Port Royal standard and commercial. [volume] (Beaufort, S.C.) 1874-1876, March 23, 1876, Image 4

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FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. Domestic Kccipcu. Corn Fritters.?To a dozen ears of corn, grated, add two eggs and a teaspoon. ful of salt. (If the corn is old, add a little milk.) Fry in hot butter and lard, half i of each. Graham Griddle Cakes.?Oue pint of milk, half a cup of soar cream, half a teaspoonful of soda, the same of salt, stir iu graham flour not as stiff as for flue flour cakes (no eggs), have the griddle quite hot; or with yeast the same as with buckwheat. Rolls.?Pour boiling water into graham flour, stir with a spoon, then stir in dry flour and knead. Work into rolls an inch and a half or two inches iu diameter, and bake in a quick oven, but not so hot as for gems. With experience the rolls may be made much larger. Excellent for dvspeptic3, and good either hot or cold. Potato Yeast.?Peel twenty potatoes, pour over boiling water enough to cover them, add one handful of palt, then Tin 3 1 L 11 COOK. v? nt'ii uoiie, uo not pour me water off, but beat with a fork until quite tine. Then take four yeast cakes, dissolve in one pint of warm water, add one teacup of white sugar, and let stand for about an hour; then add to the above. When well mixed, put in another handful of salt. It will be ready the next day to pat in the yeast jug. One small teacup of th s yeast, with a tablespoonful of sugar in it, i9 enough for five loaves of bre%l. Medical Hints. Fish Bone in the Thboat.?If you get a fish bone in your throat, and it oontinues to stick there, swallow an egg raw. It will be almost certain to carry the bone along with it. Cure for Felon.?Take equal parts of gum camphor, gum opium, c&stile soap, brown sugar. Wet to a paste with spirits of turpentine. Let a druggist prepare it, and apply a thick plaster of it. Toothache.?One ounoe aloohol; two drams cayenne pepper; once ounce kerosene oil; let it stand twenty-four hours after mixing. It cures, it is said, the worst toothache ever known. The Effect of Alcohol on the Brain.?Long before the era of tern _ 1' X - A* perance ordinances ana organizations, Hyrti, by far the greatest anatomist of the age. used to say that he could distinguish, in the darkest room, by one stroke of the scalpel, the brain of the inebriate from that of the man who lived soberly. Now and then he would congratulate his class upon the possession of a drunkard's brain, admirably fitted, from its hardness and more complete preservation, for the purpose of demonstration. When the anatomist wishes to preserve a human brain for any length of time, he effects that object by keeping the organ in a vessel of alcohol. From a soft, pulpy substance, it then becomes comparatively hard; and so, too, before death, the use of alcohol causes the induration of the delicate and gossamer-like tissues. Apple Seeds for Planting. Oolmau's JRural World, in answering the question how to manage apple seeds, says: Take three or four times the quantity of sand that you have of apple seed, and mix the seed and sand well together, and put in shallow boxes, and expose to the winter weather to freeze and thaw. They should not be too wet nor too dry. ; They should be stirred occasionally, and j kept out o! the reach of fowls, as they will eat the seed. As the warm weather approaches the seed will begin to germinate, and at the proper time for planting the "ground should be deeply plowed and finely pulverized to receive the seed. Bich soil is needed, and, if free from weeds, so much the better. Most persons drop the seed with the sand, in rows two feet, or two and a half feet, or three feet apart, so as to admit of horse cultivation. The plant must have clean culture and thorough hand-weediDg and proper thinning, so as to be ready for grafting attheend of one season's growth. A naturally well drained soil should be chosen. How to Manage GruM Plata. During the first and second season, the grass plat, by the kind of care it receives, may be made an eyesore or a .-pot of beauty. Frequent cutting and winter protection are absolutely necessary. The lawn mowers, now within the reach of every one, make grass cuttiuf on the lawn anything but hard work. Daring the first growing season, one should go over the young grass with A1 ?i 1 i. * A ' ma muwcr ai? ivnat, once in every ten ; days. Later in the summer, in spots i where the grass is ooming in sparsely, a J forkful of yard manure should be scat tered. Out at intervals of ten days; it; is policy to leave the cut grass on the surfaoe as a mulch. Later in. the fall, before cold weather sets in, the grass pht may be covered over with horse or j yard manure, the coating to be left on ; until the following spring, when the coarser part may be removed by the rake. This will leave the ground in excellent condition for th.< next year's j growth. A Liniment. K. 8. Steele writes to the American i fanners' clnb: Some time ago I was a good deal worried with a couple of j horses which had sore backs. I tried various remedies without success, and 1 was beginning to despair when the fol-1 lowing receipt came to my notice: j " The inner bark of white oak bark boiled down in an iron kettle (never use a brass one) until it is as black as ink; while boiliDg drop in a piece of alum, J< about the size of a hen's egg." This j i liniment is to be applied with a sponge, and is good for any sore or bruise; in j < fact, it is a safe thing to keep in one's ' barn ready to use when occasion re quires. As I found this so useful, I | venture to send it for the benefit of others who may not be in the possession of, anything as good. I think it is also an excellent plan in warm weather to clean the collars often with castile soap. Wuhlnf Flannels and Linens. To whiten flannel, made yellow by i j ago, dissolve one and one-haif pounds ' of white soap in fifty pounds soft water, '; ana also two-thirds of an ounce of spirits ' ( of ammonia. Immerse the flannel, stir ! ( well around for a short time, and wash \ , in pure water. When black or navy j ( blue liDens aro washed, soap should not ] be used. Take instead two potatoes \ grated into tepid soft water (after hav- ] icg them washed and peeled), into ] which a teaspoonfnl of ammonia hps I been put. Wash the linen with this, j and rinse them in oold blue water. \ TJhey will need no starch, and should be [' dried and ironed on the wrong side. An I ( infusion of hay will keep the natural ! 