men wen , the Portage rivor at Houghton, Mich., wli. n [ a boat overturned, resulting in the drowiiin; .? two women and one of tho men-Mrs. 3os> pi anchette and George Lacrosse and wife 101 in .tiiinoeit, aged 103 years, died iu the 1 inty infirmary, near Marietta, 0. 1 I'he Georgia Domocrats at their State con- t ition in Atlanta nominated a full ticket, i id ed by Alexander H. Stephens for governor, a '. R. Hagood, a prominmt citizen of Warren I inty, N. C., and widely known throughout. ,t State and Virginia, was crushed to death being caught in the machinery of a wheat I esher. lt the Ohio Democratic Stato convention in c lumbus the ticket nominated con-istcd ot J! in W. Oabev, tho present incumbent, for irenio judge ; J. W. Newman for secretary a stato, and Henry Wcible for member of the v ird of public works. ? i; From Washington. t rne pensions appropriation bill as it passed 1 i Senate makes no change in the amount apipriated by tho House, whloh remains at 10,000,000. q I Washington disp&toh Bays thero is no nda'ion for the rumor thit J. Bancroft H vis is to be offered the English mission in 9 co of Mr. IiMvell. E rue President sent, the following nominads to the Senate: William Hale, of Iovra. to gov.:i) )r of the Territory of Wyoming; J. j; juyler Crosby, of New York, governor of tii< 1 rritory of Montana; Wilson W. Hoover, ot f lifornia, associate jastico supreme court of i I Territory of Arizona. f I I ' A. v Iubs. Scovillk Hlod a protest against the irobate of any will of Gnitenu or against any et ere i eatameiitary iasutd to any person & itlier tliau hereelf. ? The Pie.-ideut sent the following noniiLia- p, ions to tbo donate: Geurgo M. Sibiue, of Nu- vf a^a, tj be United estates district judgo for tlio 11 [indict or Nevada, and Christoir Barnes, of ^ llmois, to J>b siuveyor ot customs) for the port ti >f Gai.na, 111. 12 in KTanra ^ JTU1CA5U w ?w w* ^ John Bnioirr resigned from tho British cabinet bocaute be could not approve of its ,, attitude in tbe war with E?ypt. 15 News from the insurrbjtion In Hensegovlnia ia to tho effect that an insurgent chief surprised q a district governor who was recruiting with an h sscort. The governor and a judicial chief wero a beheadfd. and twouty-five of the soldiers acII :ompanying them were killed. a A. woman has bten stiot at Balls, county a Mayo, Ireland, for taking a farm from which the former tenants had been evicted. She died ^ Irom the effects of the wound. n The lirst arrest under the repression bill v occurred iu couiity Kerry, In land. ' A t vttpii fii.M F inn flint. thn i rnvinp.iA.1 ? i a government of Peru Las given UP all hope of n foreign iii'ervcntion to prevent the spoliation 11 of Peruvian t rritory by Chili. ' A Panama dispatch s<.ys that a serious rail- r way accident occuricd ou tho Taltal railway, t in winch teu lives were lost aud property [' valued at $15,"00 was destroyed. Admiral Seymour, 01 the British attacking r fleet at Alexandria, has is.?u< d a manifesto an- t * t noticing that he ha* undertaken, with tho con- ^ sent of the Egyp'iau government, the restora- i tiun of order. Nobody is allowed to leave tho r town after sunset. 0 The Hill?dale (Mich.) oarsmen?America'^ [ rhampion l'our-oared crmv-have been refimed a'lmi-sion to all the English races on the r groun 1 that they are not amatours. The latest enumeration of Japan's military i forces shows 43,700 men in tho standing army, i including tho Imperial Guard, and 53,000 reserves. v" Since tho hot season began sixty-four ship i capiains liavo died of yellow fever at the differ- ? eut Cuban porls. Jj A fire in Smyrna, Turkey, destroyed 1,400 ^ houses and rendered 0,000 person." homeless. I The French cabinet reaignod in consequeuce of a voto in tho French chamber of deputies hostilo to tlio government i ill ror tne creauou < of a central mayorality for Paris. V An earthquake shock in ihe city of Moxic > J sent the people oa tho streets to their knees. Net much damage was done, but the building* | could not have ttood much more rocking. The ' shock was felt for many miles around. ^ Colonel 1'uiLiroNON, t to l?^te commander of the St. Feler and S'. Paul fort at Sf. Feter*- a burg, acow;l of tieating Nihilists with undue j lcnieiicy and of part cipjrtiou in their con- j spiracy, iias been sentenced to degradation i from his rank and exile to Siberia, Tduket agreed to enter tli9 conference of . the great powers on the Egyptian question. c The Elcho shield was won this year at Wjm- t blodon by the English team of riflemen, their f total ecore being 1,536 to 1,505 for Ireland and 1,191 for Scotland. ? A. vote of confidence in tho government hav- * ing bf on taken by the French chamber of dep- ' uties, nil the cabinot members exc-pt the min-' , ister of the int?rior withdrew their resigua- i: tions, and tho crisis was safely passed. FORTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS. j Penath Mr. Logan, from tho committee on appro- t priation*, repot tod the pension appropriation i bill, and it was ordered printod and laid over r for future action.... I'lio committee on appro- t priatious recommended the adoption of several j amendments, the most importaut of whicti are : those prohibiting tho payment of double pen- ? aions. and directing the secretary of the in'erior [ totr. nsmit annually to Congress a lint of per- i sons borne on the p ;nsion rolls, together with a Ihe amount paid to each ...Mr. Hill, of Color- t &'lo, from tho committee on postofficea and '] post roads, reported back the Dill to punish i postmasters for making faho certificates of the arrival and departure of mails. 1 TKa fn-v 11 wflo nn nnfl fhft Am ft lid- C merit reducing the tax on manufactured to- ? bacco to ten cents a pound was discussed.... ! Die nomination of Daniel Lanning to be postmaster at Pcuu Yan wan rejceleJ. f Mr. Logtui introduced a bill making an ex- 1 ception lor the provisions of tho Miti-Cliuicue I ill of vrweto bringing Chinese passengers a who merely wish* d to cioBthe continent on 1 ilieir way from other countries to their homes 1 ...An.otion by Mr. Oborge to retain the stanro * tax on bank checks, dra ts, orders and voucbei s over (100 n amount was rejected. Mr. imar gave notice 01 an amendment; to the ntvul appropiiuiiou bill, which he intended to prop-** when ih'it measure catue up in the , Senate. The amendment provides for the appointment of a commission of three persons? t one each from tho line and stuff officers of the f navy, and tno third fr?m civil lite?to examine an-1 iepoit to Coi gier8 at its next Bearion whether it ? advisable to sell auy of the navy- f yards, and if so wh.ch ot them. B*i?