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A DIFFERENCE. You drink from out your cup The sweetest wine; I have but bitter dregs And lees, in mine. Eou have the richest fruit In all the land; Mine has turned to ashes Within ray hand. You count your conquests o'er And little dream My love is greater far Than all they seem. A thousand hearts an- yours, You care for none. Til (riv.k niv lifT* 4 W ...v ...... The heart of one. ?Edith Sessions Tupper. !t COMBAT OF THE THIRTY. The great fencing master of Paris, Vig eaut, of Paris, narrates this extraordinary incident in a recently published work, the hero of the story, Jean-Louis, being a French mulatto: In 1S14 .lean-Louis had not yet left the i' army; he had taken part in more thai r. thirty battli s or engagements in Egypt, Italy, Prussia and Hussia. It is in Spain that we tind him during that disastrous year of 1^14; which witnessed the supreme effort of Napoleon against the in RSvasion of Europe. The Thirty-second regiment formed pari EBgF of the third division of the army.and had just arrived at Madrid by terrible forced * marches. It wns no longer a question ol . - conquest, but of falling back upon Fraue< as speedily as possible. Scarcely had the regiment been able tc obtain a few hours rest at Madrid, thai several non-commissioned officers and soldiers of that regiment?true zouaves ol the epoch?scattered through the various quarters of the city, upon what in troop ers' language they call la nocc "a spree.' Unfortunately the fun was soon spoiled by one of those soldiers' quarrels, which occur only too often in an army composed of the most heteroditic elements. It must be remembered that as soon as Napoleon I. added a new kingdom to his conouests. his first care was to incorpor ate into bis army the armies of the nation he had vanquished. Thus it came tc pass that for five or six years. Italians, Dutch, Saxons, Bavarians, not to mention our traditional friends the Poles, took part on the side of France in the great battles of the empire. So long as the star of the conqueror continued tc shifce, these armed hosts which Napoleon urged before him accepted theii condition of subjection; hut from the - day the star l>e<ran to pale, each only thought of shaking off the yoke of the terrible master who obliged Europe to conquer itself with its own weapons. The defections of 1S13?Lutzen, Bautzen, Leipsic especially?indicated that the prestige of the compicrer was being gradually entombed beneath the snows of Russia. All Germany commenced to turn against those Fiench regiments of which she had been the auxiliary. The Italians incorporated into our army were almost the only ones v ho remained faithful to our fortunes. But if, even in the hours followinL' victory, certain violent animosities had never ceased to exist between regiments so incongruous both b_v nationality and temperament, it ma\ readily be imagined how such ill-feeling would develop on the day when serious reverses had robbed our eagles of theii aureole of invincibility. The Third division of the army ol Spain, which included the Thirty-second regiment, of which Jean-Louis was t member,also included the First regiment. Now this was composed almost exclusive ly of Italians, incorporated voluntarily 01 forcibly into the imperial military system, Some of them had also started throtigl: the city to seek amusement and wine, Suddenly the noi e of a viol nt quarre cached a posada in which the Frenct were singing merrily. These instanth ceased their fun. and listened: * 4t It is those rascals of Italians. Ha they are fighting with our men!'' The noise redoubled. Soon was heard the clash of steel, a tumult of table; overturned, yells of fury, and ferocious shouts of? ' Rally here. Frenchman!7' "Death to the Francesi!" In the twinkling of an eye the French rush into the street, run to the scene of the fight and shout to all comrades to follow. But other Italians drinking in other posadas have also heard the appeal of their comrades, and hurry to succor them. In a few minutes more than a hundred men of the Thirty-second regiment arc fighting with as many men of the First. It is a regular pitched battle; blood flows, heaps of wounded are lying upon the pavement, and only tnc arrival of two companies with fixed bayonets stops a struggle which is degenerating into a butchery. The leaders are arrested; and the military chiefs immedintely hold council. This time, beyond all question, a severe example must be made; otherwise discipline will be altogether destroyed. Soldiers, oblivious of the uniform they wear, have attacked each other. Finally it is unani mously decided by the eouueil that the feneimj-masters and provosts of the two guilty regiments shall answer all responsibility for the quarrel, and shall honorably fight it out in duels until it shall be u?cided impossible to continue the combat. Fifteeu swordsmen are selected upon either side. Jean-Louis is the first fencing master ol the Thirty-second regiment. The first fencing master of the first regiment in Giacomo Ferrari?a man nearly six feet high, active and incontestable' brave. He has practiced the science of arms from his infancy, in that Italian school still so celebrated. Before entering the army Giacomo Ferrari had even opened a fencing school in Florence, which hid won foi him a reputation that extended to the furtherest parts of the peninsula. It is with this redoubtable adversary that Jean-Louis will have to measure himself Since the famous combat of the Thirty, I do not hesitate to affirm that military history.never offered the spectacle of a more terrible encounter than that of those soldiers, all skilled in the exercise of their art.?all habituated to look death in the face without winking?all resolved to sustain the honor of their regiments to the la?t gasp. Imagine a whole army all drawn up in battle array upon one of those plains without the walls of Madrid! In the center of this solemn marshalling of soldiers under the dark blue sky of Nueve Castilla, a large empty space has been reserved. P'or this spare choice has been made of a slight elevation of the ground, forming a sort of natural platform which dominates the scene?so that when, in a little while, the selected combatants shall take their places naked to the waist, with drawn swords, there will not be a single spectator of the tragedy among all these impulsive soldiers drawn up in line ?of all the .Madrid populace that pant with excitement as at the outset of a I mil-tight ?who will lose a single detail of the comhat which is going to take place. It is in the presence of ten thousand witnesses that the honor of the army is to he washed in the blood of those thirty brave men. There is a roll of drums. Sonorous and brief words of command arc given. , Simultaneosly the butts of ait tnose muskets descend upon the firmsoil.makiri" it quiver as with a vibration of thunder. The men suddenly appear upon the empty space of the little mound; the)' take their places with a quick and confident step. One of these two men, tail and strong, with black eyes and scornful mouth, gazed around him at the feverishly curious crowd with an air of haughty confidencc?it is Giacomo Fer* rari." The second, also tall, very swarthy; with muscles that seem like bands of dark steel, remained perfectly motionless, waiting?it is Jean-Louis. The seconds of both combatants take their respective places. A silence as of death has suddenly succeeded to the murmur of curiosity which had circulated like the moaning of the wind before a storm. And in the midst of that silence, suddenly bursts forth '> . these two words, heard by ten thousand spectators: "Engarde!'' The two fencing-masters cross swords. '* From the first instant Giacomo Ferrari seeks to make a deadly thrust at JeanLouis, but in vain?his sword perpetually encounters the immovable blade of his adversary. He'retires a step and resigns-himself to more patient mancnuvres. He caresses, he teases the sword. Calm and watchful, Jean-Louis lends himself to all his adversary's flourishes. Suddenly the Italian utters one of those f|roars peculiar to swordsmen of his race, and makes a sudden leafl to one side, followed by a lightning upward thrust. It is an old Florentine trick that t has often done him good service. But almost at the same instant a cry of anger, rather than of puin. escapes the lips of > Giacomo Farrari; with unparalleled rapidity Jean-Louis has parried the thrust, and his own blade, after lapping v abouthis adversary's to preseut another s'v Jange, suddenly abandons its apparent purpose, and delivers a "swift riposte, 1 burying itself in the Italian's shoulder. "It is nothing." says Giacomo, recovering himself with difficulty. Again the sworrts cross: but almost immediately the Italian feels himself struck in the breast. This time it is the sword of Jean-Louis which attacks; and it has entered deeply. A livid pallor suddenly overspreads the face of Giacomo; his sword slips from his grasp, and he falls heavily to the ground. They rush to his side. He is dead. Jean-Louis has already resumed his first position, lie wipes his sword, and holding the point downward, waits. The first fencing master of the first regiment has been carried off dead: but nothing has been decided. Fourteen "'? o.lvnr^'irl/ia fi-nr-incr masters iltld Illuiv . V . provosts, are standing at the foot of the mound, impatient to measure themselves with the victor, and eager also to avenge the death of that chief whom they had believed invincible. Jean-Louis has scarcely taken two min utes rest. He is again ready; a new adversary leaps to meet him; their swords ' cross. A sinister clash, a cry, a gasp; Jean-Louis has delivered his thrust, and recovers himself holding his sword point 1 downward. A second corpse is L iiui before him. The third adversary pre| sents himself. The judges of the com' bat are actually compelled to interfere in order to prevent him from rushing recklessly at Jean-Louis, who with an eye .1 ??m\v cnror ofliimself than before I ?and without thinkingof rest, is equally . ready to meet