5 color in buff linens, and an iufusion of j bran will do the same for brown linens j and prints. 1 f ' ? 't Burglars Loose.?Over fifty con-1 a victs were turtied loose at the Kings j i county penitentiary, N. Y., at one time, p their time of imprisonment having ex-1 f pi red. Among them were some of the ji shrewdest burglars in the country. j i LIFE IN PARIS. , A Letter from Amen? IIottN*nye?Poverty Among Women Touchiugly Pninful? 1 Story.of a Suicide. Arsene Houssaye, in a letter to the I Tribune, tells the following touchr'ng . little story: Yesterday iny physician came for me, to show mc a horrible and touching picture of Parisian life. J would call it a tableau vivant, but it wp.s i a picture of death. We went to the Rue de Longchamps, near that ancient close where the Duke of Montpeusier ; now has his palace, and where twenty ! years ago a whole republic of beggars had right of asylum. In vain have these poor creatures been turned out over and over again; there still remains several families of them in the neighborhood. My doctor took me to a hovel in rains, inhabited by three starving families?a desolation of desolations. One felt, on seeing there a half-dozen shiverj ing and almost naked children, like . tearing one's cloak in two, like the glol rions St. Martin. Why was not the ' Arch of Triumph of the Porte St. Mar tin dedicated to him instead of Louis XIY. ? In the third story, in a little chamber with bare walls, on a wretched pallet of straw, I saw a young woman hardly dressed vho had died an hour before. She was very beautiful in her pallor. Her black hair veiled her bosom; a vague smile wandered over her lips. Death is always gentle, even to suicides. The pan of charcoal, njt yet entirely extinguished, showed how the young woman had accomplished her death, i To make sure, she had fastened her dress over a broken pane in the window. A letter on the mantelpiece revealed the last thoughts of the poor creaturo. "My dear Leon, if you return to Paris and learn of my death, this letter will tell you why I die. You abandoned me to follow that girl who has been the cause of all our unhappiness. I thought you haf forgotten me, and so I forgot myself. But the man to whom I went L/\a? tt Tf. WOQ Tirkf, j Ui? UCT7U Luy ^/UU10UU:^UV( av ?MVH iay fault. I had nothing, and I could only earn by working for the Bon Ma~che fifteen or eighteen sous a day? hardly enough to pay for my room. I was always thinking of you. I lived only in tears. When your letter came it was like a stab. What! You loved me still, and I had betrayed you! I am not worthy of you, aDd so I do justice to myself. When you hear that I am dead, y:>u wilt pardon me. Now I will light m.7 charcoal. My head swims. I will go to bed and pray for you. If 9f you ? There was no signature. The un happy woman had only time to fall back on the pallet where we found her. One of the ^~omen of the house explained the letter to us. The dead woman's husband, a wood engraver, had left her after six months of marriage, during which time they had seemed to live happily together. He went away with a barmaid, on pretense of -etting up a brewery in Flanders. The deserted wife fell also into evil courses. But one day she reoeived a repentant letter from her husband, iu which he called her his dear little wife, and announced his return for the next day. This letter we also saw. This is the concluding portion of it: " My dear little wife, I do not know where my eyes were, for there is not your equal anywhere for beauty and goodness. You shall see how good I will be to you to make you forget my treasons. I have been doing some work here, and I have some pennies to bring back to you, to pay your rent and buy a new dress." " Poor woman!" said one of the gossips who was there ; "she has no rent to pay now, and the only dress she needs is a shroud, and I have brought that for her. Would you believe it, gentlemen, when she saw from that letter that her * * i ? i - mi i .1. . nusDana tnongni sne was aim goou, sue broke down crying, and said she wanted to die ? We told her she was crazy, and she promised to wait for him. But she lighted the charcoal after we were gone. There wouldn't be many women in the world if they were all like that," she added, with cheerful philosophy. This abandonment of women is an every day story. The misery of workingwomen withont work, this stoical devotion of starving mothers, ought to open the eyes of legislators who imagine themselves philanthropists. In London there are asylums for those who have no work and no bread; but at Paris the ODly refuge is vice or the morgue. A Terrible System. We read an interesting account of the 44 silent system" which is in operation atthf Hollo way model prison in London, England. It is an offense for a prisoner to speak one word, and he is never addressed except in whispers, so that he may be in prison two years without hearing rhe natural sound of the human voice. The effect of this is so terrible on the mind that prisoners will speak out in desperation at the risk of any j punishment, rather than endure that I horrible silence. They never see one another, but remain in perpetual soli-1 tude. There is a fine hole in each cell, ; and as the wardens wear rubber shoes, j they can never be sure of not being watc hed. Every day the prisoners are j taken to a chaplain, and hear him only I through an iron grating. And this is < the order of devotion observed. Wari- I ens are constantly on the watch, lest for a single instant they, through the whole { of the service, depart from the rigid rule j of 44eyes right." They must look! steadfastly at the preacher ; must raise i and lower their prayer-book with the j elbows squared, arid all at once, like j soldiers at drill. Tbey may not scrape i their feet without having afterward to explain the movement. They scarcely wink an eye or sigh without danger of1 rebuke or punishment. Red Tape. Mrs. C. M. Burnham, of Des Moines, j Iowa, fumishc s a specimen of army red j tape that far exceeds in length and con- j volutions that "which enfolded Patrick : Noonan's breeches. Her father, Asa Bprague, was a soldier in the war of 1812, and at the capture of Ogdensbnrg lost all his clothing and personal effects of considerable value, being at the time , dargerously sick with fever. Ho es- j caped by being drawn by his two sisters on a hand sled to Hewvelton, seven miles distant. The exposure cost him three y:ars of severe illness, from which tie never fully recovered. His claim for bis lost clothing was allowed in 1848 or 1849, and took its slow, tortuous course in charge of "the office" until Deeemoer, 1874, when he finally received $50. 