> Several Senate arneudmonta to the general 1 deficiency appropriation bill wem non-concm red in. i> eluding the one rela .in^ to tho 1 payment ?( expenses canoed by the i.lncss and ^ deatli of Pivsidont Garfield....A. bill wa? 1 passed directing the paymeut t,o Mrs. Garfield 1 of $50,000 leas anv sum pnid to Goueral Gaifield ! on account of his salary as Preside. 1 Resolutions were adopted in the House de- { daring the 3i1t ng members in the Virginia ' ?nd Maine ?lection cases entitled to their 1 seats ...The consideration of the cont'-sied election case of Smalls against Tillman was begun. 'ihu contested election case of Smalls vs. ? Tillman was icsitnicd, and Mr. Tillman, the J Deiuociatic member from South Carolina, was m 8' ated and M . Smalls, the Republican con- J test nut put in hia place. J The conference report on the river and har- { ?or bill was submitted....The Alubiuia con- j otff #*/! fl? or inn rurin nf Nmir.h Mprn.ikpd^ ju'ftirwf * Snelley was considered, and the Beat was de:lareU vacaut l?y a vot& of 115 yeau to 1 nay. HEALTH HINTS. Bread made with sea water is recommended for patients suffering from ilyspepsia and scrofula. One of the most important bodily needs is food for the nerves. Baiid np nerve energy and you have the greatest resisting power against disease. Wheat, milk and pons are good nerve-sustaining foods. * Brainworkers are peculiarly liable * /? suffer from the distressing affliction of n]eeplessne8<?; here is a cure which in m si eases actslike a chn^m: Wet half i towel, apply to the back of the brain, ind fasten the diy half of the towel 3ver to as to prevent too rapid evupora :ioD. The effect is prompt and char jiinc, cooling ti e brain and indnc'ng jalraer und s?eeter bleep than any narjotic. Dr. Foote pays in his health Mot thly: In one of our city hospitals a case of abstinate malarial fever was treated with all the medicines (one after mother) usually employed in 6ue.h [ ;asei, without success; but a care t Evas effected by taking tho patient to tin ^ ippev floor. All houses in malarial j lis ricts Bhould have sn " tipper floor' 4 "or refuge. n L SCIENTIFIC NOTES. 1 r The transpiratioa from a forest is [' jearly twice as great as the evaporation t om an equal area of free soil. u There is reason to believe that ants 1 produce sounds of such high pitch that v ihey are inaudible to the human ear. I Remains of a remarkable bird of the {j fioeeno epoch have been found near (j Rheims by M. de L^moinne. The bird n vas at least ten feet high when erect, " vith a much larger skull than that ot j: he ostrich, and affinities?it is believed ?to the duck. It is reported (hat a telegram and a ielephnnic message from Brussels were 0: ecently received 6imnltaneouuly over r( >ne wire at Paris. The system is the j vork of the Beluian meteorological Ci urea'.', H?-rr Van Ki.-selberghe, and if v mccessful mu>t pruvo very valuablo. h Colors fade under the inflaence of f( he electric lig t, as in sunlight, but a VI. D^'caux flud that the effect is weaker. c< EVith Hn arc light of 200 candle power a; ;ho influence upon oil and water paint- " Dga aud coloied wool sec-rued to be ai bout cno fourth as powerful as sun- k ight influence. w tl Tower City, Dakota, Las a water sup- g, >ly from a reonrkaule artesian well, ? he nature of which seems to deserve !1obo ^ximination by geologists on the pot. When the earth was penetrated >60 feet salt water was obtained. ], L'wenty feet further d>wn a gravelly t! tratum was struck, ,yielding also Halt t! vater. After boring dowu 604 feet ti resh water mixed with qutcksand came a ip. Now, from a depth of 675 feet, t\ herft in a flew of pure water of steadily | 0 noreaBing quantity. : c Who can deservedly bo called a oon? ' g [ueror? He who conquers his rancorous m as^ions, and endeavors to turn his gj riemy into a friend. Thou shalt not ^ ay, 'i wiil lovothe wise, but the nu- yr riK? I will late;" but thou ebalfc lovealJ aankind. Taxation in Canada hns increased 218 ?er cent, since 1867, while the popu- a ition has increased only twenty-tico >et cent, daring the same period of ifteen years, and the debt has increased eti mm 875,000,000 to nearly ?200,000,010, is The Tronble In Egypt, A later dispatch from Alexandria Bays Adliral Seymour haa determined to land afoice ? occupy the city to-flay, out reiugees mirmi'd him that 9,000 Egyptians occupied ft s^ition outside the city ready f-r attack, lt] liilo Admiral Seym-'Ur oould only land 800 ? ifn. Ho tbeioforo, instead of lauding men, ,.j rder flio city to bo fired over in order to ,r iKhten the rioters. It h&s since been rumored ut iat Ar?bi has only 4,000 very much diaorgan- lrj :od troops, |H the fiica iii Alexandria have been raging *11 1 ay, and the city is totally ruined. Men wero K( ;en running about with torches completing tj, 10 work of destiuction. Two miles of houses ctj i-ro set on fire at one time, and explo-ions oc- r isionallv occmred in the city. The French and ingUsh consulates are burned, and it is re- f oi ted that *ix persons were massacred at the rcnoh consulate. Tho hoiiees from the jj. treat square to the custom house avo been plundernd. In tho equare itself ?, nd other wealthy European quar is there is hardly a build- ,, ig not ruined or burning. The streets re strewn with empty clock and jewel cases j? nd similar debris, but very few dead bodies it] avo been found. Two-thirds of tho tro>pa ? erier'od duriiiK thebombnrdmMnt. Thonnm or of p?T??>iw massacred by the mob i8 esti- tJ| lated a' 2,000. Twenty-eight Frenchmen who it rere in the city .luring the massacre escaped. [a i whole battalion of Arabs was bldwn up id 110 iort during tlie bombardment. Twenty 0j rmod Europeans, who escaped tho general i ,iassacro, were told by a pasha, whom they not on their way tbr-ngh the town, that the aj Ivfvpsi?n killed numbered GOO. p At 5 this ovening a deta -hmont oif 200 ma- s| iocs marched through the town. 8 >me of g, he pl'iudorers. caught in tho act, were sum- . j uarily shot. The marines anbsequenly em- ft larked in tho Bittern. A strong force from jj lie Briiisb fleet, a-sis tod by uien from neutral & iien of war. remain to keep order in tho t >wn tl o night. The murine artdb ry have occupied ti iVt Napoloon, commanding the town. Fort ei larabour. tn-tky hoisted the E'-'vptiau colors, d tut lowered them a^itin on the British squad- ti on assembling round ir. The fleet has been a udered to do no further damage unless it is It irovoked. The Am-rictn squadron has re- ti rned to the inner hai'wir. tl During tho bombardment, alter the khedive'B c istliice had been surrounded, a party of soldiers s in tared his apartment and declaied that they b md or-ers to kill him and burn the palace, n Liter long parley their loyalty was bought by c tromise* of money. I hey then escorted the o lieilivo to tho British at ltas-el-Tln. His a navd was not allowed to enter the palace there t pith him. All the ministers, except Arabi li 'ai-lia, j.resonted thomselvoi at the Ras-ol-Tin ii mIhcc. dervish Pasha savs that but lor the r ipporiuno appearance on Wednesday?the day c .ttrr tho bombirdment-ofoneof her majesty's I liinR olT the Pharos fort the khedivo would r lavo been murdered. 