him. . "1 am not at all tired," he simply re1 marked. The signal is given. The Italian is a very tall man, like the fi st fencing mas' ter whose corpse lies beyond, with a mili| tary cloak thrown over it. He has at' tentively watched the sword-play of the | mulatto; he thinks that he has surprised ' his secret. He multiplies leaps, feints, surprises. Finally, crouching almost to . the very ground, like a tiger preparing to spring, he delivers a terrible upward 1 thrust at the mulatto. But the blade of ' Jean Louis, after i lightning parry, buries itself in the Italian's breast. ' The latter is borne away insensible. ' Shall I follow the details of all these epical duels? No. Let it suffice for me to 1 remind the re ader that what I am now > incf.iw-?th'it T nm wining is aiiiiiuun^ insu'i i ??? inventing nothing?that this encounter 1 is recorded in the official bulletin of the army?and that I have a.so obtained the evidence of witnesses who heard the narrative from the lips of Jean-Louis in 1 person. So much said, I will conclude the narrative in as few words as possible. Ten new adversaries succeeded the first three?all experienced prevots d'armesof established reputation. All these ten fell before Jean-Louis. The thirteenth was ' carried away senseless, in the midst of a clamor that sounded like a vast clamor of I terror. * r rvF with. 1 .'YiLcr mis sulwoiuu w nvw,^., out ])rocedcnt in the history of the duel, 1 one might readily suppose the French ! master was wearied out. In that unheard-of contest, which, timed by the watch, had Listed scarcely forty minutes, Jean-Louis had delivered twenty-seven sword thrusts, of which three were in- j staneously fatal. There were only two j of his adversaries left out of the fifteen ' who had been at the outset so anxious to measure themselves with him. Assuredly, ,those two men were not a whit less > brave than those who had gone before j them, but however strong human wills may be, how could their courage fail to be shaken by the successive shock of so many poignant emotions! Nevertheless ' neither of them showed any signs of the 1 despair which must have invaded their hearts. Pale, but resolute, they remained erect, shuddering, but ready to advance to tneir iate. A sort of momentary truce had re1 suited from that moment of terror for one side, of proud enthusiasm for the ' other. The colonel, an old soldier 1 bronzed by twenty-five years of campaigns. now deemed that the terrible but , necessary lesson had produced the effect desired. It was now possible, without the least blemish to military honor, to ' check the reparation exacted at its thir teenth victim. ' The colonel went up to Jean-Louis, who, in his bronze immobility, seemed like some antique 9tatue of Fear. "Master." he said, "you have valiant! ly sustained the honor of the regiment. In the name of the whole Thirty-third, I thank you! But thirteen successive 1 duels must have almost snapped your muscles asunder. Withdraw now!?if vour fellow fencing-masters choose to i l ii... ...:a | 11111811 Ulf IJUUllTdl tMUl IJUV ivuiutu ; ing adversaries, they cr.n do so."' Jean-Louis' anger exploded?as though the colonel's words contained the intimation of a doubt -or as though he felt a bitter pleasure in giving voice to the | overfulness of emotion which oppressed him. ' No!" he shouted?"no! I will not abandon the post assigned to me by the confidence of the Thirty-second regiment; I will stay right here; and I will fight just as long as I can hold a sword!'' In uttering these woris, Jean-Louis made an energetic gesture. In the over exerted condition of his nerves, he had not noticed that the circle nf spectators, encouraged by the colonel's intervention, was closing in about him. In gesturing his sword described a swift half circle, s!i*rhtlv wounding one of his comrades in the leg. Jean-Louis observed the accident before the wonnded man had even time to utter a complaint; his feverish ardor instantly left him. lie sprang to his j friend; ana tears were seen m rne eyes , of the mun who, without regret or weakness, had just shed the blood of thirteen adversaries. "Ah!'' he cried?"only one man of the Thirty-second has been wounded today, and that wound was given by me!'' The colonel took advantage of the incident to terminate the encounter. "Jean-Louis," he said?"that is a warning! Enough blood has been shed. All have acted like brave men?will you not take my word lor it as a judge of military honor?" "Why, colonel?" "Weil. I declare that honor has been fully satisfied: and that only one thing remains for the Thirty-second to donamely, to shake hands loyally with the lirst." An enthusiastic cheer arose. Only the two remaining provosts of the First regiment remained motionless and silent. The colonel, pointing to them, said to Jean: "You know they cannot be the first to come to you."' Jean Louis felt himself conquered. He threw down his sword, and advancing to the two provosts, held out his hand to them. ' " Vive Jean-Louis !?vivo Thirty-second !" shouted ten thousand voices. ' Vive le First n*?iinent!"' cried Jean- i Louis?"we are all of one family. Vive | Fanned" It was the signal of reconciliation?a reconciliation tl.at was sincere and complete. In a moment both friends and adversaries had gathered about JeanLouis, to compliment him, to dispute the honor of pressing his hand. Much affected, the fem-inir-ma^ter tore himself away with difficulty, by reminding them that it was his duty to look alter 1 the wounded. This mark of sympathy won all hearts to him. From that ! moment all ill-fealing between the two ' regiments ceased; and the treaty of peace was celebrated the same evening with many bumpeis of Xeres wine. Thus ended this duel, or rather duelbrelan, which realized in the nineteenth century the legends of ancient chivalry. Rough on the Cat. Some animals, as a class, are noted for inrltin'rliinlc nn I b|)'JC'lcll UWl, U1IU OUMIV ........... mutter of what class, have individual and private vices of their own. Dogs, as a class, are quarrelsome, peacocks are proud, mules are reckless, hogs are gluttonous, foxes are tricky, opossums lie, crows steal, cats are cruel and selfish, never doing anything out of love for their masters. When they catch mice, or play, even, they do it not as a benefit to us, but for their own appetite or amusement. They do not. like the dog. make sacrifices for men, and have neither faithfulness nor gratitude. While a dog watching a piece of meat will starve rather than eat it, a cat will s eal or lickit when not hungry. Like the tiger, which it resembles, it cannot be tamed or humanitariunized, whereas a dog, like a lion, his prototype can be. The cat. as a class, is about the meanest or morally most wicked of animals, without one redeeming feature except cleanliness.? Modem Age. Ill a paper read before the Edinburgh Health society Dr. Almond referred to the custom of having the head covered out of doors and uncovered within doors ; as very injurious on account of its making people so sensitive to draughts of air as to causc them to take cold. Boys, he said, i who went bareheaded out of doors could ; stand a greater amount ol ventilation in \ school-rooms and sleeping-rooms than i J those who wore head coverings. I i THE MAN WITHOUT BONES. A traiTED STATES MARSHAL'S ALLEGED DISCOVESY. A ."Wau Who Can be Flattened Out liike a Pancake and Kollcd up Liko Wall Paper. Your correspondent was introduced to Isaac Arbucklc. a member of a United Cfrtfoo morclxil'a nncsiP \V hicb had iust returned from a raid in search of moon shine whisky manufacturers in the mountains of Eastern Kentucky, says a letter from Lexington, Ivy., to the Cincinnati Tiinex-Stur. Arbuckle, when interrogated, stated that he had made a discovery while prowling anions the mountains down below Barbourvillc that he felt sure would be of interest to newspaper readers. IIi< story, in his own words, was as follows: "Two days after leaving Barbourvilla I spent the night at the cabin of a poor farmer among the hills, and during a sori:il fainilv conversation, in which 1 par ticipated, after supper, some one incidentally spoke'of Hector Davis, 'the man without bones.' I immediately asked what was meant by the expression, when my host explained that Hector Davis was one of their 'neighbors,' living some three miles further on among the mountains, and that he actually had not a bone in his body. As I expressed some skepticism, he volunteered to show me over to Hector's the next morning. We knocked at the door of the Davis cabin about nine o'clock the next day, and the first thing that struck my attention upon entering was a middle-aired man sitting bolt upright. and supported bv a rude and peculiarly-shaped frame-work. "He was introduced tome as Hector Davis. I at once entered into conversation with him, and discovered him to be a man of fair intelligence, and eager to tell all about himself, in a voice that was as strong as my own. I grasped his hand upon first entering, but his fingers all rolled together like a cabbage leaf in a mushy sort of a way that*made me glad - . : ? ,.r a..?. * T?L-;,wr nf Ins 10 It*I go Ul lin in. iuiw>.^ ... limbs, they yielded to the pressure until they were flattened out to twice their proper width. The only indication of bone was in his skull, which, while pliable almost as shoe-leather, still offered a kind of protection to the poor fellow's brain. ' His neck was as limber as a dishcloth, and when his head was released from its support, which was something in the shape of a similar contrivance used in photograph galleries, it rolled helplessly about on his shoulders like a football. 