1 Hiis was about five months before his leath in June, 1875, at the age of eighty>even years. Safe at Last.?We have got our safe ! ixed now, says the Danbury New*. The I Leys are so distributed that five persons i ire necessary to open it. One of these s the mail clerk, another is the chief of 1 >oiice, the third is a tax collector, the onrth is a butcher aud the fifth is the aiier. With this combination it is simply i mpossible to get our poetry. SUMMARY OF NEWS. I J I tenia of Intercat from Home, and Abroad. > The bark Floka found the ship W. J. Hat?- i ! field, from Philadelphia for Bremeu, du- i masted and water-logged on the high sea. On : account of high waves tho ships could not approach each other closely, a'.d on throe of the ; Hatfield's crew attempting to swim to the j Floka, one of them was drowned. The next ! ! morning the Hatfiold had disappeared, and it ! ! isbelieved she foundered with all on board .. A committee of tbe South Carolina House have presented articles of impeachment agairst j Judge Montgomery Moses for corruption 1 Tho forces of Don Carlos suffered & severe de| feat, and rnmors of peace negotiations are current At a lumber camp on R flo river, j ; Michigan, John Hayes had been in the habit j of teasing a half-witted fellow named William j ! Libby, who became exasperated, and seizing ; an ax buried it to the helve in Hayes' side. ' after which he struck him on the head, inflictj ing fatal wounds. Rev. Horaco Buehnell, a widely - knawn \ | preacher and writer, died in Hartford, Conn, j | ... .By a collision off Dover, England, between ! ! the steamers Franconia aud Strath-Clyde, tho I ! latter beiiur eastward hnnnd fnr Rrvmhav tha ' ! Clyde was heavily struck, and her boilers | | almost instantly burst, causing the vessel to j I sink, and carrying down forty of her seventy ! | passengers Over $100,000 were lost by a j ! fire in Rutland, Vt The report comes Irom j i England that Miuister Schenck has resigned. j Three of the murderers of Minister j Burch, at Perak, India, have been captured, ! and one of them has confessed, implicating I nine persons The Sioux, Cheyennes and Arapahoes are said to be preparing for war | Articles of impeachment have been brought , forward against Lieutenant-Governor Davis t (colored), of Mississippi. The German state tribunal has decided to | indict Count Von Aruim for treason, and a 1 writ of sequestration has been issned against , his estates A bill abashing the death ; penalty has passed the Maine legislature | A portable boiler in a sawmill at Framiugham, j Mass., exploded with such effect as to kid | three men The Herzegovinian patriots > refuse all compromises with the Porte, no matter what powers recommend them, and stAte their determination to tight to the last for the oomplete freedom of their country.... While the cashier of the Kern Valley (CaL) i bank was working on his books in the evening, he was overpowered and chloroformed by robbers, who stole $27,000 The Sonora (Mexico) revolutionists gained a victory over the State troops near Alamos... .The jury dieagreed in the case of Fiunel, on trial in New York for the murder of Ned O'Baldwin, the pugilist Buchu Helmbold has been adjudged insane by the courts Three Italians were hanged in St. Louis for a murder committed two years previous Charlotte Coshman, the great actress, died of pnuemoma | in Boston, at the ago of sixty. Charlotte Cushmau leaves au estate of j $C00,000 Ihe German ecclesiastioal court has definitely summoned the bishop of Mun j eter to appear for trial on charges which inI volvo the penalty of deposition from his see. Keith, the man convictod of poisoning the well of a neighbor in Leeds, Me., was sentenced to ten years in State prison R. D. Ruflin, a colored member of the Virginia House of delegates from Dinwiddie county, 1 was expelled for improper conduct in abs;ract1 lug money from the paybook of the sergeant; at-arms. . ..Scrvia his ordered all men between the ages of twenty and fifty years under I , arms Ly a fire in Athens, N. Y., eight I I icehouses of the Knickerbocker company were destroyed,with implements aud forty thousand tons of ice already stored. The loss amounted to $325,000, which was covered by insurance. Tho Red river steamboat Mary Loory was burned to tbe water's edge while on her ( way to New Orleans. Her cargo of thirteen hundred bales of cot-ton was almost a total loss By tbe precipitation of an engine down an embankment on the Short Liue road j at Lagrange, Ky., Eugiueer Fiunegan was j { caught uader the machinery aud held fast i ; while etreams of boiling water from the broken boiler ran over his face and body. He died iu tbe greatest agony, with a dozen men looking on, unable tq extricate him. It is announced in Rome that the Vatican j : has advised Don Carlos to stop fighting, as bis j j success is hopeless The national Demo- i cratic committee have dec.ded that their Freti- J | dential convention shall be held in St. LouiB j j on the twenty-seventh of June Dha?trcus I i lloods have occurred in the provinces of Upper Anstria and Moravia. One hundred and j twenty houses are known to havo been de- j j stroyed The great $30,000 four-mile race I at San Francisco was won by Foster in 7 53 I and 7 38>?. Rutherford, which sold first in the i I pools, came in second ; the other five horses ! being distanced The Central American I j | States have settled their difficulties, and tbe j j war which threatened devastation is thereby j \ averted i'cace negotiations are being . entered into by Egypt and Abyscinia.... i Richard B. Irwin, who was before tbe countjy l so prominently at the time of the Credit Mobilier scandal, has been arrested at tbe 1 . ? . ' 4 instance or Ruius Hatch, charged with stealing $750,000 which was pat into his hands by the j Pacific railway company to secare a subsidy, j George Cameron and Fred Schneider ^ entered a Chicago saloon together, and while j standing before the bar Cameron put a pistol ? to Schneider's head and fired, and then blew g his own brains out. Both men