8 Tho khedivo, with Dervish Pasha and some r if the ministers and the khedive's harem, < ' vrive l al)oard a vessel in the harbor to-day. s lb nit 500 loyal troops follow the khediye. A > iroc'amation in Arabic is preparing in the J :hedivo's name, calling on the people to main- 1 ain order and on the troops to disbaniL Further dispatches from Alexandria say that 8 ;!ip fire in the city was not spreading and that f early all looting has been stopped. Admiral a oymour organized a police force and occapied J he gates of two forts. A force of Germans anded from the fleet to protect the hospital, } ind a party of Americans, with characteristic J mterprise, reestablished a consulate among he ruins and horrors of Alexandria. The a American flag and the Euglish wave together " n tlio breeze over the piles of debria and the * urning stones of the devaa'ated oity. * The American marines were the first to and to help the Bi itiuli to restore order. They iccupy the great square, with their headquar- ? ere iu the at. Mark's building. The Germans J ollowed tho Americans. Both parties landed rithout any political instructions from their * espective governments. All of the foreign : resn- s in the harbor, except thoso of Austria " .nd Greece, landed men. It ia now possible ? o walk the streets without an escort. The : afen and shops ?ro reopeninpr, and confl1-nca is generally reviving. The bombardnent of Tuoaday almost exterminated j ho Egyptian corps of artillerymen, which rag tho best bianch of the army. The ires in the town wero undoubtedly directly . litigated, by the principal supporters of Arabi 'a-ha, ii not by himself. After tho lootiug . icminencod, ttie soldiers attacked the orig- -j nul plu.i'ierers and robbed them of their j ),ev* Arabi Pa?b& during tho engagement . VH? at Fort Na| oleon, wlncn neither fired nor r eceived a *!iot. After the firing had ' ;em*ed. .'ie rodo through the town accom xmed by Slahmoud 8anTi and other ministers, jubaoqu inly m, piriy of soldiers deliberitt-ly set !lre to tho French consulate. Another >arty proceeded iu the same systematic manlor to set firo to the other a de of the Groat iquare. 1'ho whole district is so ruined that . von the street openings are indistiuguisha.de. The En^l h consulate aud the quarter containng the gi< at grain and cotton stores escaped he contlsgration. The o li'.'ea of the Ottoman >ank am5 tho Credit Lyounuise escaped the ,'eueral destruction ?t' tho banks. Arabi Pasha ippropii&ted ?25,000 from the custom house c fore lc viti^r. Ac/ording to tho aoconnts of persons who omained in the citv, bands ol murderers, luring and a iter iho bombardment, lorced heir way in'o almost, every hou^e. Scarcely t>iy European tlwe.lin.,' was spared. It appears hat larg'i stores ot petroleum were amit to Uex mdrii tho week before the b mibandm ni ipeei;<i:y o so1 tire to llii town. Tho inceiidiines say 'hat. ihty receivod instructions t > art ire to the houses, 'lhiitcen hundred Chrisian reees were saved iu tho Coptic church luring tl e massacre. A famine is appreleaded; r-lso an epidemic, because of the mim)er of unlmr.ed dead. Whole tumiliesof En .ipeiins 1 ave disappeared, aud it is beliewd ^ hey were thrown into the llames. A procla- f nation, declaring tho city un .er martial law, v.ts i-s>:cil by HUthority <n the Khedive. j The cot respondent i { the London T>bvrnph ? ?! *.* #V. 11 .luimr Ifru.t A lA\Utulrill U| Vwifffl I ? ha Miu ricau Cons ilato t?-<Iay, innl round it j ) cupiod bv sixty American ui..rii,c , ati.i -Ataty sailors, witli a small nun. me noni<-6 irnuud living ou tiro, tne Americans were pi ewing to save tlio Consulate. How tlie Araeriraiis iu_iiagod to get uun|>owder into the square s a mystery, as the air is literally (till of spark-. However, thev succec led and brought down tic houses in tlio vicinity of the Consulate a;;d Ailuco of justice. So bad was the con<iitiouoi ho ct;e?*i8 that the Atueric<n marines insisted is uiiiirding us to our laudingpiace, many cuthioa s being abroad. Arabi Bey haa (liveried the Mahmoudieh ~.ual, which supplies Alexandria with water, ilthough it is believed that tlio larger number >1 the cisterns in tbo city have been recently i led. It was calculated that there was aufti:ient iresh water in Alexandria to last ten lftjs. The London Nricn has the following lispatch: "Everything is at a standstill. Y 'thiiiK is doinu and nothing is known. The ( toman wells cannot be cleaned and filled in t than a fortnight. The fleet can condense c efficient water for the crews and troops, bat c lot lor the populace, who must go afloat or reJ iio to the villages." t The Loudon Time'8 correspondent says that1 \ here is no chance of a resumption of businers 1 n the city for at least three months. He adds i hat he has been informed fiom the camp of i Irabi Boy that the latter's force is incn-a?inn ? ind that lie ia lcgainiug bis influence because i if the delay of tho Uritish troops in attacking s lim. Hia"senilis have been aeen at Ramleh, f our miles ou tsido of the city. Arabi liey has c leilain y not been inactive, though the stories f if J is movements aie newly all vague rumors, f 10 tliat it is hardly likely he will obey the a >orte, which tho correspondent of the Daily t Vtic.i hi Constantinople aaya has ordered him c 101 to nmk\: any further movements. Arabi is t lalliny in all tlioBedouina in the neighborhood c if Itainlch. Geueial Alison, with povoral officers, reconloitered to a point within three nnles of Aran's positions, which were found to be very trong. l he Suez canal ami Port Said were considered j uost insecure. There whs only a small gun- / ioat in the canal and there were 12,000 Euro- . leans in l'ort Said, witti 7,000 Arabs. Omar ' 'anna Lutti, governor of Ah xandiia, returned t o Alexandria from Cairo by way of i'oit said. J do made the fol owing report to the khedive : c ''On the way to Cairo I saw Europeans j tniesacrtd and their houses pillaged at Damanu?