11 is arms drooped at his sides, but with the aid of the muscle he was enabled to partly raise the forearm, although the hand curled over limply and gave the whole a sort of zigzag shape. He shuffled off his slipper, and retjnested me to step on his foot. I did so, and it at once spread itself out until it looked no Sf O v.iilrAnfl trnin llllfl lMSSed OVtT it. "a " - I It slowly resumed its natural shape, but it was fully half an hour before lie was able to get the foot in his slipper again. "Perhaps you would like to tie my leg in a knot?v he suggested. '*1 found no difficulty in performing this feat, while my friend accomplished the same with the oilier leg: and after we had also tie I koots in both his arms, he presented a very knotty problem indeed, and one that would have set a proessional contortionist crazy. "When he had unraveled all the knots and straightened his limbs again, he requested us to lift him gently from his frame-work and place him upon the floor. This we found noeasy task, for his body slipped about in our arms like an eel, and it was only by securing a firm grip upon his clothing that we managed to keep him from falling. AVe finally succeeded in straightening him out upon the floor, and then my friend, who seemed to thoroughly understand the boneless man's programme, seized a barrel standing ne.ir, and which I afterward learned contained turnips, and swiftly upending it, at once proceeded to roll it over the prostrate Davis, from his toes up to hi, chin, and back again to his toes. ''The only manifestation of pain he made was when kthe barrel passed over his heart and lungs; but it left him in a horrible shape. I can only describe it by comparing it to that of a man made of mud and then thrown up and flattened against a wall. But I had no time to contemplate his flatness, as he almost immediately called to us in a rather weak voice to ;rcll him up.' This we proceeded to do by doubling his head over his chest, and then continuing to 'roll him up1 as you would a carpet, until we came to his feet, and he formed a perfect cylinder about as large around as a half-barrel. A voice feebly piped from the center of the cylinder for us to unroll him, and we soon had him once more spread out over the floor. "While his body was resuming its former shape I learned from his old, spectacled mother, who had sat during all these proceedings knitting in her rocking chair, that Hector, who was forty years old. had always en joyd excellent health and provided well fur her until the beginning of his peculiar affliction two years ago. lie first observed a softening of the bones of the tovs and this rapidly spread to all parts of his anatomy, although, beyond making him helpless, he never experienced any incon venienee from it. All his vital organs performed their functions properly, and she believed he would live to a good old a?e. She had a younger son. then in the field at work, who assisted her in handling him, and altogether they got along quite comfortably. She did not know what the doctors might think of neotor, as sue nau 1101 seen ?i uucun uj? in them thai- hills for nigh onto twenty years. After my friend and I had replaced the boneless man in his framework. we bade him good-bye and came away.'' The Water Lily's Story. "When I first opened my eyes to the daylight I was in a lovely place. My home was a beautiful pond, whose waters were so clear they reilected the blue sky and fleecy clouds overhead, and where everything was still and calm and tjuiet: I was surrounded by fair companions each as lovely as myself. We grew fairer and sweeter every day, and we thought ourselves better than the common flowers that grew on the farther side of the pond, the Daisies, the Blue Violets, Adders' Tongues, that queer fellow, Jack in the Pulpit, and the Wild Rose, who was so rude if any one touched her. Were we not tall and slender, fair and sweet of face, and did not our green dresses become our fair complexions wonderfully? Were we not admired by every one who saw us; and more tiian all, did not our mirror, the pond, tell us we were beautiful every time we glanced in it? Yesterday there came to our pleasant home a gay pleasure-boat with a party of ladies and gentleman; the ladies all exclaimed, as unnn oj viiw UU "(ill llOWCVVPCt how lovely!" and one, whose face was like an angel's, reached over and took me and several of my companion* into the boat with them. The other ladies gathered some of my fair sisters, and we were all earned away to our new and separate homes. Tin* lady that 1 and my sisters were with took us to a grand house on a hill, where we were again admired and our fragrance inhaled, and at night I shone like a star iu the raven braids of my new mistress's hair in a ballroom. Her lover's hand placed me there, and as he did so, he bent and whispered something in her ear, and then kissed the rosy lips that looked so tempting. The warm bloom rose to her check, and I thought I never had beheld anything so beautiful. I missed my old.home and my pretty mates, but I felt sure I had fallen into good hands, iind I felt proud in having so beautiful a mistress, and beingso admired. When my mistresscamc home and looked in the mirror she saw my drooping head, for the heat in the hall-room had made me taint and languid. She took me from her hair, and said tenderly, as she held me in her hand. ''Poor wilted lily, I'm sorry you faded so soon." Then she put me in a vase of water, which refreshed and strengthened me. and this morning when she looked at me my white petals were open once more, which made her exclaim: "Ah, my pretty lily, you are alive yet, ain't you. But I have lost, some of iny fragrance, and I know that before the sun sets 1 shall be dead, for the life of a lily is very frail. They say this is a cold \unrlrl lmt. "mv linns have fallen in nleas ant places," and I am sure that when I am dead, and all my beauty and fragrance gone forever, ray sweet mistress will not throw me into the street to be trampled in the mud, but will lay me carefully away in remembrance of the night when her lover whispered sweet, tender words as he placed me in her shining braids of hair.?Floral World. Life is made up, not cf great sacrifices f>r duties, but of little things, in which smiles and kindnesses, aud small obligations, given habitually, are what win incPpreserve the heart, and securc comfort. 1 SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL A new process in shotmaking docs away with the tall towers. A strong current of air is forced on the lead as it falls into the water. Glass is becoming fashiouable as a protection to oil paintings, and as a safeguard against moths and damp the backs of valuable pictures are covered with rubber cloth. Scarcely a quarter of a century ago there were plenty of productive oyster beds in the waters ot Norway. At thn present dav the oyster is very scarce, as < . 1 1 onrl rnc UIII1KS IlilVU IJUCIl UVtlU.TUVU nuu neglected. One of the latest purposes that paper pulp has been turned to is t > make piping for speaking-tubes. It is believed that paper will be better for this purpose than metallic tubes. The patentee intimates that metallic elbows and couplings will be used to connect the joints of the paper tubes. Although the aurora generally appears at a height of 100 kilometres or more above the surface of the earth, I)r. Sophus Tromholt says it is very possible that the phenomenon may be witnessed very much nearer. There are observers who aver that they have seen the aurora below the clouds, in front of icebergs, mountains. and coasts, and even on the very ground, but Dr. Tromholt has never observed a fragment of an aurora either in front of or below the clouds. It is said that an electric hand lamp has been invented, the illuminating principle of whicii is generated by some simple chemicals that are ridiculously cheap and easily manipulated. A little sliding drawer at the bottom oi tiie lamp holds the electric spark in solution, while by simply touching a button, a magnificent light is developed or extinguished, as the ease may be. This lamp does not specially differ in appearance from the ordinary kerosene affair, and ?an be used in the same way, but with a complete absence of trouble, odor or danger. It is ascertained from experience that it is always best to boil lamp chimneys and chinawarc and ordinary glassware be fore using them. The glass is greatly toughened by the process, and the boil ing of cinnaware prevents n jrum suwcquent cracking. Lamp chimneys and shades which are stained may be thoroughly cleaned by boiling them in soda water, using ordinary washing soda. The glass or china should be put in enough cold water to cover the articles, with a cloth or board in the bottom, and brought gently to the boiling point, when it may lioil from one to six hours, according to convenience. Kairwan Dwellings. In an article entitled il Kairwan, the Iloly City of Tunis," a writer in Hurler's Magazine says: The architectural disposition of nearly all the houses in Kairwan is the same: a square block, in the middle of which is a square court. The door is low.strengthc-ned by nails, and furnished with large bolts; it only opens half-way with a terrible grating. The rooms are arranged around the court, which, as well as the terraced roofs, slants in order to tacmtatc the running of the water into a cistern. They drink only rain-water; the water of the wells contains much magnesia, but serves for all household mirposes. The living-room of the family serves at once for reception, dining and bed room; it is the only one decently furnished and clean. It is in the shape of a Latin cross, taking away the foot, and forms, in fact, three distinct compartments separated by curtains. To the right and left arc the beds; in front, low divans furnished with cushions; the wall are hung with variegated carpets, or ornamented with encaustic faicncc to thp height of a man. The ceiling is made of young olive trunks placed transversely upon the walls, which explains the narrowness of the rooms and the absence of large square ones. In the dwellings of the rich the paved lloor is covered with matting and carpeting, the ceiling is covered with a paneling of wood decor. ni.olu.Mnne onH litflc UlCU VYlLil " iiiaucotjuucf u?v? ....... shelves are hung here and there. Sometimes fantastic animals, painted in red with a liieratical rigidity and bare barisin. relieve the bareness of the whitewashed walls. During the hot hours of thsiesta. the door, carefully shut, preserves