dropped dead, { and it is believed the crime was prearranged j between them The Indiana Republican \ State convontion nominated for governor the ^ present minister to Austria, Godlove 8. Ortb, adopted a long platform, and recommended 1 Oliver P. Morton for President The "Wis- j f cousin Republicans, in convention, favored j j James G. Biaino for the Presidency. ) it The bill abolishing capital punishment in j a Maine has become a law, the governor haviDg 1 c signed it The Democratic State conveD- a tion of Connecticut renominated Gov. Inger- c soil and the entire Slate ticket. The platform s called for specie payment.... Attorney-General c Pierrepo'ut spoke before the supreme oourt in C laudation of Reverdy Johnson, and Chief-Jus- ^ tice Waite responded A fire in TarrytowD, ? N. Y., destroyed fifteen houses, with a loss of ' ?150,000 Elijah Shaw, of Wales, Mass., \ ? ? m W ? ? AA ^ C AA Tr m % m I X nas ianea ror Touy.t.uj. tie was tne owner or g five mills, aod employed some three hundred ^ hands A revolution is feared in Hayti. ^ All Cnban refugees are ordered to quit the ^ country within thirty hoars under penalty of c being delivered to the Spanish authorities.... \ I ho niiro-glycerine magazine of the Roberts c torpedo company, at St. Petersburg, Pa., ex- s pioded with terrific force, killing one man and tearing the building completely to pieces. t Railroad Accidents. [ There were in January last sixty rail- e road accidents in the United States, s whereby eight persons were killed and s twenty-nino injured. Six accidents t caused the death of one or more persons, ii ten injury but not death, while forty- e four, or seventy-three an 1 one-third per p centum of the whole, were not accom- h panied by any personal injury serious v enough for record. During the year 1875 v there were killed 232 and injured 1,040 n persons by railroad accidents. b I FORTY-FOURTH CONGRESS. The Rvtlnrra of General Intereet Trans- : acted. SENATE. Mr. Edmunds (Rep.), of Vermont, proposed to take up tbe resolution for the admission 01 Mr. Piuchback. He agreed with the Senator j from Indiana (Mr. Morton) that the question 1 was one of high privilege, and already Lad j been too Ion? delayed After tome discussion, j Mr. Logan (Rep.), of Illinois, demanded the j yeas and uave, and the motion to take up tho resolution was lost?yeas, 30 ; naye, 33 Mr. Morrill (Rep.), of Vermont, reported with two amendments the Senate bill to establish an educational fund and apply a portion of j the proceeds of tho public lauds to public education, and to provide for the more complete ( endowme t and support of national colleges j for the advancement of scientific and indue- t trial education. Placed on the calendar. Mr. Wright (Rep.), of Iowa, introduced a bill ; to reduce tho interest upon the public debt, i provide for a safe and elastic currency for the speedy appreciation of the value of treasnry notes and national bank notes to that of coij. and to guard against panics and iDtlation of bank credits. Referred to finance committee. Tne Senate resumed tbe consideration of the report of the conference committee on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses on the { joint resolution to pay the interest on the 3.65 ; District of Columbia bonds. Mr. Sherman (Rep ), of Ohio, moved to recommit the bill to the conference committee, that the resolution j inieht be perfected, and have all the creditors i paid. After further discussion, the moticn to i recommit was agreed to. The net increase recommended in the Senate j for West Point over the appropriations in the I House is about 816,000. Mr. Harvey (Rep.), of Kansas, called up the resolution directing the secretary of war to ; furnish tbe Senate ruch suggestions as may be i deemed expedient for the public service, cover- j ing the period between May 19, 1869, and Oct. ; 1, 1872, to enable the government to carry out j rltn nrnvisirms of a.n aafc constituting eivht ' hours a day's work for all laborers, workmen and mechanics employed by ?r on behalf of the government of the*United States, approved June 25,1863. After discussion, the resolution was laid aside. The Senate resumed the consideration of tbe bill for tbe sale of timber lands in tbo States of California and Oregon, aud in the Territories of the United States. Tne bill passed. Mr. Morrill (Rep.), of Maine, from the conference committee on the j .int resolution to pay tbe interest on the 3.65 District of Columbia bonds, made a report, which was read, and the report concurred in by a vote of thirty-one yeas to twenty-five na\e. Mr. Logan (Rep."), of Illinois, presented a petition of disabled soldiers asking that the provision of the act of June 18,1874, te extended so as to include all who lost au arm below the elbow or a leg below the knee, and that Ibey be allowed pensions of $24 per mo Jtb. Referred to the committee on pensions. Mr. Morton (Rep.), of Indiana, pmeuted a petition tigned by over 15,000 women of Indiana, and nearly 14,000 voters of tie 8:ate, on the subject of temperance, asking Congress to appoint a commission to investigate and report as to tbe effect of the alcoholic liquor traffio, and to require total abstinence from alcoholic liquors of all civil, military, and naval officers of the United States. Referred to the committee on finance. The Senate resumed consideration of the bill conferring exclusive jurisdiction over Indian reservations upon the United States courts, and for the punishment of crimes committed by and against Indians. Tbe amendment providing that the second section shall not be construed to prevent the cutting of timber or grass, or the use of stone, on any Indian reservation as may be necessary for the army or the use of the several agencies located on such reservation, and also to amend the third section so that it would read, " That any person found upon any Indian reservation contrary to law, and who shall refu?e or ne gleet to remove therefrom upon the order of the President of the United States, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor," etc., were agreed to. HOUSE. The military committee reported favorably the bill to extend the time for filiDg claims f?;"r additional bounty. An amendment to strike Anf fltA limitfltiAii troa rnlo/>.nr1 onrl omr.DfL I VUV ItliD HiUi .a.'iwu nwo ivjvvieui auu mu muiwuu- | mont extending Uie tico for filing claim* to j July, 1880, was adopted. Tho