/1 WiKulla ii'lmt A A U??:in_ fl Iria robhiOhatl nriived Tboy cut oil the bands f if berberuis because thoy served Christians. ^ Imbi Bey bad called a meeting at Cairo of r ,11 tho paohus, ulomas and notables and asked . uein whether it was right to obey the 11 ibcdive, seeing ho had sold Egypt to E he English, had 'ordored the military bake- v louses to uiako 1.5U0 loaves daiiv lor tho ? >riusU withoat ptoviding for his own trouua, . nd bad sent telegrams in their name. Ihe Jl innister of the iuierior presided at tha meet- n ug. Mahmoud Pasha liaroudi practically di- e iciod tho diecus?ii>tm. Sheikh Hacsuu rccom- 0 ueiuled the dedication of a holy war, but at r ho instance of the Coptic Patriarch modira- ^ 1011 prevailed. The meeting appointed a com- * mttee to go to Alvxatidiia in order to verity b he accusations against the libedive." h A dispatch from Alexandria says: "There j rill be public executions to-day or .o-moiruw. am asked to point out tua1 ah tho culprits lavo been convicted of murdciing Europeans h inder circuit stances of exceptional barbari y n uring the bjiubardment ot Jio city. The ; ^ jurdotera will be shot by Egyptian troops. It -1 i quite possible that Mich im cations will coninuo lor sonic ti.uio, us eveiy day bung* to Pl ght eitnilur caeos." 0 ?? tl The Trained Ear. w The Elmira Advertiser relates this in- o ident of a receDfc examination of rail- n 3ad employes for deafness: ''Now, w lank," said tho examiner, " take the a atton out; of your ears and listen ! Can il nn hear t;his watch tick where I now a old it?" Blank "cocked his car pro- y 5<*sional," and did not hesitato a mo- V lent in answering the official that he d Duld hear that watch tick as easy u ? the blows of a trip - hammer, b Look here, Blank," said tho official, w jsnming a more serious air; '-do you d now that you are an awful liar? 1 is asn't examining your capacity to tell It >.etruth, but your hearing; or it might g' o hurd with you. This watch is broen, and hasn't ticked for ten years I" si ?. t! His Star Still Ascending, K In a recent call upon Mr. W\ Jl.McAI I 6C ifiter, 200 Front street, general ngent foiM lie pale of the Star chewing tobacco, he I htiMspuke to one of our reporter?: "1 wa.- I lu srtured with pain from acute rheumatism. [ cl nd cared not whether I lived or died 1 m ried St. Jacobs Oil - just two application.- w f which entirely cured me."?Suit Fran- ay isco (Cal.) Call. 0j Tho resident population of Great w ritain in tho middle of 1882 is esti- ^ .ated by the registrar general at 35.- I 30,299 persons; that of England and I fales at 26.400,820, of Scotland at 3,- | {" !5,400, and of Ireland at 5.088,079. | bl .. ? i Ex-Sanitary Com. Rttfus K. Hireman, ol i f? rew Orleans,was cured of n H?vere attack of j leumatiem bv St Jacobs O l, .?o we ?-eo by j Ot niteminIheColumbu^Ga )Enquirer Sun ! m The smallest print which a normal eye ' m recognize at a distance of one foot | fa about 1 50 of an inch. 1 ac AX OPE# frETTER, tine Catupokrn ii<-Nirnt? ofOre*i ftllt The jrom < urtlf? of the Highest rtta. dlnff. Wlieu tho people of America become bo thorighiv aiouaod, and on a Bubject of such aeriin imp u taaco as tho preservation of their ID ? Cf res and betlth, it is but natural that the ones native u havo boen largely instrumental in tho gOLiei igm of the movement should i-peak frankly fle]<j8 id cllrtQtly to tho ptople most interested. It _ _ for this reason tn it wo thus cotno boTore tho *->. a., iblic ami make tho following revelations. Havil Every cflroiul observer who has sought lo tons nn..n wUh thn mflrdh of events haa noted :cp u?*vu ? ?? iO alarming iucreaae of certain peculiar physl- ' ,1 troubles within the past few years. Theso ? Be*J oubles have Come at unexpected moments and bold]; i a most treacherous way. They have mani- and I] sted themselves in innumerable lorms, but fonnc" ley havt- always had the same cause. They , ive not afllicted the taiuor parts of tho body, ana it have gone dircct to tho strongholds of the morn stem, and their work has usually been as soiue rompt an it is fatal. Their treacherous and aD(j T iC< ptive natufe has often prevented a direful g jalyeis of what causes them, and, as a result, itense suffering and final disaster have Usu- tfaaii ly ensued. The real cause, however, has h^grd ;en a derangement of the kidneys, and all of beat'i lese troubles are, in fact, the first symptoms . , rthe terrible Bright s disease, which" has cast s dark shadows orer so many homes in the Clean ind and is increasing Wonderfully and oontin- tion ( ally. It io now ecr^fded by the ablest physi- en^ fi ,ans in every land and by eininent scientists ri v le world over, that this disease is the fesult of -Jr lood poisoning. 'J his poisoning is brought Pn"( bout by waste 1 and unhealthy kidneys that sails tsrmit the poisou to remain in the blood, :n- Jeavil ;ead ol throwing it from the system. But it is tphnf jually evident to all who huve studied into the *LXlot Ifects and have become cdnversaflt with the '?8 ^ icts, that a disordered stato of the kidney* And tain 1 TTwiaf?f fh? ivimmnn comDljints nn Vii Lid pain* which afflict the hnrnan race, and 0f WQ :ey cau bo traced to this source juat as cerlinly as can bright's diaoase. To purify a aroP [ream we must go to its source, and to cure a passe isease we mast remove the caune. It being any e rue, therefore, that nine-tenths of all humun ilments are caused by diseased kidne>8 or ver, the only certain way to cure these roubles is by treating the organs which cause D1 g new. How intimately the kidneys are associ* <iiscc iated witu the entire system m?y bo under- rocfc icod from the fact that over 1,000 ounces of ...u' lood pass through them every hour, being n lore than 200 gallons, or nearly one ton in tho t>ner ourse of twen'y-four hours. This vast mass 8Clto( f living fluid is 3ent to every part of the body, John Dd if the kidney* are diseased tho iiupmi'-ies hRt are in the blood are not removed, and icncepaes through tho veins, carrying disease 1 u come of its many terrible forms. The hor- Tfc orn which accompany most of the diseases par^j aiiKod by disordered kidneys and liver cannot , >e described in print, while Jthe dangers snr- "uVe oun ling them are even greater than the the C gony. And yet a person may be troubled for a los uonths without knowing the cause of the dis- ^han uses that have attacked him. Some of tho .. ymptoms of tho first stages, any one of which ndioates disordered kidneyB or liver, are these: the 'ains in the back and around the loins, severe Acad leadHcheB, dizziness, inflamed oyes, a coated qccu onguo and a dry mouth, loss of appetite, chilly jo-j; en.