in the interior an agreeable freshness. A little window furnished with glass gives a discreet light, which leaves all the objects in a shadow-like obscurity pro'pitions to nonchalant reverie. The other rooms serve as stable and kitchen. There are no cellars, but in the pavement of the lloor of the court and rooms one notices large square llag-stones, the situation of the silos?a kind of great hole, with careful mason work, where the pro I vision of grain is kept for the. whole | year. These houses, veritable gynecffia,sneitei tlie women, whose husbands are arbitrary and jealous masters, aud seclude them from all contact with the outer wor.d. To enter here is an especial favor reserved for the physician and the marabout. Fortunately for me, I had brought a traveling case of medicine,and the vciy first days I had to attend several^ieigh1 bors. I had regular patients, and my reputation extended itself little bv little. This character of physician,the best passport in Arabian countries, allowed me to see and observe closely many things which, without it, fanaticism would have hidden inexorably from Christian eyes. Inappropriately Named. The way the Australians have of calling things by inapuropriate names is inconvenient, says a correspondent of the Philadelphia TIhuh. Their "bear'' is no bear, their ''whiting" (fish) is no whiting, their "cherry" is no cherry, their "flyingfox" only a big bat. It used to be proverbially reported that "Australia is a place where the oysters grow on trees, the fences are made ol mahogany, unci cherries grow with their stones outside." There is "no real mahogany in the country, so far as I can learn, except it has been imported; the so-called cherry is a kind of cypress*and the only truth about the oyster is that about some harbor oysters covering everything close to the water, including occasionally the roots and fallen trunks of trees. (Miserable little bits of oysters, of which it would take a dozen to (ill a tablespoon.) More wonderful is the little "hand-fish," which climbs up on the beach sand, props itself 011 its finhands and looks at one pertly as a sparrow. The "Tasmanian devil" is a good deal of humbug too. At Auckland I heard him described as fierce, untamable, dangerous; at Sydney (his bones only are found in New South Wales) he was fierce, but not often met with in Tasmania; at Melbourne he sank to an "ugly little beast;"' in Tasmania it is discovered that the poor little nocturnal creature is rare and timid. There is one creature of whose alleged habits I had heard with some skepticism?the ground parrot of New Zealand. On inquiry I found the worst reports about it confirmed. This parrot builds its nest on the ground, and. since the introduc: lion of sheep, lias been buiidingit chiefly of wool. To obtain this it perches on a i sheep's back. For some time the worst that was feared from this parrot was such 1 thefts of the golden fleece, but for some ! years now it has taken to tearing through J the sheep's back and dragging out the I liver, which it devours, it has become ! a pest in New Zealand since this rapid ; evolution in Knglish civilization. It is a I large parrot,but 1 do not think it pretty; j its breast is the color of iron rust. ? Australia's ltahbit Feat. j Tilt; rabbit, savs an English paper, is j probably the most productive of the l whole rodent genus; a single pair may I be answerable for a population of half a | million within five years. Originally naj fives of .Spain, the rabbits once rani- ; I tip.ied in that country, as well ns in I | some of the islands of the Mediterra- ' nean, in such an alarming manner that the people appealed for military aid to assist in their destruction. And it was not until numbers of .ferrets and weasels j were introduced that the rabbit populai tion began to diminish. The uuadru1 - - * ? .f *L,. t, peels ot Australia arc emeu v ui iuc iuiusupial'' order: and from the great kangaroo down to the wombat and kangaroo rat (both burrowers) nearly all the tribe are herbivorous. The dingo, or native dog, is destructive only to sheep, while the wildcat, though pretty common in some parts, is not generally prevalent. When, therefore, the rabbit was first landed in Australia the land was all before him where to choose. Iu the official Sydney market rate for January, 1873,. the price of rabbits was quoted at from 2s. (id. to 4s. each, retail. Five or six years later they were looked upon as aggress:vo and destructive vermin, and j had so rapidly overrun large tracts of land as to become quite a scare to the squatters. To-day every phase of the Australian rabbit plague is not onlv regarded as of vital interest by the colonists. but is a subject of curiosity and discussion throughout the civilized I world. r FIRE FROM THE ROCKS.: THE FAMOUS LTTVTOOTTS BTOZTS OP SALT LAKE. A Yankee'* Trick iti India?Phonphorcfli ent Diamonds and Rain ? Heat Developing: Light. '' Here's something rather remarkable," said h mineralogist to a Philadelphia Time* writer, handing out a pieco of stone that was of a light gray color and seemed to possess no particular interest. "Just step in this dark room, and now rub the stone on the wall." The writer did so, and a streak of red light was the result. "Phosphorescence?" queried the somewhat startled observer. " Xo. It is nothi g but simple limc-* r ? '?" nl>niif isnlf. T,nke. MOUU 1IUJ11 lliu IU^ivu uvv.v . Some time ago some laborers were digging out the foundation of a house when they came upon a ledge of this rock that was so soft that it was found not necessary to blast. The contract for building called for the completion at a certain time, and so a gang of men worked all night by an electric light, but the first man that struck his pick into the rock dropped it and rushed out of the excavation in such a manner that the others, demoralized also, left, and when the boss demanded the reason the man said thathc had seen a spirit, or had struck the evil regions, for as soon as he touched the rock a stream of red fire came out. The overseer of course doubted the story, but jumping in he struck a blow with a bar that went far toward coroborating the other's story, as no sooner did the iron touch the rock than a flash of red light ensued that lasted several minutes, finally, slowly dying away. It was found that the slightest touch or scratch produced the same result: in fact, the rock was phosphorescent. A simple scratch on this, you see, Ton^no ,1 lirrVit tVinf will Inst two or three seconds. It is limestone, indeed almost pure carbonate of lime with a few impurities. Examining it under the glass it is found to be loose grained, so that it really appears like a sandstone. "You know," he continued, "there are some objects that, only show their luminons ]>roperties on exposure to heat. Subject this to heat and it will glow for three or four minutes with a rich, red light, and then die away entirely. A piece was recently exhibited before the Philadelphia academy of sciences and the members made the interesting discovery that in their collection was another specimen of a similar limestone, but from Knngberry, India. A gentleman who had visited the locality to!d me a curious story in this connection. It sceni9 that several years ago a genuine Yankee from Vermont found himself in Calcutta with less than enonch money to buy hifh a dinner and his sole property an electric battery. He had been a little of everything in his time, but had devoted most of his energies to collecting minerals and curiosities of all kinds, and when he found himself in the lurch, as it were,he determined upon starting through the country and trusting to luck, lie was very successful at sleight of hand and easily made his expenses. In several months he found himself at the locality before named, and in prowling around discovered the luminous limestone by accident. With mother wit he determined to take advantage of it, and in a day or so the little village in which he was staying was nm 01 ruiuura n> mc effect that a wonderful wizard was among them who was enabled to work marvelous cures by drawing fire from the rocks and Imparting it to the patient. "In the meantime the American had erected a hut near the ledge of rock and was visited by hundreds, and rigged up with a curious costume he carried on a business for some time that made the native cure-alls wild with envy. Ilis method was to take a number of persons into the hut, and with his finger-nails, that were sharpened for the purpose, scrape down the side of the limestone that left marks of lurid flame, of course astonishing to behold; then joining hands with several and having the battery concealed he gave them a shock that they thought came from the rock. No doubt it did them some good, and for a long time he did a thriving business, until final I v a rival anneared in the field, and he was obliged to leave the place. "The subject of the phosphorescence of inorganic matter is of great interest, and experiments arc being made in many laboratories. Curiously enough," said the mineralogist, ''many of the discoveries that have been made regarding organic phosphorescence have been the results of efforts to manufacture gold. You see that is worth the labor of the chemist. It has hardly been done, though I know a man who claims to have discovered the proccss and expects to flood the market?so the first success-perpetual motion machine will probably be made of this manufactured metal. "One of the first experimentalists in the gold-making line was Yincenzo Castinola, a shoemaker, of IJologna. in the sixteenth century. He was a famous chemist of the time, working alternately at his shoes and his drugs and bottles. The real reason, however, for his investi gations was to find out the secret of goldmaking, and one night, in walking in the country, he stumbled over a stone that was so extremely heavy in comparison to others that he took it home and. beginning his experiments, discovered phosphorescence, which he considered the clement of gold. Not being able, however, to get the gold out he took it to another noted chemist