bill was then j panned. Tbe bill for the Bale of tho arsenal and lota . iu Rtoningtou, Couu., waa nparted favorably j and paaaed. Mr. Southard (Rep.), of Ohio, reported a bill to amend the art of March 3, 1875, for the admission of Colorado as a State, and asked for its immediate passage. Referred. Tbe House, on motion of Mr. Sonthard,went in oommittee of tbe whole on the Colorado b 11. The only changes made by this bill in the Enabling act of last March are a provision that all qualified voters under the laws of the Territory shall be entitled to vote on the question of ratification or rejection, and a provision appropriating $20,000 to pay tho expenses of the const Rational convention. Passed. Bills were introduced to reduce the tax on distilled spirits; to appropriate the proceeds of sales of pnblic lands to educational purposes; to define the right of United States citizens in foreign countries. The House voted on tho bill to reorganize the judiciary, and it was passed by yeas 143, I nays 102. ( Mr. Jenke (Dera.), of Pennsylvania, introduced a bill for the transfer of the pension f 1 bureau from the Inter.or department to the ; War department. Referred. , Mr. Fort (Rep.), of Illinois, from tho committee on Territories, reported a bill to prevent tho useless slaughter of buffaloes in the Territories. The bill makes it unlawful for , any person not an Indian to kill, wound or in any mauner destroy any female buffalo or any greater number of buffaloes thau are needed < for food or for the market. Passed. j ] The Dynamite Fiend. j, The annals of crime contain bnfc few , stories so interesting or so terrible as , the report of the German authorities on 1 the dynamite plot, says the New York , Herald. Especially is this true in so , Far as the narrative is a history of the | man by whom the plot was conceived, rhomas was in many respects a man of uystery. His true name is unknown to | ;he world, and, strange to say, was not, i jven known to his wife. His business I * le kept a profound secret from her, and | j le spoke even to her in terms of mys-! iery. He traveled to nearly every city j j n Europe and crossed the Atlantic to I ( md from New York without so much as ! 1 giving her a hint as to his purposes. Yet I y t was plain that he was reasonably hap-, )y in his marriage and that he loved his i ! vife and children. More than this he i i vas a man of some refinement, and not i * >ven the German police can fix upon i , -i - i i I c urn any associations ui u uououui or i s lisreputablo kind. With all these things I j n his favor it is only too evident that j : or years he was meditating crimes of' 1 he most terrible character and went! tbout the commission of them with a ! omposure and method which mark him j * is a fiend. To him human life was so ; iheap that he was willing wantonly to j acrifice it that he might dishonestly ac- ' 1 piire a few dollars. Only a monster \ jould carry such a desigu into c-xecnion, and it is hard to conceive how even , k monster could con(feive it. If we look j or the motives which prompted his acts j t ?e look almost in vain. The mid-ocean s a new field for the exploits of a new * pecies of criminal. Most men who live ; * >y murder are witnesses to their own i j leeds. This man preferred that his i' leath dealing work: should be done ? >nt of his sight and in a way that the i , (rorld should never know either of the ' c riminal or his crime. It is only neces- ? ary to assume that the City of Bostou i ras destroyed by his terrible contrivance o appreciate all the horror of his plot: ? or the destruction of the Mosel. And ; or all this there is only one explanation fi -the desire to be rich. This man could i ? tot forego his ease, his comfort and his r ocial position, and to sustain these ho acrificed everything. In such a man * here could have been none of the feel-1 j ngs which control ordinary men, and he f aust have been utterly without moral i j perceptions. Psychologists will find iu c lis career a new study, but we doubt I r hether any analysis can explain acts: * rhich stand by themselves- in fiendish- j iess and which will be long remem- I J tered as without parallel. j i i A Farmer's Home. The arrangements for reprodncing a New England farmer's home of 1776 are j progressing with great success on the j Centennial grounds, and from the materials already at hand and promised, one of the most attractive features of the ; Massachusetts exhibit will be formed. ! Not only will fittings aud furnishings of a hundred years ago be presented, but housewives of that day will bo represented by good and local descendants, who will repeat the scenes of 1776 in the kitchen and keoping rooms of those days, i Dinners of ye ancient time will be served for all visitors, and as much of a repro-1 duction of life in New England a century ago will be attempted as is pos sible in the space assigned in the de- i partment. Little Phil.?Phil Sheridan is get- J ting fat. Lincoln once said to Welles j that Sheridan was "a brown, chunky ! little chap, with a long body, short legs, ; not enough neck to haDg him, and such I long arms that if his ankles itch he can ' scratch them without stooping." Dr. Pleroe. 8uccess is never achieved without merit. A man may make a poor article and sell it once, and there being 40.000.000 people in the United States, the sale to each one would be enough to make a decent fortnuo. Uut an article that holds the field year after year, and the sales of which increase regularly and rapidly, must have absolute merit. t>r. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., occupies our entire eighth page to-day with his various \ articles. We admit it because wo know the doctor, and know of his articles. We know him to be a regularly educated physician, whose diploma hangs on the wall of his office, and we know that he has associated with him several.of the most eminent practitioners iu the country. We know that patties consult him, by mail and in person, from all the States in the Union eveiy day, and that they arc fairly aud Innestly dealt with. This grand result has been accomplished by two agencies?good, reliable articles?articles which, once introduced, work easily their own way?and splendid business management They have succeeded because they ought to have succeeded. If you would patronize medioines scientifically prepared by a skilled physician and chemist, use Dr. Pierce's family medicines. Golden Medical Discovery is nutritions, tonic, alterative, and blood cleansing, and an nnequaled congh remedy; Pleasant Purgative Pellets, scarcely larger than mustard seeds, I constitute an agreeable and reliable physic; | Favorite Pr ascription a remedy for debilitated i ft-males; Extract of Smart Weed, a magical lemedy for pain, bowel complaints, and an uuequaled limment for bot 1 human and horse- j flesh; while his Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy | is known the world over as the greatest specific j for catarrh and 44 cold in the head " ever given I to the public. They are sold by druggists. twenty yeab3 a sufferer.?cured by tet j golden medical discovery. Dr. R. Y. Pieroe: Dear Sir?Twenty years ago I was shipwrecked on the Atlantio ocean, and the cold and exposure caused a largo abscess to form ou each leg, which kept continually discharging. I was attended by dootcrs in Liverpool, ! ilavre, New Orleans, New York, and at the ! hospital on Siateu Island (where the doctors wanted to take one Isg off). Finally, after spending hundreds of dollars, I was persuaded to try your ''Golden Medical Discovery,"and now, in lees than three months after taking the first bottle, I am thankful to >-ay I am completely cured, and for the li st time in ten years can "put my left heel to the ground. I am at home nearly every evening and shall be glttd to satisfy any person of the tiuth of thisiuformation. I am, ?jr. yours respectfully, William Ryder, 87 Jefferoou street, Buffalo, N Y. Tul&lo Blade, j - ___ i See tiolice Family Bitters. * Important to Persons Visiting Xeiv York ; or the Centennial. The Gkavd Union Hotel, New York, opposite the Grand Central depot, b:<s over 350 elegantly furnished rooms. Eievator, steam, and all modern improvements. European plan. Carriage hire is saved, as baggage is taken [ to and from the depot, free of txpuuee. The ! restaurants supplied with the best. Guests j can live better for letB money at the Grand | Union, tb&n at Any other firbt-class hotel. Stages and care pass the hotel constantly to all | parts of the city, and to Philadelphia depot. * CONSUMPTIVES, TAKE NOTICE. Every moment of delay makes yoor case more hop* j lees, and mnch depends on the jndicioos choice of remedy. The amount of testimony In favor of Dr. ' Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup, as a cure for Consumption, far exceeds all that can be brought to support the pretensions of any other medicine. See Dr. Schenck's Almanac, containing the certificates of many persons of the highest respectability, who have been restored to health, after being pronounced Incurable by physicians if acknowledged ability, Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup iloue has cured many, as these evidences will show; bu the cure is often promoted by the employment of two jther remedies which Dr. Schenck provides for the purpose. These additional remedies are Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic and Mandrake P.lls. By the timely ose of Lbeee medicines, according to directions. Dr. Schenck :ertifiee that most any case of Consumption may be i ;nred. Dr. Scbenck is professionally at his principal office j 2oruer Sixth and Arch Streets, Philadelphia, every Monday, wnere all letters for advloe must be addressed , The Markets. r KXW TOHX 5eef Oattle?Prime to Extra Bollocks 08 11% Ooiamon to Good Texaus 08*0 08% i ?!ilch Oows ...10 oO <875 00 1 logs?Live............ ............ OPX0 08.V i Dressed 10X0 11 i 3Lsep WJ|(8 18 lambs ? 0 ? Jotton?Middling 12*0 1 X ! flour?Extra Western 5 3) 0 6 G > State Extra 5 3? <3 6 CO Yheit?Red Western 1 33 3 1 33 No. 2 Spring 1 21 0 1 29 ' lye?Stite.. P8 0 3) iariev?State..... P0 <4 >0 larleyMalt.... 1 M 3 i 35 lato?Xfil'd Western.... 49 0 4 I Jorn?Jfixoi Western... 61X0 M r*r c*1 <8 i ' 0 itraw, per cut in <#110 lope 76#?:a 0 PX ..culii 04 0 f8 5ork?Mess ?2 8? 023 00 Drd !.S3 U% 'lab ?Mackerel, No. 1, nov........ .29 no 0t7 0 44 Uc. 2, iiew 5:< 417 ?NJ iv.y Cod, per cart 4 7i 3 5 5'.- j L5 erring, Sealed, per box. . . m <4 0 tetrciru.m ?Or-rule O8S0O8V Re lined, 14 Voo!?< .'aiifortr.a Fieoce., ,0 c3 I Texas " 2D 0 S3 Aar.-fylian " ...... 41 0 80 j, lu^r?Statr- 34 <4 37 Woe tern Dairy 21 0 24 V/exiern Yello*- CO <4 21 Western Ordinary !G <# 18 lennsTivauia Fine......... ? 0 ? 1 'boo*o?State Factory 67X4 14 Plate Skinamed.... 04 4 IT Western 52 Slate 10 A 20 | LLBIXT. n?S?t ) 87 4 1 37K .ye?.-;:.t'.e 91 4 93 lorn?Mixed 68 $4 64 ! Jarley?8??- 84 0 84 v? ,-a an i STTTTA'X). "lotir .. 8 CO & 8 00 1 :.'bc.v ?Ns. 1 spring,..... 1 87 (#187 i?5rn?atszvrt. 47 tl J| rata >7 3 ! It? 74 & >o j Jarlay 75 ?i -5 ftAVTTYaBZ. !otioa?Lour tflfidUEfC*,, 12\ j ^cr?Eitr* 8 76 Q 8 75 ^haai?Ucc Westcrc 1 (0 $ 1 40 . iyo..... 75 & 78 (cm?Fellow SO ? P0 1st;?M'.ze-l 45 oi ?6 W-dJP.riiTl.... C'8V# U& i ' >T.rLAS*lrHIA. ieef Cattle?Extra 04 (<4 07 hoop 01^(4 07 Ioj?s?Urwec! .*. 11 @ .1 i\J | 'lour ? :-*uit>>"iV.vif* Ei:;. 6 10 ^ ( 0' - v? :-m fcfii 5 2 -At 2' >><; . M s? 8! lOtD-Yoiio?:.,,. H * 74iteJ .. 65 ? P6 i*t??M.rsi.. U 41 !tir?*?r,.*p-0-.T;*? . ('?< AV *i > * ?nM. ?:3? WATKBTOWN, MASS. Serf Cattlo?Poor to Choice 8 00 A 'J t0 hwp...... 2 00 <| SO dtsbfl., 2 CO C& 8 tO ] 1 ~ I A Terrible Death. At Lagrange, Ky., John Finnegan, an ! engineer on the Short Line railroad, ; met with a terrible death. Finnegan was on a freight train when an axle broke and precipitated the engine and car.s down a si ght embankment. Finne- j gan was by some means eaugot fast by the machinery and held so that his com i panious could not release him. Two j streams of hot water poured upon his j face and body from a nroKen Doner, .no , relief could be extended to the sufferer, and after the most horrible agony he be- j came unconscious and soon died. The 1 skin from the face and body peeled off ! before his own eyes. When a physician ; from Louisville arrived the sufferer was dying, with his tongue almost dropping i off from the effects of the hot water j which had forced itself into his mouth, i j Chapped hands, face, pimples, ring- j worm!1, e&Jtrhcum, and other cutaneous affec j tiocH cured, and rough akin made soft an: , smooth, by using Juxipeb Tab Soap. Be care- j fnl to got only that made by Caswell, Hazard A , Co., New York, as there are many imitations made with common tar, all of which are worth I less.?Com. . I The best Investment? Ptt'tl'l SILVER TIPPED I -Shoes. Five cents laid out for i p4##a>lafl Sliver Tips adds one dollar to the ! B^fl CIJ 31^1 woith of a pair of shoes. tWiifciM Also try Wire Qnlltcd Solea. Bonna to go because everybody wants them. HMilSinV CABLE SCREW WIREKMsiaftB Boots and Shoes. They are dor- BfMMBg able, eaey dry. L!O HKTIIl\(i entirely new. Immense profits and 1J quick r ile*. Address TIDD A C'O . Olevelaod.O. Hoiftirkeeper.