-aii >ns, indigestion (the stomach never is in ;f iider when thekidnoys or liver are deranged), that . dryness of the skin, nervousness, night dimi wf-dts mnscnkr debilitv. despondency, a tired far I eeling. especially at night, puffing or bloating conri indor the eyes, etc. If any of the following blngs are noticed about the fluids passed from COml be system it ahowa that the kidneys and liver devii ire out of order: A rod d( poait, a scum npon the that urface, an unusual thicknesa or thinness, a DOrt] rerv dark or a very light color, a burning senation in passing, a retention or a frequent delire to void aud inability to do so. 6Upp The above are a low of the hundreds bf whei lymptoms which indicate the beginning of ag- ever fravated caaea of kidney or liver difficulties, -uftr. ind they lequiro instaut attention. If tlese ri lymptoms are not checked at once, they are at- p09Sl uotit certain to result in some one of the many eeae< errible diseases of the kidneyB. Bat unpleas- siimi mt as all the symptoms and even these dis- go-jQ (ases may be, they are as nothing oompared to he last stages of the complaints. Tue kidneys vaete away by degrees, accompauied by intense Mins; the heart becomes uncontrollable; the tings aro oppressed; the eyeballs grow glassy, ind the entii e system is reduced and debili- m tn ated. For weeks before death comes the auf- ver, ei or looka forward to it as a blessed relief; and wort inything that can furnish even temporary help b gladly hailed. Thon it is that bloating be;ins; the face becomes puUy and pallid; the $0 re jrca'li can only be c*ught in gaeps; speecn is ^ori mpossible and muscular action suspended, npoi ['be patient finally siuka into a state of uncon- Yorfc ic.onsness to everything except the pains which kro racking him, and dea h comes by certain p&tl, jut slow dot-roes. There can be but one con- ing ' ilnsion which ail readers of care and Judgment pape vill draw from these facts, which is the neces- chai] ii;y of treating the disease in time and by that , m ans which has been proven the best and onar nost efficient. pape It has been our privilege to treat more cases each md effect more cur s of thiB terrible complaint him ban has ever been known before in the histoi-y / >f the world. The wonderful sale which our Y7T emedies have attained is due wholly to the " act that they have cured the ones who have of D leod them. The power and value of any rem- maQ sdy must rest wholly on a basis of worth, and fl tj0 lereiujust where our Safo Kidney and Liver Dure has found its wonderful power and sue- sista !et<s. But in this connection comes one im- Bull jortant fact: It has always been true that arti- undt :les of merit are subject to imitations. No one jon? leeks to counterfeit the bills of a worthies- ? j?nk. The productions of a cracked inventor a ne' >r witless writer are never copied. It is jus 10 with a healing remedy. If it possess no nerit it will not bo subjected to imitation*. If, pr lowever, it has power and value, imitations ? jja' viil spring up on every side. While it is a ti0n" ribute to the value of this medicine that it ha* takei nutations, still, ia justice to those who are jiave luffering, we feel that all should be warned jjeve igainst them. There is but one known remedy that has ever jeenabloto cure serious kidnoy troubles or Fix iontiol these great organs when once deranged, five c ind that remedy is Wurnfer's Safe Kiduey and specii jiver (Jure. There are numerous nostrums on that i he market c'aimiug to le ;usr. as efficient and ome which even claim to be the same. Tne T est of merit, however, is m what has been ac- a spe lomplisbed, aud we therefore say, unhesiU- nivin ingly, that lor all diseases of the ki'lneys, Pt>'s, ivur and urinary organs Warnei's Safe Kidney inJ Liver Cure b ands alone, not only in poiut jf excellence, but in the wonderful result- J00".' t has achieved. In order to successfully avoid ?am" lie pui chase of spurious and injurious medi- _ :ines, observo these facts: Our reme ly is put up in dark amber glass ?.ent lottles, with the Safo (our trade mark) blown 25CrC u llio DacK. a pnvaie prupriciiu-jr pi.\-vi-n' , . uterna> revenue stamp is affixed to the neck 01V11 ind covers llie top of tuo cork and is of a ligln jCE jroun color. In the middle rliereof is a Safe nae(] 11 outline, and on it the picture of a negro about fathering herbs. If this s amp is not found >n every bottle of tho Safe Kidn'-yanl Liver /lire, or if there ia anv,,evid. n :n that it ha* ieen tampered wi It, and if a !-afe ii not blown H. >n the back of the bottle, reject t!io bottle at langi inco ?ml insist on having a guriino one. preci We are led to publi.-h tlio i'< reg?ing in order Livei hat the public m?y kno.v auu realize just and vhere we stand. Wo have always sought t- tonit tee]) our personality from obtruding upon the>ullic, leuowing full well that the value of out eniedy was the essential tiling, but the v.nex- .... implcil use which has been made of this med- Missi cine, and tlio volumes of letters we are con- cane, itantly rece iving demand a persons I utatcmou' roiu us. We are justly gratified at ihe c >nfl- Till lencu which has been shown us, and thankful jlinir or the myriads of cures our remedy has per- ienv ormed, and we pledge ourselves for the futiw, pnrct s we have endeavored in the past, to furnisu "Grei he best and only valuable remedy that c.m nf fo ontrol and cure all tlio many and terrible Octot roubles arising from di-.orders of these great xin irgans. Sincerely, cbanc H. H. WARNER 4C(\, the a< I'ochester, N. Y. cijanf A Miner's I,nek. ?* Mr. Richard Knowles, a prominent p^iaci oiaer of tho Gunnison country, in *?de Colorado, said to a reporter: " While f lf whs yet at Leadville a man came up here from Denver named Dexter?Jim the S )exter they called b'n? r 3 lie was foil Minnt if life and hope, and had some money. )exter looked about b m for a wbile, ^ ,1; nd finally bought a claim on Carbonate iill, which had, at that time, t lot been prospected very well, the (. le paid, I think, about "'15,C I '"fla or ?t, and set to work putting in aach'nery and sinking the shaft, whi( h ? Tn ?as | ready down some 100 feet or more. Bf??k le worked awav on the mine, people pai(j? nughiDg at him a good deal, but he ytree ever onco lost heart. The mine had ^ iot shown up a single lliinq. n the way nu^i f mineral, and the phafthud been sunk nao C y that time several hundred feet. Icutu> )exter did not know what to do. He cover ad now spent nearly all the money he g ad, and nothing was coming in. One gj(}D( ay in the early part of the year 1879 chupj party came to him and asked pblet im what ho would take for his Th< line. Dexter told him, and a Acad< argain was made between them. *?Paj 'he price paid was, I think, $30,000, i:S 1>ri ome 85,000 more tbau Dexter had spent Pro n it altogether. He was mighty glad t,1.? 