and for many years it was the subject of innumerable experiments and attempts to obtain-the gold, as the stone had the then remarkable faculty of shining in the d; rk with a golden gleam after it had been exposed to the rays of the sun. The stone is now well known as barvtine. that is nhos phorescent after insolation. The curious mineral is still sold in Kolomna as the Bologna stone and explained as solar light. "The discovery thai diamonds are phosphorescent was made in 11(5:} by Hobert Uoylc and created a great sensation. A diamond was shown that looked like a burning coal in a perfectly dark room. An old chemist of Hamburg while trying to manufacture a gold fluid made accidentally a subs.ance that shone in ' the dark, and in a delirium of delight lie went to the chemist, John George II. of Saxony, thinking that he had discovered the golden secret. He took care, however, not to inform anyone how it was made. Another chemist hearing of the discovery traveled a Ions distance for these times and succeeded in buying the secret for about $200 of our money. But his experiments were not successful, the material being merely phosphorous that was discovered iu this way. Later, in 1GU3, a diflerent phosphorescence was discovered by calciming nitrate of lime, and others soon followed, until now hundreds of different methods of its manufacture are known. "Heat in some mysterious way de- | velops light in certain minerals; thus el dspar, lime, sulphuret of calcium, dia monds, etc., when heated to a certain degree give out a soft, phosphorescent gleam over their rntire surface. In fact, j the luminous property is possessed by i everything?plants, insects, minerals, and even the very air often shows re- | markablc exhibitions. Some years ago I 1 was traveling on horseback at niglu near Trenton, New Jersey, when a sudden j rain-storm came up unci in a minuie 1 ?as completely surrounded in a blaze of light. You would have thought the liquid tire was bcinir poured over me. The trees, rocks and road gleamed in the sa ne mysterious way?in fact, if I had been in- j clined to superstition 1 should have j thought that my day had come. It soon ! disappeared and was merely phosphorescent ruin, the cause of which I knew not." Coats of Arm*. In olden times people of distinction had coats of arms,us they are called: and in England the nobility have them on their furniture, couches, silver, etc. This is the way they came in use. As the poor people did not know how to read, il... I ,1 1 1..,., till! IUIU.-5 UHU. UU1UI ^lUlb nail uuu a/Ull- | ners made and on them various figures, ! such iis u lion, dragon, lily, helm, were ! painted. Thus the soldier could keep i near the leader. Then it seems that the | same ligure was embroidered on the out- j side garments, so that the common | soldier would know where he met a per* j son of superior rank. Sometimes these > figures recalled some Rotable event in j the fortunes of the family; the spider, which Robert Bruce watched mending its web in the cave while he was hiding from his enemies, was placed in the royal arms after he became king of Scotland. In order to show that they have had brave, courageous or loyal ancestors, tiieir descendants keep up the practice of wearing coats of arms; they value j them verv highly. ?Sc/iohir'a Companion j * Mr.*. Hayes, Mrs. Tyler and Martha | Washington are the only wives of former Presidents whose portraits are hung in ; the White House. I Modes of Salntatlon. A French traveler reports that every race among whom he has sojourned has its own mode of salutation, not excepting the great Yankee nation. He informs his readers that, however a few w polite and Europeanized Americans may salute one another, the characteristic b national salutation is "Hello!" The Arabs say, on meeting, "A fine f, morning to you!" The Turk says, with dignified gravity, t. 'God grant you His blessing!" The Persian salutation is familiar to all the world from its comic quaint ness, "May your shadow never grow less!" f The Egyptian is a practical man. lie has to earn his taxes by toil under a b burning sun, and accordingly when he c meets his fellow, he asks. "How do you 8 went?" B The reader is probably aware that T in those low latitudes all is well with a laborer as long as he perspires freely. , The good Chinaman loves his dinner. "How are you digesting?" he kindly inquires, on meeting a friend. The Greeks, who are keen men of r business, close bargainers, ask one * another, "How arc you getting on?" The national salutation of Naples was ' formerly, "Grow in grace!" At pres- * cnt. in all parts of Italy, they use a phrase equivalent to saying, "How arc you?" ? The Spaniards say, "How arc vou passing it?" " s The French, "How do you carrv your- 1 self?" The Germans, "How does it go?" ? The Dutch, "How do you travel?" 1 The Swedes, "How can you?" meaning, "Are you in good vigor?" I 'n,? "TUwplini I i UC 11UJOIUUO) 1VV t> v*? The English-speaking races, in addition to. the juvenile and telephonic "Ilello!'' say, "How are you?" and "How do you do?" We also take off the hat, shake hands, embrace, bow and kiss,as,in other climes, people rub noseB, touch foreheads, and take off their shoes. The American in Italy is surprised to see men embrace and kiss each other, as in Bible lands. The Italians in turn look upon our hand-shaking as cold and ridiculous, the bobbing up and down of the arm having no meaning whatever in their view. The touching ot the tips of gloved fingers, if more graceful than handshaking, must also seem to people of the East as professional and expressionless. The bow, as a mark of respect, is a custom used by nearly all nations nnd one that had its origin in ancient times. ? Youth'a Companion. 1 A Use for Dead Languages. 1 The following by J. T. Trowbridge, in Sf. Nicholts, is a clear and simple explanation of the reasons for giving to llowers and trce9, beast9, birds and fishes, the long and, to many, unintelligible Greek and Latin names they all bear: 'But I can't see the U9e of giving Latin and Greek names to birds nna things, nowadays," said Gasper. "Perhaps I can explain it to you,'' said the master. "Take the picus aurutus, for instance. We have seen that it has several common names; one of which, certainly, belongs to another bird. So if a person speaks of a yellow-hammer, how are you to know whether he means this or the European species? In ordinary conversation you may think that is not very important; but in all scientific descriptions, it is necessary that such names shall be used as can not be misunderstood." "But why can't men of science agree upon English names?" the boy inquired. ' That is a sensible question. The answer to it is that all men of science are not English-speaking people. There are German, French. Spaniih, Swedish, Dutch, Russian ornithologists, and those of many other countries. Now, it is true, they might all agree upon an Kngliclt nnmo fr>r rwh bird: but it WOllld be us unreasonable for us to expect that of foreigners, as we would consider it, if we were all required to learn a French or a Dutch name. It really seems much simpler and more convenient to use Latin and Greek names, which learned men in all countries agree upon and understand; so that a German man of science will know just what a Spanish man of science is writing about, if he uses correct scientific terms. Now, take the case of this very bird. A Swedish naturalist named Linnteus, who was a great botanist, and classified and gave scientific names to plants, also gave names to many birds? to this species. I suppose, among others; so that when picus auratus is ailuded to by any writer in any language, ornithologists know just what bird is meant. So, you see, these scientific teims that you dislike form a sort of universal language understood by men of science the world over.'' Captain Kid. Ivid was the son of an old privateer in the West Indies, and being known as a brave seaman, was recommended by Lord Bellamont, then governor of Barbadoes, and several other persons, to the home government, as one admirably fitted to command a king's ship cruising against pirates, on account of his knowledge of those seas and practices in warfare. The project met with no favor in England, and would have fallen through altogether had not Lord Bcllamont and his friends fitted out the Adventure galley at their own private charge. Kid was put in command, and furnished with the king's commission, charging him to hunt down pirates, all and sundry, especially Thomas Too, and other9 specified by name. lie also held a commission of reprisals, for it was then war times, empowering him to take. French merchant ships in case he should meet any. The Adventure galley sailed from Plymouth in May, 10%.carrying thirty guns and eighty men; and, after scouring the North and South Atlantic, tried the Indian ocean, picking up a French merchantman or two; but ot pirates never a one. At last, the patience of Kid, who appears to have meant well originally, wore out; his crew turned mutinous.nnd lie became, according to his defense, a pirate malgre lui. After a lucky cruise lie sailed for this city, thinking his offense would be winked at, but was im mediately seized here, with all his books I ' and papers, sent liome for trial, and I hanged at Execution Dock, with six of , his associates. His career proved an ex- , ccption to the rule that it is well to set a thief to catch a thief.?Keio York Nac*. Could See Well With Tliem. "You have no idea of the number of absurd things that happen in our busi- < ness.'' said a salesman in the store of a prominent New York optician. "Not ] long ago a well-known Wall street broker, i whose ideas of life go but a little way i beyond margins and futures, walked i briskly in and said that he wanted a pair ( of 'gold spectacles.' There were a number of frames lying on the counter at the 1 time, and in a business-like way lie began 1 trying them on. Finally lie got a pair that apparently suited him, and after inquiring the price, walked to the door and looked out into the street. 