* rejoice. AGENTSmake money wltb oar.? nawaitlcloj. UaPkwtcll A Go .Oheshire.Ct. Oli FANCY CA111IM, T etyies, wltb Name, I Or. ! Address J. B. HUSIXD, Nassau, Konas-Uo., N. \ . rt 5 a day at nome. Agents wanted. Ontdt and term w'^tree. Address TKUK A OO., Augusta. Maine WANTED AiiKNTS. SampUt and OuiAi fr? IMUr than Said. A. OOULTBB k OO.. Ohloaav CC, COO a day at home. Samples worth SI ** IU free. STINSON A OO., Portland. M day. Send for Chrorao CMbttr 4s1V H 4) L OJ. II. Bcrroso'a Bout, Boston, KA HPLEMDII) CALLING CARDS to t'nk. fj\J wit j duh?, sent tcr 23 Oto. (Sample* seat ijt ? 3-ogni lUmp. J. MlNKLBK A CO.. V K Package* Farm Seeds, circular* of Blooded O Cattle, on?ep, Hogs, Poultry, 8 port In* Docs, etc., se.it in?* for 3 stimps. N. P. Boras, Parte bar*. Pa. poninniptlTrii. Havlrg eared mjself of OonsumpvvtioD.l prepare th~ rexeuioe. Ad?ir-e< with stamp glv. log partlcolara Dr. J. S. ilar.U, 437 W. 4hth bfc.N. Y. A TfltT Book*. Kurloua Goods, 8 port In* Articles, n 111H elc- 04-y?ge book for two 3a stamps, it 1VLI BALDWIN A CO., Ill Wasaaa bt.lf.1 'J/iA M*n Wanted to occupy positions at the Center.Ovv nlal KxDibitlon. Good ba ary. Inclose 23a for registering. America.i Agency Co., P. O. boxH37, N.Y. A gente Wanted.-Twenty 9x11 Mounted Qfammos t\ for ?1. Largest assortment in the World. OosnhKNTaL Ohbomo Co.. 37 Weeaan Htreet, New York. MDNFY Mods rapidly with Stencil and Key Check 1*1 UII u I (^tflta. Catalogues and full particulars FREE. 8. M. Spkwckr, 3*7 Washington St.. Boston. jOu/i A Month.?Agents Wanted. 34 best mi IDOOU by. articles In tne world. One sample free ^ Address JAY BltONSON,P?tr3tt,Mlc< f* f\Per cent PROFIT to Agents. Pot *? II I traits, etc., drawn by Machinery. For fall particulars address bMITHOURA PH M'PG CG^St. Louis, Ma ADTIT1I ?ad Morphine JUnblt absolutely an: 11 r 111 HI 'peedUy oared. Painless; no pubilclt: VI lUia 080,3 tempfor Partloalan. Dr. (Ja* . tow. IH7 Washington bt..Chicago, ill A Miniature Oil Painting on Canvas which will be roar nwn Likeness, free, with The Hent Weekly, sent 3 Months on trial for 23 eta. Mone\ to Agents. L. T. LUTHER, Mill Village, Erie Qq. Ps. QAA AAA Agents Wonted. Greatest Ini/vvsVVv dnoemente ever offered. Terms, Samplo 'and Outfit free. Send 23 eta to pay for postage and pacsing. Q. B. BAA BORN, Briatol, W. H. REVOLVERS 1! ??s $3.0C rilesg! Feu. X'ran. Puts. JUtlsflx-enc rarantMA lUortnt: CsokciM Fsss. Addrtss W ESTER.X UlN WORKS. Csrc.no, UL ! KIDDER'S PASTlLLESsbyrna^footTcll&Lc ! OurJestown, Mags. ftlPyff A WEEa guaranteed to Mali and i Sa / / male Ag<* te, in toetr locillry. (Jo: \Ij I | NOCHLhu to try It. Particular* fn-i T_ _ p- O. VIOKKKY * GO.. Augurta. 1 . Aasta A MONTH ? Agents wantoo ?7?: y~'|K|| wt**re. Business uonorable an < trr Jfk/|||l olass. Particulars sent free. Aidm WMW WOKTU A GO., St. Loots, Ma I nmtlllW All Want It?thousands of llrss anA Mr II IP v millions of Droperty saved by lt-fortnn ? HIT Ml I u rn&do with It?particulars free. O. A' 1 istwflTOS ABBQ.JfewYorkAOhlet . ? RniiK I MARK TWAIN'S New Boo* ootHUGH. | sella everything. Don't worry about hard I (lmu lL.ll ikl. k?L .A W. ? AiJENTS. 1 *U? MVW Hi; ? . I they are. Send for circular* to f _ AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO^timford, Qt BOOK I 22?PY aad 8ANKEF.?Th? only i original, authentic, and oomplete reooro AflK\T8 I ?f these men and ihair worka. Bewtre 01 | imitation*. Bend tor circular* to AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO.. Hartford. Ct "PSYCHOMABKTT, or Soul Ch*rmtac.' B Uow cither aez may fascinate and gain the lore ad<; affection of any pereon they cltooae, instantlr ."hli art a!l car fo^eaa, free, by mall, IS cents; together with a Lorcr'a Quid*. Zg>ptlan Oracle, Dreams, Htnta to Ladle*, Ac. 1,SM,SMsold. X Suser hook Ai Vers T Zif, (Vy.. p' 'ste?rt>\n. FRANK LESLIE S m*L. $ I </" / weetuy by canvassing for it; 128 paces, NO illustrations, 8 ?.a0 yearly, with elegant chrome. Send 20 cents for copy and terma 11 Feame Innx, New York. iy A tUTCnA few intelligent Lad tea and ww All I Clw Gentlemen to solicit orders for Oapt. Glazier's new work, " Battlet for the Union." Just the book for Centennial time*. All exoeneea ad- I ranced. References i*quired. DUSTIN, OILMAN A CO., Harilotd, Conn.; Chicago, 1U.; 01aclnn*tl. Ohio. j sag v?zx Finely Printed Bristol Yltltlaa m A (.'ai'du seat coet-oald for 2A ct?. Sen.' * w sravp for Nunploa of falnae Card*. X^Jf V .Tl'irbls, Haoivfinkef. Scroll, DaujilsIi. K?c. **e bare over lOO stale*. Aoent* if"*'/.'. A. H. Failtt* 1 Oo . HmckloB. Mue Your Name Elegantly PHntad on IS TaaKSPanaaT Visirmo Cakds, for U Cents. Each cardceataini * * ecene which is not visible until held towards the light. Nothing like them ever before offered in America. Big Inducements to Agynta. NoTSLir PaiSTixo Co? Ashland. Maai 5 AAA A<iENT8 WANTED to sell the Oriental U, U U U Si atiooery and Jewelry Package, the largest i moat compbteatd beat railing Package in the Wot Id examples with complete SETS of GOLD plated sleev- j buttons, shirt atads snd collar button. By mail 2d , cts. Catalogue-t of Chromes snd Nove ties seat free ORIENTAL NOVKLTY GO.. 11 I Chambers Br..N.Y j AGENTS WANTED ro? the Best Bioofaphim or 1 MOODY KS5' 10 j A?D 11.Lrstrated. Cewts . Compixtf. i C A W U IT V This is the cheapest and brst thin# out. ' Ott I* fx C LK>n't ?ell any other till you tee this. Large d sconct to Agents. Address ,MUTUAL PUBLISHING CO.. Hartford. Ooun. f T R I O K S S MOW TO TAKR A I?1AN>8 VE8T OFF) WITHOUT BEHOVING HI8 l OAT. ; This seemingly rliieuious and unrwjeon-ible Tr ek 1- I to b p*n\>. met without cutting, tearing, or in any wa> : damaging the ve-t, or without removing hither ant hom ibe sl>?vt-s of tbe coat. This 1* no Catch." * 7 Now and Wourterml Tricks with Card*. . bv Malt, post-paid, m receipt of price, 10 cts. T1IO.MAH O'KANE, 130 Ntuwuu St., N. V. , rggg. HassiinHarrcster Buy the Beet* 1 vAe* TWO men bind i ,1 rhlnftl I iT*VW Ten Acrea daUjr. rL nth^mmks: "MA.