3 get the 330 000, and thought himself I onc"?, 'ell out of a bad bargain. He rushed declai ut to Carbonate hill and ordered the Cm liners to drop their tools ami quit oared ork. This wa3 abcui 8 o'clock in the well> fternoon. He said: 'Boys, 1 have sold Th# ilis hob', and I don't want you to work medic aether minute in it for me. I will pay **ed ( oa off right now and you can quit.' Ml. the miners had jnst finished a rill and were going to place a blast and to eve Lcov.jr some rock, and they asked to Sent r* e allowed to finish it before they quit 150 v ork. No,' eaid Dexter, 'come out, I on't want you to work ano more; there dgft nothing in the old hole.' They re- OiJ ictantly quitted and departed. Dexter |l ^ ot his money and wao happy. Well, the mine had been bought by a 2 ock company, and in a short time | :ey began work on it. Now, yonng mn, what I am going to tell you is the jtzj iletnn truth," said the miner. " Tbote illows went up thero to that mine and - A .id u fuse to the blast left by Dexer's 'y TO len and touohed it off. After the smoke ^ eared away tbey went in to see how ,uch r:ck had been loosened, when tob*. hat do you think? Thero before their Fg c res they saw tho richest body of silver re which has ever been seen since the p? orkl began. At that time hundreds of J^uiqt loueanda of dollars met tho gaze of the ' flighted owners of the richest kind of TPS, e. Well, young fellow," continued I f t. Knowles, "that mine was the cele- tn" T rated Robt, E. Lee, which has mado erybody rich who bas had anything ^PrW,i do with it sinoe Jimmy Dexter sold Millions of dollars have been turned |IU it of it, and it is the greatest silver in? in the world " A Louisiana man bas established a sol: rm to rmse alligator for their h'dis id tallow. ,A." / y t. '' ^ t A. Bemarkable Adventure. AI i mail steamer Oarlew, jasfcin from est coast, brings an acoonnt of a And je and unique adver ture. A sealiptain, named James Babbitt, a *nd i of Buergo, h. F., who had been in?ti yhftt sncoessfrl among the oil J^tr the past spring, went to Sydney, one' , to purchase a fishing schooner ^ ig secured a vessel of about sixty eret burden he looked around for a ^ but conld not succeed in getting jAC nan for love or money. He then |nt y determined to put to sea alone J'j - - - + * i it avigate J)is vessel down 10 new- nu Hand. He left Sydney on the 3d, ill went well with him till the ing of the 9th, when, requiring refreshment, he lasbed hid helm . cent below to boil the teakettle. i had not left the deck longer three minutes when be ?. [ vessel bump, bump )y again*,1 a roc}- on 1 he fofthd the ^00Df? ilbboom over a rock. SkrtW afc his Posi)f peril he went out ofl ibo md dropped himself on the ad scarcely landed there when a of wind struck the vessel's headand wheded her clear of the reef, ag tbe captain behind. The )uer was soon lost to sight in tbe hat hung over the ocean, and CapBabbitt was left like a lone seagull s rocky perch, amid a S'leat waste iter. He had no food and not a P1e of water to drink. The whole day >d and night came cxl, but without feri ign of approaching succor. JjJ, out noon r-f the next day some' dis< i were off from tbe snore for gunpurpoees. The strar -je sailor was mir ivered on tbe highest, peak <.f the and was rescued with some diffi ? ?._. ?1.4 - i i.. u:? tot ana, on UgJJb EHUClJf IV uio uv;mc iu V. -. go. No tidings of the derelict gT> mer have yet been learned.?St. wrf 'a Dispatch. L" ?? ltt< I'orner In the Sardine Market. ? ere is dunger of a oorner in the __ ne market. For two years the floh Z failed to make their appearance off jig loasts of Europe, thereby inflicting 2S 8 npon Brittany alone of not less ? 15,000,100 franca. The canse of non-appearance has been made subject of a discussion in the emy of Sciences at Paris, and has / pied tne attention of some of the ng French savans. One thirds unusual winds have driven the h nntivo fish whic. serve as food |j bbe sardine oat of their regular j se, and that the sardine has been /j jelled thereby to make the same /\( ition. Others are of the opinion not vast ice fields coming from the ci?l a have aflected the current of the do' stream, by which the sardine is ft osed to be drawn to the coasts /J e it is caught. If this cause, what- M it be, is merely of b temoorary <gc icter, we may see a good haul, and raaj ibly a very large one in the next A ) . Otherwise this widely con3d article of food may become ' usly scarce. A Wealthy Newsboy. n P5i?hout doubt the richest newsboy | a rtcnnfrtf ia MiVo Mvbana nf Dan. I ? Colorado. He is supposed to be i?h h 850,000, which he has invested in poI; ?er real estate. He is not jet ready C itire from business, but from early fl ling until midnight may be seen Jl t the streets orying, ' Boston, New Philadelphia, Chicago, CineinSt. Louis and Kinras City morn- f papers.' In connection with his L r stand be has a bootblack's r, which he generally leaves in v ge of an assistant. He sells his wel us at a unifoim price of ten cents CI , and Ion# experience has made cw very expert in detecting at a glance chi . what part of the country any one ?jjj! :e strangers who throng the streets gal enver hails 4 Ran after that old rio withaT.vte choker and sell him gjj ston Ht& d, be will say to his bs- gj nt; or * Work oflf a San Francisco ho; ttin on that slippery-lookiDg cuss ?? >r the awning.' Mykens is no ^ er a boy, but he is likely to remain wboy for years to come." 41 Two-thirds of n Rottle Cares. uoi . R. V Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.: L>*ar Sirve been taking your "Favorite l'rcscrip- _ for "Jemale weakness," Before i had pj i it two days I began to feel stri nger. I taken but two-thirds of a bottle and beI am cured. Gratefully, Mra. H. C. Lovhtt, Wateeka, HL >bida butterfly hunters get an average of enta aDiece for their captures. 8ome rare /_ .liens bring much more, and oue kind j?t a very ecaico brings $40 a pair. Ja bToat, Bronchial and Lnng Diaenaen 5**" dairy. Bend two stumps fur lary in a?i-t Bi is? ceif treatment. Adilresa Woui.u's Dis- j.?[. art Medical Ashociatiox, Buffalo, N. Y. gen Pri< Oregon Chimnmn substituted rats for _ )n on several oco isiona without any of the J y suspecting the deception. g k and bilious headache and all derange- c b of stomach and bowels cuiel by Br J e's "Pellets"?or anti-bilious granules. E nts a vial. No chcap boxes to allow waate tloi rtues. By druggists. bUi ? cm] frozen mechanicahy is now extensively >'* in tho Southern cities, the price being une ; $1.50 per hundred. His me; Gratitude Inrxpretaible. Pateiison, N. J., May 13, 1881. ft| H. Warneb & Co.: Sirs:? I cannot uee IT iage cxprestive enough to convey my ap- ||J ation of the value of your Safe Kidney and 11 : Cure in all diseases of the kidneys, liver p urinary organs. 