1 '..t , ?. :,i. ,r 1 * *i nesc art: cxceiicm, uusum, i almost see the print on the paper that 1 gentleman is reading on the platform of f the car going down the street.' lie threw > down a & "> note and was about to rush < from the store. lie was rather crestfallen i when I called him Imck and asked whether ' he wanted glasses in the frame 01* not.'' 1 An Uncxplorel Table Lniiil. According to .Mr. lm Thuru, whose travels in Hritish Guiana nave recently been published, there is in the far west 1 of that country, or over the Brazilian ( boundary, where the savanna itself rises 5,000 feet above thesea.a flat table land, t the edges of which are more or less perpendicular cliffs 2,000 feet hiirh. No traveler has ever been round it, so that it may be accessible from the other side, f and there is a way. as yet untried, which l Mr. Im Thurn believes nmv prove nraeticable. The summit of this plateau of Koraima seems to be forest covered, and ;0 Vnovm nf rhp fauna and tlora r of the district to make it certain that a j naturalist would find himself well re- j warded for the ascent. There are tradi- . tions of strange isolated tribes that live (| in this inaccessible region. Johnny hnd been given a bag of dates. There were more than he could eat at n! one session, and he gave two dates to his ,| sister Mamie. "Seems to me. Johnny," a said his mamma, "you haven't been very 1 liberal to Mamie." I didn't dare to give 5,1 her any more," replied Johnny. "I was w afraid she might make herself *ick."? Boston Transcript. ~ li There arc three wicks to the lamp of a jv man's life?brain, blood, and breath. ? Press the brain a little, its light goes out, ' followed by both the ethers. Stop the heart a minute, and out go all three of ? the wicks. Choke the air of the lungs, t'| and presently the lluid ceases to supply ( the other centers of llame, and all is soon stagnation, cold, and darkness. b NEWS AND NOTES FOB If OMEN. ? ' 4' ' A woman in Connecticut has been made notary. Pongees, either plain or embroidered, rash beautifully. Black lacc capotes are worn aa much >y young la.lics as by matrons. Flounces, when narrow and not too nil, sometimes cover the entire skirt. Miss Dodson, a Phil adelphia artist, has wo pictures in the Paris salon this year. Mrs. Mary Mapes Dodge, the writer nd editor, gets $8,000 a year, it is said. Dove, steel, and mouse gray are the ashionable shades of this popular color. Whole front breadths are made of lone trins neatlv liued and braided in ana ?L? ^ ut. Twenty-one of the twenty-eight ward chool principals in Indianapolis are romen. White dotted Swiss, with gay colored >ouquets sprinkled over it, is now this ummer. Flowers are placed in pompons or ound clusters in the same way as feather ips on bonnets. The woman market is down now in Tunis, Africa. Wives only* bring from ^20 to S120 a head. Laura White, an American girl, has )een admitted to the special school of irchitecture in Paris. Telephones in Switzerland are exclulively in the hands of women, who are jaid $260 to $800 a year, Japanese paper and silk and satin fans ire not entirely out of vogue, but feather 'ans are the favorites. Very small diamonds are now more ashionable than those of larger size, but :hfiir settinsr is a work of art. _ 0 A material much used for summer Iresses is etamine, a thread texture relembling extremely fine canvas. Fashionable and dressy parasols are rery gay, very large, and very much :rimmed with lace and flowers. The jackct or cosaque opening over :he waistcout or gathered or plaited plastron ia a feature iu early summer suit*. Changeable linens are among the summer dress goods. They are very becoming and, of course, wash perfectlv. A venerable sunshade may be freshened by almost covering it with very narrow velvet ribbon, and will pass for one ot the newest French fashions. Some of the new straws show mixed effects, as in the cheviot cloths. Others fire ail of one color, and another style has alternating braids of two colors. Light weight Ottoman and gros grain silks are selected for walking suits, and trimmed with gathered frills or plaitings of the same, with lace and jet galloon. In Buffalo there is a Woman's Union, to advance the interests of tne sex in general. There are classes for instruction, in which women may learn penmanship, typewriting and bookkeeping. Young girls who.are desirous of securing physical beauty are recommended by a physician to eat meat once a day, pickels ouce a week, and sweetmeats once a year; also to take a cold bath and a fivemile walk every day. . A "Lyceum dress-lining," printed all over with portraits in miniature of Irving and Miss Terry, and with scene from Romeo and Juliet and The Merchant of Venice, is the latest Irving craze, which comes from an English Manchester printworks. Cynthia Ceres, a young Illinois schoolteacher, took up a wheat farm in Dakota three years a^o. Now she is a jolly, healthy girl with a fine farm of 320 acres and $2,000 in money. She is independent for life. Sho has only to raise a wheat crop every year. The day when an oversklrt could be made from a small scrap of materal has passed, and unless a woman chooses to weigh herself down with several pounds of curled hair she must allow her dressmaket yards and yards of stuff for plaitrmflinrr Dr. Sarah L. Weintraub, a graduate of a Philadelphia medical college, is going to practise her profession in the ancient city of Damascus. Male physicians are not allowed to enter the women's apartmentc there. Dr. Weintraub will nave things all her own way. With white toilets, brides still adhere to very long white gloves, the choice being between undressed and finished kid, each style having its adherents. White slippers and hose are usually chosen, but another innovation sanctioned by fashion is the use of black ' Uppers and black silk hose. The handles of this year's parasols are made from sticks of wood ending in knots, but these knots are carved into the heads of dogs and owls or ornamented with sca'e work rather than left plain. Some of the handles imitate a vine stem tied in a knot, and some are ebonized and then cut away with a sharp tool, so as to show the white word beneath in spots, making the leopard pattern reversed. The choicest of all the parasols, thosa of figuied satin bordered vith row on row of chenille fringe, have bamboo sticks with handles and tips of finely-woven strands of bamboo. Too Big. Big things are not often useful or profitable. Bulky, unwieldly property that a person can do nothing with, is very forcibly characterized by the phrase, ' fie has an elephant on his hands." Many great works of human skill and boldness, however, that are too big to be profitable, are not too big to be useful, and the following pertinent remarks of the liailway Age are rather suggestive than otherwise: Whether the great bridge between New York and Brooklyn will pay even a low rate of interest on its cost, beside the large sum which will be required each year for repairs,is not at all certain. It seems as if there was a limit in size for structures of all kinds, which is not profitable to over-pass. The Great Eastern steamship, while it was in many respects a mechanical success, was, on the whole, a great failure. Locomotives beyond a certain weight are not profitable. The wide gauge for railways has been abandoned, because the narrower one was found to be best adapted to all the conditions involved. The use of driving wheels of very large diameter on passenger locomotives was continued for only a comparatively short time. Nature herself, while she may produce the immense, does not obtain from it her eflective uses. The vast proportions of the London dray-horse can be profitably employed only in a narrow range of conditions. The giant grenadiers, whom Frederick [. ransacked all Europe to obtain, were not effective soldiers in the field. It is t-Vm m.in nf nvor!iiiP fli'/fi \vllf> is t'llfllirinor. ilert, adapted to all the varied demand if practical life. In the case of both machines and men the gigantic is not, all things considered, the most serviceable. Curious Recoveries. We have heard of idiots and insane persons whose minds have been restored jy sudden blows on the head, and latplv we read of a deaf man who stumbled, jtruck his head on the door-sill, received i bad bruise, and was relieved of his leafness; and of ft notable case occurring on Loug Island, where an old gentleman was beaten about the head by tramps and thereupon recovered his eyesight after having been blind for a year. ?Dr. Footers Health Monthly. George Dalzell,of Zanesville, Ohio. 6aw iobo:Iv but his sister for lifteen years. He lied recently. One plant of the dandelion is estimated o produce 2,740 seeds. D<x-s your heart ever stein to stop and you eel a death-like sensation. do you liavo sharp | iaiiis in tilt' iv.zi >n <>t" your heart? you have irart (list-as . Try Dr. 15 raves* Heart Iteguutor. SI per bottle. loxfi bra.vi h has the largest roller-skating ink in tlio worl 1. "We know henrt ilisias can be euretl. why? {( cause thousands say they have us;il Dr. iraves' Heart Kemulator, and know it doe* ure."?Plyiiipton 2s'ews. $1 jn-r bottle at Iruggists. _ Louisiana has a negro yia^ecojege. Lydia E. i'inkham's Vegetable Compound (a most valuable medicine for ladies of all ces who mav l>e atllirted with anv form of - ???? m-..r u? israse peculiar U> nii-ir m'a. uci uninm-5 re put up not only in Ik/ id forms hut also in 'ills and Lozenges, in ?ui<-h form they are i-eurely sent, through the mails. TiiE man who ]>ui site > th * < v.m tenor of hio ay can never i ommit a l ass act. JIensman'8 Peptonizkd 1jkek toxic. the oll'V reparation of beef containing its mtirr irfn ons jiroptrties. It contains blood-maiiin jrce generating and life-sustainin:; properti ivaiuable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous rostration, and all forms of general <leki.it>*; Iso, iu ail enfeebled conditions, whether the [ suit of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over ork or acute disease, particularly if reuniting om pulmonary complaints. C swell, Hazard .v Proprietors, New York. Sold by -i. I The Louisiana rice crop aggregates vo0.0t>0 nrrelb this year. ?, v' v " :CW?igB&MS A THRILLING EPISODE. I A Tocoaotlr* Eralnee '?Imttnrt-HfW It ' 8#Tf4 A Tr la aal Uow he Saved HI aielr. f>n one of the darkest and stormiest nights A of the recent unusual winter the express of one of the leading New York railroads was moving westward from Albany. The engine's headlight threw a strong reflection in advance, but the storm was so blinding it was almost impossible to distinguish anything even at a , short distance. Under such circumstances in- bu stinct necessarily takes the place of sight. All M seemed to be going well, when, in an c< instant, the engineer reversed his engine, ap- jplied the air brakes, and came to a mil stop. >v ny ne aid so ne coiua not leuany moreinan ?