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AN ANTARCTIC ADYENTUKE. A New Hampshire Mnn'n Ficbt with Fneean Savages. Captain Dennis Mahoney, of Greenland, N. H.,who, a few weeks ago, arrived home from a sealing voyage to Cape Horn in the schooner Express, of Ston- , ington, Conn., has, sinco hisretnrn, had removed from his head a fragment of a , flnfiaf TtfViioli rro a A ? f TTHJ UAATWU A-Ll W iV AAA January, 1881, on the shore of a small island near Terra d&l Foego by one of a party of Fnegan Indians, by whom he was attacked. Captain's Mahoney's account of ^is adventure is something as follows, anj| says the Portsmouth Chronicle, no one who knows him will question its truthfulness: The schooner had left a sealing gang ashore at a selected point, and, with only four or fife men on board, was working up the coast on her way to Sandy Point, Straits of Magellan, when the wind falling light she made a harbor near nightfall behind one of the numerous small islands, and Captadn Mahoney took a couple of men in the boak and went ashore to pick up a few skins by trading with the natives, who had been making a big smoke, the recognized signal to the vessel that they desired to trade. There had been some trouble at a point farther down the coast the previous winter between a gang of sealers and a tribe of 8 natives, in whi^h one wbite man was 1 fatally wounded and possibly some of 1 the Indians whaleboat's crew of the sealers, armed 4 with Winchester rifles, while some die- 1 7 f tance from shore, espied a ship's launch ^ filled with natives?among them being a number of sqaaws and children?and gave chase without being able to overhaul them for a long time, until a Bhot killed the old squaw, who was 0 steeling, when the wretched creatures E ceased all effort to escape, and making ? no attempt at resistance were pitilessly butohered by the Christians, not even a pickaninny being allowed to survive. ^ None of Captain Mahony's men had anything to do with the heartless affair, and no memory of it recurred to him j1 as he stepped out of his boat and clam- ' bered up a steep, rocky bank, thirty feet more in height, to where the na- ? tives awaited him in ambuth. When but a ^ shert distance from the edge of the bank 0 he was assailed by a shower of spears, one u of which strnok him on the side of the a head, jnst forward cf the left ear, and * another in the abdomen, and a blow on * the head with a club (as he supposed) knocked him down. He fortunately s fell down the bank, reaohing the beach J1 at~the Tognir&ised, dazed, and bleed- ^ ing, but still artV?T"and with sense ^ enough left to stagger to the boat, . when he drew his revolver and fired several shots, which probably had no other effect than to frighten the natives A from further attack. Captain Mahoney at once gave up all tuouwht of buying a 6eal slofi^xfind was pulled aboard the /schooner. numtrons braises r joasioned him noth si ing more than annoyance. The wounnear the left .-r was the most painful, n and the hearing on that side proved t< be entirely destroyed. In dressing th v hurt he found some foreign substance in the passage of the ear, and the stew ^ ard succeeded in extracting a piece oi spear three quarters of an inch Ioag ana three-sixteenths of an inch in diameter, ^ which Captain Mahoney now carries in his vest pocket to remember the adven- r' tnre by. The Fnegan spears are slender & affairs, from twelve to fifteen inches long, made of very strong, hard bone ; ft when used they are afflsed to a heavy handle about eight feet long, with a swell in the middle and tapering at both v, ends, the Indians darting the weapons 0 with one hand a long distance and with considerable accu- * racy ; when darted, and striking with a sharp blow, they are quite effective, and Captain Mahoney's escape with his life was no donbt due the fact Cl that his assailants were so clcse that n they could not dart the spears, and held them in their hands when striking, so 11 that only one of the many holes made n in his outside clothing penetrated through to the skin. b Ashe remarked: " I don't blame the b poor devils a bit. I was kind o' mad c' about it at first, but when I got cooled off, and considered the provocation the o poor creatures had had, I didn't want n to hurt 'em, and never tried to hunt a ' ? -3 ? ?A 1 A i r? /\n n . am t A enx UUWU III LU1. XJUU 1U iuu t>o xu generally is in rows between white men y and savages, it wasn't the one who de- c served punishment that got it." t - v Dealing With a Liar. The only way to deal with a liar is to * beat him at his own game. What, a started this item was reading about an ? American who had been to Europe, a and who was telling a friend, who knew he was a liar, about his trip across the t Atlantic, and how, on the 25th of j ' Hia mnnfh ttiAv AnrnnntArArl a swarm of r L locusts and the locusts carried away 11 every stitch of canvas off the ship. The ? m listener looked thoughtfully a moment, B and then, hesitatingly: " Yes, I met j ^5, the same swarm of locusts the next j H day, the 26ch. Every locust had on a , sS pair of canvas pacts." The first liar | |B went around a corner and kicked him self.?Peel-. An area of 93,000 acre3 has been 1 planted with trees in Kansas under the i /> ?a?1 frtWA 'Pli a (LgrfKrfcfi XiDVY 13 TT ICIQUiUK U<J aiUUllVUlVUlVt xuu ?