1 never lose an oppor- Blo< y to recommend it highly. cnti WM. RADCLirn, ' c0i, e hundred and fifty thousand acres of j. asippi and Louisiana are devoted to sugar for Colorado Buninesa. )8e who think of atteudmg the Ne'ional M ig and Industrial Exposition, to bo held in er duriug Auxust and September, should . iase the cheap excursion tickets of the E it Bock Island route," and tako choice j ur routei', with privilege of return until to < ?er 31. Z" le as quick as the quickest, and no more u?-i ;es of cars than by any other lino?with T* Ivantage in its favor of makiug the siDgle ;e necessary in a union depot. The roiling j of this great railway is simply superb, R{ rting of magnificent day coaches, Pullman ft 3 sleeping can, world-famous dining cars v xquisite Horton cbair cars. :ra; going to the Northwest, don't forget the imi is Albert Lea route to Minneapolis and aul, wbere it connects with all trains of will loithern Pacific railroad and St. Paul, . a p olid and Manitoba railway, The Frnzer Axle Greane ap e beat in the market It is *he mosl jT mieal and cheapest, one box lasting as I is two of anv other. One 'greasing will S wo weeks. It received first premium at 10 Vntenuial and Puria Expositions, also 1? !s Ht various Stato fairs. Buy no other. 25 Cents Will lluy The iatise npon the Horse and bis Diseases. of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner stn irses. Postage stamps takon. Sent poatby New York Newspaper Union, 150 Worth t, New York. J( nihands of persons who aro bald-headed Si' t liave full heads of hair if they would only J* arbolino, ft deodorized extract of Petro- * which is the only prof aration ever dia- a , f%rl tViof mill rMlllT Mll'u J\ 1 uv* "" J the Cntnrrli of ihe Bladder. vn sgino irritation, inflammation and all IU iy and Urinary Complaints cured by "Ba- <<'<" nba." $1. Druggists. Send for p*m- r?-j to E. 8. Wells. Jersey City, N. J. J ) new circular of the Cayuga Lake Military imy, Aurora, N. Y., is a handsome book 01 gy jes, full of information. Maj. W. A. Flint ucipal, Homy Morgan, Esq., President. tE ood-liveh oil, from selected livers, on ?asbore, by Cas*ell, Hazard A' Co., N. Y. ulely pure aud asvcet. Patients who have aken it prefer it to all others. Pnysicians e it superi- r {o all other oils. , ,pped hands, lace, piiuples aud rough skin ? by using Juniper far Soap, made by CaaH-zard & Co., New York. Science of Life, or S?lf-Preservation, a ' al work for every man?younp, middle- TI1 >r old. 125 invaluable preemptions. . .Ulit ?enm trin Bay a Trentlwe npon ihe j*ai and nis Diseases. Book of 100 paces. Valuable you ry owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. yn ostpaid by NEW YORK Mi WtiPAPEil UNION, >'urth btrect. New York. Is I w.ir AlfPTTUfc.* It is *ho concurrent ou'ii ^ I B | t AV testimony of the i'->' fl B I Y public ami the n:?di- Til Cl!""fiJTED cai profession, that v HouMtcr'bStoroa'h I"*' ^ Biters is a medicine J,,',,] thorough and be- ^ cases. Moreover It is ISTOMACH^^ the Brand M'.'rifir fc? - tm lor t.ver and amir. is?< For sale by Dm;:- ??bJ G W^,r\4m K^ts iind Dealers ^"s' V gen erally. TI! miogrnpliv. or Phonpflr Shorthnn<1 rue of wor'us. with PlioivRraplltc alphabet J*s< nitrations. tor beginner*. scut fin applica- of p \ddress, lJenn Pitman, Cinriniiati, t). H.im 4RESHERS~ ?s 1IK AULTMANATAYLOK(JO..Mini:i-U.a p g A MONTH?AGENTS WANTED-00 be?i celling articles fn the world: Isan>{>l> /#< & A(ldrt:??. Jny Bronion, Detroit. Mich. 1 H HIM A*iw*p"'*"r EATING B U If I speed v cure SIONT FKF.K. Dn J.C. v " ]3S,Chicago,III. jitv that H"i AND NOT ^wmo IA/ANVW?TCH LJ WEAR OUT. n bv Watchmakers. By mall, a5cts. Circulars u FREE. J. B. BIRCH A CO., 38 Day St., N.Y? p,,,s I??A hnndsome set of cards for 3c. stamp. 9,'_ tor*. A. E. JJAS-6ETT, Rochester, N. Y . J f: n ' ^ - -f&Q t-*j* " - ?? ' Vend In Need Is a Friend Indeed, by such a one's sympathizing advice and many a trouble has been lifted and burden tened. Such a friendship Is worth keeping. when, fron his experience, he advises and ructo, his opinions should be heeded. If kind ds can never die, and good deeds arc never the Inducement for always doing the good can Is still a greatone. Many people imagine , they had better do nothing than do a little, etting that it is the detail thnt makes the agnate?the drops that form the showers?the e kindnesses of life that muke existence enable; As, in the picture, the Rood old Sr. ob Is extending relief to the mi fieri tig suppllby offering a bottle of tlint wonderful remedy, Jacobs Oil, so all can do something of bene SlIL^l' mention of the vrotfe *&f, j'obs On" E!~??.i,t?hI ,onn3 ,of ^rfoiwnww find cn. niiff rum fa psrf ng with rheumatism. In view 6J fAe record of this Great German RemcrfyiWi'l* b of rheumatism, neuralgia nr.d nil raiisfuA !ases,It appears In the lignt of Mrong dmj torr ryone to patiently, yet persistently, ur^e lt*-i llcation In the diseases named, tearing iu? id tiiat the highest good from man to man < slsts In that which tends to promote their . ce.welfareandgeneral health. Amongotliers : a have no hesitation in giving free expression heir opinion is Bishop Gilmr.nr, of Cleveland, o, who has used the Great German Remedy. jacobs On., and endorses it highly. He tes about it as follows: "I am pleaded to ?ay t the use of Sr. jacobs om. h/i* benefited me atly, and I have no hesitation to recommend 3 all as an excellent curative." sis p?'io ^gerchant'ig 1MBJWC0K nm for htim:i?, fowl and animal flesh, waa . L3L first prepored nnd introd iced by l>r. 3B5 Geo. w. Merchant, In Lockport, N. Y.,. *j9K U. S. A., 1833, since which time it ha? Xs* steadily grown in public favor, and is ily| now acknowledged ana admitted.by the' Tv?a trade to be the standard liniment of the jlP country. When we make thia annonncerfw meut we do go without fear of contra* f A diction, notwithstanding we are aware WRa there are many wbo are more or less /Vw prejudiced against proprietary remedies f|N! . especially on account of the many ftttur*U'i4hnas on the market; however, we are-. ""^pleased to state that sach prejudice do?i exist against GARGLING OIL. We ao not. m wonders or miracles for our liniment, bot we\ :lalnj it Is without an equal. It is put up in bot rtgj ties of three sizes, and all we i tbat you give I. a fairtrial, remembering that the Oil; '"f/BSg^Qiu pnt np with white wrapper (small) Is for human and fowl fr*< -Ccfc wrapper (three sizes; for aniflesli. Try a bottle. i these cuts indicate, the Oil it used nuccessv for all discs-es nf the human, fowl and animal ft. Shake well before using. Cannot be Disputed. y* One of the principal reasona of the wonderful success of Merchant's Garbling Oil is that It &: :nanufactnrcd strictly on honor. proprietor* do not, as h the t cast' with too many, aftermsiifng, for their medicine u name, dlrainits curative propmies by nslng inferior coninds, but nse tne very" bestfjoods to be bought taa jji the market, regard!es?of cost. For p? half a centiry Merchant's GargYiy. ling Oil has 5een a synonym for honesty, and **111 continue to be long as tin.