** any of us can account for the dread of com- wi ing disaster and death, and to the wondering inquiry of his fireman, he simply said: feel that something's wrong." Seizing a lantern he swung himself down from the cab and went forward to investigate. D Everything appeared to be right, and he was w; about to return to his engine when his eye a[ caught sight of a peculiar appearance at the joint of the rail next to him. Brushing the m accumulated snow away, he looked a moment, F and then uttered an exclamation of horror, st The rails on both sides had been unspiked and 0j would have turned over the instant the engine ouched them. What inspired this attempt it train-wrecking is unknown, but it was pre- m sumed the confederates of some prisoners who ai were on the train hoped, in the confusion of r an accident, to deliver their friends. st Engineer John' Donohoe, of Albany, to hi whose wonderful instinct was due the salva- tr tion of the train, when asked by the writer r why he stopped his engine, said: ' 0 "I can't tell why. i only know I felt some- pi tliiiig was wrong." B "Do you have these feelings often when upon the roadr continued the writer. "No, very seldom, although for the past twenty years I have been in a condition to feel apprenhension at almost anything." "How is that?" "Why, I have been a victim of one of the worst cases of dyspepsia ever known. I have not been confined to my bed, as like thousands of others, I am compelled to work whether able or not Indeed, when it first began I had only a loss of appettite, a faint feeling that would not go away and a bad taste in the mouth, but I finally got those terrible craving and gnawing feelings that make life so unbearable ana are known as general debility." ."What did you dof "I tried physicians until I became discouraged. I gave eight different ones fair tests, but none of them benefited me. I then tried proprietary medicines, but they failed, likewise. It looked pretty dark for me so far aa any more peace or enjoyment in this world were concerned and I became terribly discouraged." "You certainly do not look that way now." "Oh, no, indeed, I am in perfect health now," was the reply, "and I propose to continue so. My nervousness is entirely gone; I can sleep nights; the aching numbness has disappeared. the pale, sickly appearance has given place to the color of health, and I have readily put on iiesh. This is what has been accomplished by -jneans of Warner's Tippecanoe. If I can be cured after a chronic illness of nearly a quarter of a century I believe all suffering in a similar manner^can be restored by naing the same great remedy.* f Sucn is the testimony of a man who could detect and remove unseen danger on the road, but could not remove the dangersfrom within ' his own system until brought face to face with the great preparation above-named which did so much for him and can do as much for all those who require it , . . ' , Six hundred men are at work on the New Orleans eiqtosition. The Oldest Dru?gUt. * Being one of the oldest druggists in this city (although having retired from business), I wi-h to say a good word about Hunt s Remedy. A number of years ago I was troubled with my kidneys. The idea of a druggist, however, resorting to the use of a "patent medicine" was a little humiliating, but when I came to cons der how many peo. I_ 1 1 hir thn 1IRA of Hnnt 8 I i>iO XiUU UQOU UCUOUWU # f Itemedy, I unhesitatingly bagan using it; sni after having fully tested its virtues I can say,, as rrany of my customers have said to me, "It is the best medicine for kidney and liver comiilnint ever compounded." I nave yet to learn of a single instance where it has failed to benefit and give satis-' faction, in fact it is the best I ever pj!d. I would say to all who are- troubled with kidney and liver complaint, give Hun 's , Remedy a trial and you will say as I do, it is the best known remedy, and the best is the cheapest every time. Yours truly, , Edwald Auix. | Hartford, Conn., May 19,1863. Mr. James Chshet, with J. W. Goodman, billiard table manufacturer, of Athol, Mass.. wri es, May 23, 1883, as follows: "I have been troubled for a number of years with kidney disease, with severe pains in my back and sides, and could got do relief unt 11 used Hunt's Remedy, which was recommended by our druggist, Ward, of this place, who stated to me that many wondorful cures had been made in thLs vicinity by the use of Hunt's Remedy. Peop e who have suffered for ye rs wilh kidney disease, inflammation of the bladder, and accompanying troubles, had been permanently o ired by this great me licine. Ipurchased abot.leofHunt'sRemedy nnd found that it neipea meirom uie m bl dose, and two bottles removed all the pain in my back, and I consider myself cmed, and cheerfully recommend it to my friends as b medicine that will do all that ia claimed for it, Sutlifacrory Evidence. J, \V. Graham, Wholesale Druggi t, ol Austin, Texas, writes: "I have b^cn handling Dr. "VVm. Hall's Balsam for the Lungi for th .> past year, and have found it one of the most salable medicine? I have ever had in my house for coughs, colds and even consumption, always giving entire satisfaction. Please send me another gross." For teu or twelve years 1 nave been severely afflicted with Catarrh. Never before found such decided relief as from Ely's Cream Balm. I consider myself cured.?J. W. Bufflngton, Mechnnicsville. N. Y. Price 50 cents. In one week Ely's Cream opened a passage in one nostril through which I nad not breath in three vears, subdued an inflammation in my head and th>*rat, the result of Catarrh.?Colonel O. M. Neifliay, Owego, N. Y. See adv't. The ancients were acquainted with the virtue of petroleum. Herodotus refers to it and speaks of welLs being found in Zante. Nowadays everybody has heard of it through Carboline, the ^reat Natural Hair Restorer. Rheumatism.?""Wilson's Wonder" curt* .1 x hours, or money returned. Sent on receipt Medicine depot. 99 Park street. N. Y. Headache is immediately relieved by the use of Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. Chinese actors probably don't need many reheasals, as they never lose their cues. "The Reliable Medicine" We do not claim tint Hood's Sarsaparilla li "th? ;nly" medicine which deserves the confidence of the | public; hut we do claim that the universal voice of tjv proTsl which comes from the thousands who hare us?d it; the pn a', cnrati ve power which it has over scrofula, dyspepsia, biliousness and all diseases caused by im- 1 puro state or low condition of the blood; and the great skill, ext,eri?nce and care used in its preparation,make It worthy the full confidence of tho public and entitled to be called "The Reliiblu Medicine." Hood's Sarsaparilla " Hood's Sarsaparilla beats all others, and is worth Its weight in Bold."?I. B.mniN'OTON, 1J0 Bank street, New York City. Mr. J, .V. Ketchura, of Barre, Vt., says that his boy had several very ugly scrofulous sores on his leg. Hood's Harsap iril'a cured him. ' H ire's Sarsaparilla is the best blood purifier."? F. s. Phelpb, Worcester, Mass. Mr. J. V. A. Proudfoot, of Chicago, says 'his little I nnv liad a dlsi-harite Ir.'tn his ears, after scarlet fover. Hood's Saroaparilla Rreatly benatited bfm. Hood's S'mnparillii is sold by druggists. $1; six for 83. Made by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Maw. 100 Poses One Dollar N Y N U?22 Regeneration for I2pB^I BL 3 I r Dp enfeebled systems, jSiBLt Laut s, dyspepsia and derV0d*n'>S%l'8f 80'" A^nioclicine (hut will H arnMiCH ' 4* Rran'd requirement fc8TDW*CM^ft* whiohroakesHwtet;'W tor's 8t.>maoh BitVijJ W Si ts3 ter? so effective an an " Q B iuvicorant. For sale >? all DrijTgi'it" and Dealer* twtra I". ; DR. DAVID-** | KENNEDY'S Plooaant to Take, c / L j Powerful to Cure, 3 t&w.'kS. JK And Welcome '7 WW In Erery Ho,n?? o KIDNEY s tofji LIVER CURE >?f-Kpnnpilv'n PnTor. I / ' I ftS^lS MM l|e lt?Mliedy is adapted to I \ a p*V'I}?Af all nges nn<J both sexes, af. I j li Spb<^Blording perm mint i elief ml I all ca??? caused by impurity I l C o' the blood. such 43 Kid-I a B mimr ney. Bladder and l,iver I 1 I CoiiipluintH, Constipation and \l eakuessei I (f peculiar to women. It pr> Tes succosfui in cases where mil other medi- 1 oini'H hud totally f liled. No>atf?r?r should despair 1 as lone as this remedy is untried. It bas an un- k broken rec'rd of success for many years, and has ' won husls o( warm friends. Are viiu suffurinit froin any diseass traceable to f the ciises mentioned? If so, l)r. Kennedy C stakes his personal and profesnnnnl mpntat >n on 1 the statement that Favorite Remedy will do j you go< d. ri Kors ilebynll driigcistv or write to Dr. David B Kenned}, itondoiiti N. Y. " ? mppppihsi B enamel, ci V1) ,r inc. .m:.r..vi,iK ?ll g. Id |i.nnt>-d or bruized nrti A . - !,?t ofoi'd-m i vmhi u-iu i F. M i,SON, Box 327, P. O. Jersey City,>. J. ? -'II Motto ami hand Chromo Curds, lticts. | /<" .S-iul iii -. lor licw nnok Bold, beveld e:1ge J . .. .-iiiiii'lis . <-is. I). J. MAXSO.V. Hcrlin, N.Y. \ 9 C AD II Trli'tfi-nphyor Short Hand ?nd Tvpe P is-Mnll Wriiinu here. Situation* fnrnieneJ. K Li AcMros VAt.KNTlSK Buds. , Jancitville, Wii. Card I Handsome Dow si't curd* four I-e. atampa. H Collector! 1 A. U. ljaaactt, Kochebt?r, N. Y. | W J JMJ 1 El CUBES^WHE^rlui S3 *1^1 ee EM IV-iu.'ouRiiSyrup. Ta.sie-KiH.