^1 FAMILY BITTER*. indigestion M relieved with one d. s *. Dyspppsia, Constipation, Hkai;- ! ACHE,jAtXNDICEand Biiioubni ss oared in .short f ine. | NebvouS Irbitabujtt, Rhecmatibm, Kidney and ! I iveu Complaint# cq ed 1j a few days. Curts Pile#, KitvaiPEi a?, ScitonxL.?, Ulceus, Boils, and all Ssin j Diseases by parlfyi' g the B1 od. They will not intoxl cate, but w'll cuie abnormal thi at for strong drink. Try them! M. S JAMES, M. D.. Pioprletor, Brooklyn, N. Y For Sa'o by Drugg atV Price ft I .DO. I , WANTED flFTJTPN VI IT ' ILrllLllMIAL UNIVERSAL HISTORY To the close of the first 100 years of oar National Independence, in' hiding an account of the ootring Grand Centennial Exhibition. 700 pages, fine engravings, low price, quick sales. Extra terms. Send for Circular. P. W. ZIBGLr.RAOO ,.r I S Arch ".t. Philadelphia,Fa. ANY ONE ffnO CANNOT GET - at-home, pan be^rop. ' bend 2-cent tUr^ Catalogue' and P.-LAHDEETH & SONS, Philadelphia. | BOOK AGENTS W ASTED to ~n TeU It AW E / Mrs. Stenhouse, for 25 years wife of a Mormon High 1'iiest. It exposes Mormon mysteries, secret doings, tic., : **us a Vi uraan sees them," anil include* the real ttory t j ELIZA ANN, WIFE No. 19? ! 1 .Id In fell by herself. Introduction by Mrs. Harriet , Bceeher Stowe. 50.000 copies bare been sold, or over i 30.J00 more than any other timilar book. It it the most complete and best, and outsells all others 8 to 1, Ministers say "God fpeed it:" Eminent Women endorse K- Thou* sands a.-? waiting for i^snd Agents sell frojn lOtolOa 1 1 yfaUAM g. Bowprrca,ai5 warren SL, Boston. Mass. A<?KNT8 WANTED P?K THE CENTENNIAL R. R. MAP OF THE U. S. ' NEW PICTORIAL CHARTS, Etc.. for the TIMESWIDK.AU AKK iMK* are making large proiiu saltern OCX fre^b works. CatHlnsnes and Tenna fro*. W|Vto K. C. BRJDGMAN, 5 Barclay 8t, NewYork. or'' T4 Kim St.C'tnolnnatl.O. B WHILE WA'i <tR PIPES ARE BURST ING oommon Water Closets aod Prlrles ar* a nuiuuu*. Stormy days. dark, chilly ?. nights bar* ooma tor Deoenoj, 2* Health, Eoonomy, for the Ladlsc. S Children, Sick and Infirm, nt ocr yd Practical, Portable, Odor lee* f.I.lO Water Closet. Or oar best and II cheapest EARTH CLOSETS. U?e xL | nothing else. Send for ctrealar < o the WAKBFI8I.D B. C? CO. 36 Pey St., N. Y. HO! FOR IOWA!! TO FARMERS. Better Lands at Cheaper Prtoee sannot be had In the World; than from rheTewa K. K. I .and (-?. Soil and Climate strictly first* laaa. Pure Water abasdant. Half FareTlckeU from Chicago out and back with Free Fare te Purchaser*. A Desertptlre Pamphlet with Mai* of Orer Oae Milssi Hr jSwt Laid t eteetlnelessr. /I Beat Btporuilaf the Great Ke B / E t1t*1 at* now Ww published In the / I New York Witness. Trial ml Subscription price for One Month, I DallyUlfnt MS,25cents; Weekly V W lines*, 10 cents, pottage paid. A T Every Farmer should tsks the Witness for the fall reports of Prorif ion, Ormin, Lire Stock Markets. Offic*. 2 Sprooe St., New York. fT" Plewse order It for a Memh. J |TMI jS^Jjerewii i lmenaeaDy Jennie Jane, JsmesPsrton end ovb i tre?will, on receipt of subscription price, ti, II Ibe sent one year, poet-p<Ud, ana deliver Fill, i II fAOfi worthbeetOrocof&St II gN.Y. Weekly 8an, Jar. 13,1876. aayas II I* it is one of the beet chancre for agents seer IB lo/errd." Ae we allow A LARGE GASH COMMISSI!! IB Iit is o rare chance to make moneyrapidlg ana H pec?rs a permanent business. (\ F. Win rate BJ&Co,(Umiwd),?Dn?neSt.N.'r. Sewplewfy 'Ok SAVE MONEY By tending 84.75 tor any 84 Magazine and TUB WEEKLY TRIBUNE (regular price 86). or 85.7ft for the Magazine and THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE (regular prloe 88). Address THE TUIBLNr. New.Ywrfc. Oldest, Largest, Cheapest, Best Great Reduction in Price. The only III net rated Family and Literary Paper In Piiiladelphln Larger than the N. Y. Ledfer. Only $2.00 a Year. SPECIAL CLUB RATES: 4 erptes.one jeer....8 7 1 lOocptee, oneyear.'..8(ft 6 *' - " .... 10120 M M - ... 2ft An extra oopy Fbii to iett? r np of clab of (sw or tteenty. 8smple Copy and ctro.ilsrs Fan Agents Wanted. Gold Prem.nro?. All subscriptions can begin with a nsw story. Address THE SATURDAY EYKMNG PO*T, 726 WntiMom Hireet, PMla. .DO YOUR OWN PRINTlNC! ATLTOVELTY B A! PRINTING PRESS |Hk!H For Professional and Asuttrn n HLLaa Printers, Schools, Societies* Mm.. ullseturers, Meressnts, sad other* it's SyWHB the BEST ever invented. lli.OOO la ?"!. ? alrSRiTon styles, Prices from SS.00 to $1*0 .VO mmnrMlh. U/ODQRACO.lfimiftiia) E3H23SI dctieraia ?u UaoTof Pri nt fng" M ateri a i, ?ena ?Umn tor Cataiopsa.) 49 Federal St. BostonC~AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ENTENNIAL HISTORY OFTHEU.S. The treat Interest la the tbriUtnx history of our ooib? fry trakea this the fastest sell'ryr book ever publish' <L It oor.talos a fall account of the approaching (rand Oen'ennial exhibition. CAUTION.?Old. Incomplete and Unreliable works are being circulated; see that the book yon boy contains 442 Fine Koffravlncn and 926 Pa*e?. Send for circulars and extra terms to Agent*- Address NATIONAL PUBLISH I WO CO., Philadelphia, Pa. A FARM OF YOUR OWN Tue Best Remedy for Hard Times! Free Home^gpds A.1CD Tk J BEST and CHEAPEST Railroad LANDS Are on the L!aepef tho Union Pacific Railroad, In NEBRASKA. Boo ure A Some Now. /all Information sent FRJCE to all parts of the World Address. a F. DAVIS. Land Oorn'r. U. P. R. R.. Omaha. Neb. KKWgKj] /lr ? L^vAMHJ^VS^r^H$fj*?& tWI|^^BCTw9^^B^Hj[^M|jf A ^Hb T^^^^BM|^Hni0i^3Qgrj HALE'S " | Honey of Hop ehound and Tar fob the cubs of Couohs. Colds, Influenza, Hoabsei3ss, Difficult Breathing, and all Affections of the Throat, BaoNcniAL Titoes, and Lungs, LEADING TO CONSUMPTION. This infallible remedy is composed of tUc Honey of the plant ITorehound, in nl wntfttl nninn with TKH.TiAX.Xf ptf mrt. l: from the Life Principle of the fo:est tree Abies Balsaxea. or Balm of Gilead. The Honey of Horchonnd soothes and scatters all irritations and inflammations, and the Tar-Balm cleanses and heals the throat and air-passages leading to the lungs. Fits additional . ingredients keep the organs cool, moist and in healthful action. Let no prejudice keep you f.-om trying this great medicine of a famous doctor, who has fc'&vcd thousands of lives by it in his large private practice. N. B.?The Tar Balm has no bad taste or smell. p '.ioss, 60 cents and $1 per bottle. Great Diving to bay Uzga ?ix?. Sold Dy all Druggists. * Pike's Toothache Drops'* crre in 1 minute. '