** endures. For HKate*?P- sale by all respectable dealera nighout the United States and ot.^er conntrlea. Oar testimonials aat'? from 183*to the present Tnr Merchant's Jg Gargling Oil Liniment t'w Internal nu<* external nse, and tell yoor [ffiriHwr^ neighbor what good It has d. one. ion I rail to follow directions. Keep the bottle 1 corked. IDCC Barns and 8pralnfl and Brulaea. '"CO 8cal?lK, Stringhalt, Windfalls, ilblains, Frost Bites, FootRot in 8heep, atches or Grease, Foundered Feet, mred Hands, Roup In Poultry, :crnal Poisons, Sore Nipples. Curt), id Cracks, Poll Evil, Cracked Heels, Ola Sores,. [Is of all kinds, Epizootic, Lame Back, ffllinps. Tumors, Heunoorhoids or Piles, xb Wounds. Sitfast, Toothache, Rheumatism, islionc, Foul Ulcers, Spavins, Sweeney, "K"t in Co', a, Farcy, Corns, "Whitlows, w?_ r>t >,? Jnlnta. iCKPcl lea a, ncuno ? . Iohh, Lameness, Contract* in of Muscles, rn Distemper, Cramps, SvslleU Legs, iwnscab. Quitter, Fistula, Y? ,70. Thrush, icesa of the Udder, Coked Breasts, Boila, &c. \i,000 BEIF.4JlJ)forproof of the exiatfiv sfiL encc of a bettei liniment than "Merchant's Garbling Oil," or a better worm "medicine than I V*C'\J, "Merchnnt's Worm Tablets." }^?0rSfcMgife iifgctnred by 3L G. O. Co., Lodfc* t, >. V., I. S. A. JOHN HOPCE, 9?c'y. Engines. 3liable. Durable and Economical, tciU furnltk a ?e potter tcWi H leu* fuel and water than >tny other fine 01liU, not fitted with an Automatic Cut-off. d for Illustrated Catalogue "J." loriniormAtiouk B. W. Patsik ii Boss, Box 800. Corning, M.Y. P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ICTORSAIr HISTORY" WORLD bracing full and authentic accounts of every na- i of ancient and modern times, and including*, lory of the rise and fall Of tho Greek and Homan |)iren, the middle ages, the crusades, the feudal tem. the reformation, the discovery and setttent of the New W.irld, etc., etc. It contains (i7i i historical engravings, and is the nioft complete tory of the World ever published. Send for specln Pages and extra terms to Agents Address National Pcbushixo Co., Philadelphia, Pa. Ef IE wm nrionn' Puruutlv? PilU make New Blcm 3(1, aud will completely change the blo^U in theire system In three months. Any person who* lake one pill each night from lto 12 weeks mav beared to found health. If such a thine lie possible.i everywhere or >"i>* hy mail for 8 letter stamps. S. JOHNSON it CO., Boston, IUom.. nit-rly Hnngor, ->le. GOOD NEWS SGjgABH ZjAX>XES ! l,P Cubs for oar CELK* jfc-JMi ? UK ATLD TEAS, mod tccure - bc*utir?l "yen Bess er Osld Bud T?a C?t," WmJJ^TJvSI M4 pUcei,) oar own Importation. On* EVlrnviHWm of th?fe beautiful Tea ixt? KivcD *wiy io jMi-fy i"*n tin* * Clubfor$2.?.00. Bcwmr* of tb? EAP TEAS" that aro bcin? auveniacn?uirjarc ? letrimeht~) t.i Ijealt!i?*] < w |*ii?mi. Deal only wllb rellwAlo ics and w th fln?t hand* If poMlMt*. No humbu?. 10 Great American Tea Co., Importers, Box la?. si k U Vtst V ST., h?w York. IfiKEHENSLflT. 11 English W-teriuary Suiyeon and Chemist, now reliiiK in (bis country, says that most of the Hore? ,l'a: tie Pott dors sold here are worthless trash. He> i that Sheridan'sCondition Powder* ate absolute itireaud immensely valuable. Nothing on earthi make bens lay like Sheridan's Condition Pow!)i se, one tcasuoi nful to one pint of food. Sold' rt where, or sent by mail for 8 letter stamps. 1.8. iN'SON' 4 CO .,_Bost< n.ilasx., to rnierly Bangor, M?. In abundance.?85 Million pounds LBV Imported last year.-Prtces lower ^ ?1 J% than ever.?Agents wanted.?Dont Lb n W v<ute time.?Send lor circular, lbs. Good Black or mixed, for ftl. Iba, Fine Black or mixed, for 82. lb?. Choice Black or mixed, for $3. a for pound sample. 17 cts.exm for postage, n net np a club. Choicest Tea In the worthiest variety.?Pleases everybody.-Ojdest Tea. ise In America.?No chromo.?So Humbug'*? :lKht business.?valuo for money. B'f WK1.U>,4* Vesi-y SU.X. Y? P.O. Eoi 1287. 'DlinPLJ ' H100TT. P?f. MARTIM2. VlV I n ib#<ir?al Spaoish Asirjl?t?r / I hivcboUfiit, mil, for 30 ctoU, with aft, ( Ifipjy \ n oT?jm and lockofttalr, i#od a CfKRtCT tlC-j I RK of jaur futura hujband or ??fa. with nam#, lime', I plaoa of maouof, tad d?i? of p?jdvlo<" ? ?r? ii?t*sl. Monoy raturoad ta ail aat aautflcd. wEHH . . af. ^ Marti*?. IQMawt'/Jfl.,b?a*?o. Ma?. ' i"'iao Pflv r nrrrrtnn Youmr Ladies' 11 MP MHW 11 vnu want to learn Telefcrapay in UIXU IVILf* a few in mtlis, anil bo certain c*n hi inn. a<lil.i?< \ ai.-nt jne liros., Janeaviiio. w?. JI MILLION COPIES' SOLD. EltYBODY WANTS IT! EVERYBODY NEFDS IT! ie science op i.jfei or, selfpreservation. medical treatise on Exhausted Vitality, Nerroua Pli' sieal Debiti'v, Premature Decline in Man; i io.ii*:en*.tb!e treatise for every man. whether UK, Uii<!'U? ac;fi! or old. E SCIENCE OF LIFE: OR, SELFPRESERVATION, >eyond all comparison the most extraordinary k on Phvnioloey ever published. There is nothing .tcv. r that the married or amele can either re e o-u-Hi to know but what is fully explained.onto lobe, E SCir.NPE OF LTFEi OR, SELFPRESERVATION, nirts those in health how to remain so. aftd the i l l iiowto become well. Contains one hundred twenty-fiveinvaluable prescriptions for all fornfc iif- and ehmnie diseases. for each of which a -class |-Ii\ hician wuuld charge lroui 13 to $M.rtim [4nwt>. E SCIENCE OK LIFEj OR, SELFPRESERVATION, tains :W0 pases, tine steel engravings. is superbly nd in French rauslm. embossed, full Kilt. It is a vol ?'f art and beauty, warranted to be a better iical l>rvk in evcrv sense than can be obtained where i'>r douhie the price, or the money will b? tided in every install re.?Author. E SCIENCE OK 1,1 HE; OR. SELFPRESERVATION, i much superior to all other treatises on medical ioctn that comparison is absolutely impossible.? '/m Hrr tli. E SCIENCE OF 1,1 KEs OR, SELFPRESERVATION, >nt by mail, securely sealed, postpaid, on receipt rice, only f l...r< (new edition). Small illustrated pics, Oc. Send now. ie author can be consulted on all diseases reiug skill and experience. Address iABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, or W, ii. PARKER, M. D., ulfinch Struct, Hi.ton, !Hns*. CIDER set, 'irnters, Steam Evaporators and all other r M-*eh:uery. iio m? <V llo-olieri I i? i , 62 Veeey St., New York. Factory, Syracuse, N.Y.