-d. |n jJ Use In time, bold by drueglsu. (Si _ j |9 * mm suMEiif. nipntation Within Three Inches of the flip Joint I?Recovery Dae to the Use of Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy (Rondont, N. Y:). ' Money is the universal necessity and non? r it a cynic or fool will affect to despise it. r. Abram Ellsworth, of Port Ewen, Ulster mnty, N. Y., had-realised this truth. His lease involved tha whole of his thigh bones - " * * ' ' -A vtnh id the suffering man xoojieu ^ ithout apparent reason, to death as his only iliverer. His family physician refused to apntate the limb?asserting that the o. eram would kill the patient on the spot DH? VVID KENNEDY, of Bondout, lf? ho was consulted, held a different opinion id amputated the limb. The doctor th n adinist^red freely his great Blood medicine, AVOHlTE REMEDY, to afford tone and rength to the syetem, to prevent the return the disease, and Mr. Ellsworth remains to lis day in the bLom of health. This gentlean's disease was the offspring of fool bloxi, id DH. DAVID KEKitEOrS f 1VOBrE REMEDY puri.led toe blood and reored to lii.n t'je power once more to enjoy is lire. Are you suffering from an v disease aceable to the tame Cause.' Try FAVORTE HEUDUY. Your, drug.ist ha^ it ne dollar a bot la Bear in mind the pronator's name an I adlreas: DM. DAVID lE.V.VEDV, HondoaL, !\0W York. ^ r - - ? ' " " . LYOIA E. PINKHADTS ' : VEGETABLE COMPOUMD * is a PosrnyB ccee ros * I ,S All thou# palafal CoapUInU > y^rSJ *I,N(' to ?o*?o?* to o?rl)Mt * * FES ALE POPULmOS.* ? / PrtMtl 'It* purpose it tolel-j for Uu UaltimaU healing of ditto*} and lha rtlief of do in. end that it doe* alt It claim* to do, thousand* of ladle* can gladly testify. * It will euro entirely all Ovarian troablM,Inibunm** tl^nani i;i ?ration, FalHnjf and DtupLaeemrnis, aad e nicnuont Spinal Weakness, and UparticnUrlr adapted to the Chaazo of Ufa. # ?? It removes Fiintnew>,Fla?n!f>Ty7r, destroys all craving (or stlmuluits, and relieves Weakness of. the Stomefc. It cures Dl.iitlnsr, Headache*, Nervous Prostration, General D?Ml:Cr, 81-eplewine**, Depix^rioa ond-Indf portion. Tiu fecllitff of b*artiwr dnwn, causiA* 'pals, and backache. Is always penounestly cored by itf oaa. * Bond s:a;n>) to I/vnn, Msw.forparopblet, Letters of Inquiry runfldci.rlaUy answered. ror *al eat druggist*. ??????? ?????? ?? ? > a ? # v HHBlMMBBfldHBDflhlKflHflMI THE SURE CURE | . FOB . KIDNEY DISEASES; lues aaudi iiiita kl T bn wmrMMi iw) CONSTIPATION, PILES, AND BLOOD DISEASES. | PHYSICUKS ESDORSHTtBRTILY. | **Xldney-Wort li-the it remedy Z mr used." Dr. P. g. Balloa Hopkton, Vt. "Kidney-Wort ll always reliable." Dr. B. K. Clark,'80. "Hno, Vt "Xidney-Worthaacurodinywiflj after tvroyeai* ufflsrinf." Dr. C. M. Snrnmnrtln, 8anatll, Ga. IN fHOUSANDS OF CASES it baa earedwhere all else had ftfled. It la mild, buteffldefit, CEKTAJtN IN IT? ACTIGK, but harm lata In all ocaea. ' grit clfwiw tieBleod a?d ItMjthM nil free Mew Life to all the imfecru&t otsana of the body. The natural action of the Kidneya ia teetored. The Liver la dhMsaed of.oljdiaeaee, and the Bowela more freely and haaKhfttlly. In thia way the wont dieeaaee are efriKoateil from theeyftein. , g mo, 1100 LIQUD OB OKI, SOLD IT MOTORS. Dry ota bo mctlt by ^ a* Ty * ' 14 WELLS, HICllAJIDSO* ACO.fljnlIaictjm Vt. wuhmm** Tills porous plaster is U /^% ' ibsolutcly th* bat ever |"f f, made, combining tho _ - ?~ n mm *? Tirtncs ef Jiopa with PI A C^jrCl# fjums, balsams and cx- > BiMW lall tracts. Ifci power U wonderfo>lrt enrinjr dlseaees where other plasters simply relievo. Crick la tho Back aad Seek, Pain In the Sldo or Llmbe, Stiff Joints and XnscMt Kidney Troubles, BiMntn.nm| Neuralgia, Sore Chee^ directions of tho Heart and Liver,andall paiuupr achae Inftanilrhvtkii Hart PLIMUT. fw TtT | m It Prtcoasocnta or flr# ior ftoi LAMt Mailed on receipt oJ price., Sold by _ all drnogliU and country it ore*. . U A If If Bop Plaster Company, I\. ?Proprietora, Boaton, yaw. ? BrFor constipation,- 1 :c?cf .ipTot::oind(!iseaaeaofU?? tKwb t^fco^Wey|3 8*o-nMh^3dUr|frKllvJBceatfc Consumption Can Be Cured! SSHALL'f luhgsBALSAM Cures Consumption, Colds,. Pnenwion I a, Influenza, Bronchial DUBcnltlra, Bronchitis, Itonrsenesij, Asthma, Croap, H'hooiiln* ( ouKlit nnd all lllitcaMa of the Breatbiif Orgunii. It soothes and heal* Ike JleuibnuM el (lie LnDM inflKiued and poisoned by U< dlfcniie, aucT prevent* the mrfit-sweats and tightness a cross tbo chest which accompany it. Consumption is not uu incurable malady. IIALIAS BAWA.I1 will care you, BTM though prolCnaiuunJ old luila. .^iw.-ucaf nm nnfiw< ^ 30 DAYS' TRIAL 1%, luYEil^ I (BEn?Kt) ' (4ms.) FiLECTRO-VOI.TAlC BELT and other Eltctmo j Ajtt iancm am a rat on au Day*' Trial TO MEM ONLY. YOCNC OR OLD, who are aiffering from NfmvoCb DciitLiTY, Lost Vitality, WartUM Weaknesses, ado an Kinuroj uihwi. --lief an I com pi - to restoration to HEALTH. Vigob ih Manhood Ocabamtkkd. Send at onoa for Illustrated Pamphlet freo. Address .. Voltaic Belt Co,, Marshall, Mick c?Tj??????? Walnut Leaf Hair Bwtorer; jfwWBiih. ar?.n It It entirely different from all of hew. and ai It* bum Indicates la a perfect Vegetable Hair Restorer. It will Immediately free the heaa from all dandruff, restore gr*? bsir to its natural color, and produce a new rruwta where it haa fallen off. It doe* not affect the health, which sulphur.sugnrof lead and nitrate of tilTer prepaid itions have done. It will change llghror faded hair in a few day* to .1 beautiful glossy brown. Askyonr druggist for it. Kach bottle ta warranted. Smith, Kline At 'o.. Wlioletale Ag'ts, Phi la.. Pa., aad Ci.WiOntUnton.W.Y. NO AGENTS^fay New Machines Guaranteed positively new u9 and thoroughly tirst-claas is ed for6jr*. (Jan be returned J c*f jjn , at oureineDie if not jia re^re-1 * . sented. f reights paid to all ^ points. EntuDlialicil 1878 A. C. JOHMSQiV, 37 North Pearl St, Albany, N.Y. ^ WW ^Cf A L?atIhur:?oed<?n Thywf ' HanllBKl loan esialiiislies aa-' ftff' S % Ofrlcola New York I I I |j EPJLEPTloVlTS; GB Bb Hi ffff FrouAnJournclofMedicinti Dr. Ab. Meserolo (late of London), who makes a specialty of KpUopsy, haa without doubt treated and cured more eases than any otherllflni; physician. Bis success has simply been astonishing; we hare heard of cases at oret SO yean' standing successfully cured by Mm. Ha has published a work on tills dlsoaso. which ho sends with a Urge bottle of his wonderful care freo to any sof. fcrcr who may send tnulruipress and P. 0. Addre.*. Ta Mlvlia anr cine wishing a cure to aildress Dt.AB. JUtiiiltVUi, Ho. M Jotrn fit, Ksw York. D? FOOTE'3 Original METHODS m fl CVCC Made .\ew without doc- OP ULU L I CO tors,medicine orglaseeu IT A If 11 BUPTII RE .WcSasi?n?llII!i phimosis NFRVHIK Debflltr. etc'.: cantof;^ IfLFI 7 UUO anil rational freatment. t nURONIO Diseases Of .511 kind*?J*"ipn,e^v Un (1 Un IU so riiirrij' "Incurable." lOc.csA/ Address Dr. E. B. FOOTE, Box 788, K. Y. Oft. Sao oo NEWS TO LADIES? Greatest mdBctmroUerer <A tend. Ncw's jourtima toentnf , orders (or our celabr.ted . e?j I and Colleex.and mjci;roabeiutJ. ful Gold Band or Mosa Rose Chin# Tea Set, or HandsomeDecmtM Dinner Set, or l?old Band Mom DecorMed Toilet Set. Fix tnll particular* addresa TIIK (iUEAT AMERICAN TKA CO., , P. U. Hox 288. 31 and 83 Vetaybt.. N?w York. WE WA\T 1000 BOOK AGENTS or the new book TII1KTV-TIIKKE Jt'KARS AMOXO OUR WILD INDIANS. 3y Gen. DODGE and Gin. SHERMAN*. Tula Great WoA m indorsed by Pre* t Arthur, Gi-n. Grant. and tliou,a?d? of iulirM, Iinhopv Clersymen. Editnra Etc.,a? " the r,'st, matt rhrillinn. *ntt mot! Valuable Imhan fool" rrrr nritttn ' Jta Superb lilii<!ratinni, C.rrat Authorthip, and folvi Mrril make t Ihr boominn book for AgtnU. ?-70.000 seM. Aiffntl >11 10 to lt? * dir. W*-S-nd fnv Circular^ Kxt-a IrrmM, Specimen Plate. etc., and judge /or ynvrtel/.- .Addrm A. I?. WOKTHIXUTO.N JL' CO.. Hartford, t'oo*.^ VTOVET.TY. BEAUTY AND AUTISTIC EXCELJl LENcE. lathers, mothers, brothers, siglen, ousius, aunts, uncles, lovers, and friend* will and year's subscription to DKMOllEST'S MONTHLY IAGAZINE the illustration of frieuulv foi-Hnjf, specially us a holiday |>re?c-ijt. Tills muuel ma^a* ine now combines the essential of all others, and nly #2 yearlv. Do not fail to see the splendid arr?r I novelties, Rrand array ol entertaining, uselul and cautlftil literary (jems and artistic illustrations, to ; lonnd in the successive numbers. Sold ererj rliere; price, 2t) cents, or yearly, $2. Address, W. JENNINGS DEM0HE8T, 17 East Itth Street, N. Y. ---jjfSS/' LADY AGENTS P^nSSt 1^" Tftl . ^i"fl"yni"nt and good f-alarj jgjPfKI FyxZzxZU-7 selling Queen City tiklrtana StockingKupportertctc. S?mll^?f?jH\.Pll)o,lt,ltfrM> Address Queei ^'CUy b uipender Co., CimcUaaU, 0 W-DON'T FAIL to send 3-cl tump for the inert complete Ctulofut ot YPE, BORDERS, CUTS, PRESSES, AC. LOWEST PRICES. LARGEST VARIETY. IATIONAL TYPE CO.,^LH>&a? SUPERFLUOUS HAIR. M"lf, ^ ?'t-, ^1 M'*:'; I'Uf'n", \ - BL tU>? fr-nv. ILiiut a lihttfMii iutirtruuiuui ly Dr. JOHN H. WOOOBURY, ?jSiS0 Scndioctt.forbock. 37 X, 1'cariM., Albany,X.T. IIRRIFQ B''?t work in th? U.S. for the money, UUUICO EXTKRPRISE CARRIAGE CO.. nciumti.O. Write for Cataloguo No. 14. Frea. nCMTC WANTED to sell our XXX Blended ToZ lUCW I w Gold B-nd China Cup and Sauoer giTel Itli each pound. Prico Dt-alors send (or p?i> culars. Jns. I). Clark, SiSS Gr 'enwicb St., N.Y. Ih A 0^ PAYS for a Life Scholarship In th? * I1 Colpinnn Kiisiness C'ollt'?e. V I H Newark, New .Jersiy. Position foi 11 frraduatej. National patronise. Writ* W ^^ lor- Circulars ru H. COLK.MAN Jt CO. to S"ldirrs ? Heirs. S?nd etanp PllQBflltC for Circular'. COL. L. ?ll*IUIid HAM, Att'j, Washington, D.JJ. ,'amphoh Mii.k i<i th" li?>t l.inimont. Prie? 24 c?nt?. , srnln W tin ted i>?r i!r- But hihI t'a.neat-e-)llin* i Jpu loriil Hook- ?nd liililus. I'ricgs r? lui-od :Up?? at. NationalPi'iimshino *'u., P;iiu<t?lpliia. P>. PlfcEMV PtVloitAI. will cuiu jrosrc^ugh. Pricn 36o. i TPttlTA St nil m.imnforour Nnw Bookoa 'ME pM I V Patents. L. HINGHAM, P?*> ft I Kal? I VP oot !.??> ?. Wuihlmrton. v. CL