|B cotton tree was largely planted on acra|B count of its rapid growth, and 6,000 |t||B acres were set with walnut trees. The ||||B expectation is that this will operate, in Bttj$B the course of time, to relieve the cli* |g||B mate of its extreme dryness. jejlfr&B New York is to have an underground railroad under Broadway from the BatBm^B tery to Harlem within four years. LADIES' DEPARTMENT. Indian Women. Among the Northwestern tribes cl Indians innocence is as marked among the girls as their color. The impression that the red maiden does not entertain a high standard of morality is an error for she is tanght as other girls are and grows up with well developed ideas ol the responsibilities of life and a firm reso lution to discbarge them. Educated in the faith that she was ordained to work, die trains herself to undergo hard labor, md at sixteen years of age is sturdy and strong, brave against fatigue and a housewife. She may not possess aotions of cleanliness, but she takes not i little pride in her personal appearince, and in the arrangement of her lodge she displays some crude ideas of :aste and \ certain amount of neatness, [f she marries a white man she makes iiim a good wife while she lives with him. Bis home is her sole comfort, and his jemfort her sole ambition. She thinks )f him and for him, and makes it her itudy to pleaS8 him and make him respect and love her. She recognizes n him one of a superior race, and by :er dignity and devotion endears herself ;o him and struggles to make him hapjy. At the agencies of the upper fronier thousands of men ore employed ma it 13 not an exaggeration to say hat the majority of them have Indian vives, and live happily. They are not ought after-fcy the maidens, for the Inlian girl's cnstom is to remain quiet mtil the marriage contract ii> made and he marriage portion paid over. The rasband must have; the dowry, with ehich he must invest his projected nother-in-law before the ceremony akes place. The process is a little out if the usual run, and its description aay be of interest. The aspiring bridegroom must be well-known in the tribe lefore he can hope to win a wife, ller icople want- to understand him and now if he can support, no" only icr, bnt also her relatives, in he event of a pinch. He must >e a kind-hearted man, with a emper warranted to keep in any i Va i 1 LUiiieBLiu uuuiai*?, nuu lit? inuot uuvu a ood lodge and at least half a dozen lorses. If he be and have all these, he an awooing goi Selecting the lady, ie makes application to her mother, nd at a council the price is fixed npon. f a girl is especially pretty, her mother rill demand a gnn, two horses and a at of provisions, blankets and cloth. A un is valued at $30, a horse at $20, and e must furnish material enough to ring the amount up to from $100 to 150. Then he tries to beat the dame own, and if he succeeds he knows there i some reason for letting the girl go; if ot, he understands that he has made good choice. The courtship is left ntirely to the mother. Faibion Noels. Inflated skirts are gaining ground. The bonnet of the i ? Bed plays an impoSM^I^^ lawn ?nnis costumes. Handkerchiefs embroidered in color roin high tavor. A mau should not resign?even an mbrella?while under a oloud. Ivory white and. ficelle gray is the ivorite combination of color in laces. Nearly all shoulder capes have a thick ache of lace or material around the eck. The pelerine oontinues to be the ivorite finish for summer toilets for the treets. None but home-made dresses, and ery ugly ones at that, are inflated with rinoline. The corsages of some very handsome ostumes are laced up in front instead f buttoning. Summer pelerines are small, and ome in a variety of simple as well as lany fantastic forms. Fantastic hats shading the face, with idented brims of large size, will be inch in use at the seaside. Many of the cotton satines that are x> striking and bizarre for dresses to e worn in the city will be effective for onntry toilets. Venetian lace in patterns like those f rose point is the moBt elegant trim. ling for the Canton crape dresses worn t summer receptions. Large Leghorn hats with white and ellow plumes are most popular beanse they can be worn with oosnmes of any of the colors now in ogue. White Chudda difesses, with old due or dull red velve collar and cuffs ,re worn at summer hotels by ladies ehose fair complexion will admit such , trying toilet Blue with brown is a fashionableoon rast of colors in imported dresses. A >aie Dine iouiara winn aaru Drown ligire8 trimmed with bowj of brown velve 5 ibbon is one of the prettiest of the >eason. Jast as beaded trimmings are losing favor and are about to be relegated to the Indians who first wore them, it is mnouuoed that real gold beads, real turquoises and pure amber beads are in rogue in Paris. The bicrcrest tow ever broucht dowc the "Mississippi was a fleet of thirtj loaded coal boats and barges reoentlj arrived at New Orleans from Pittabnrg. North Georgia people want the gov> ernor to appoint a daj of thanksgiving for the splendid crop of grain that hat been reaped in that section. Men can develop themselves intc splendid mental conditions, whereii they can accomplish almost double their ordinary amount of labor. TOPICS OF THE DAY. p ?ii The unfortunate animals imported to England from America, says the Sf. James ' Gazette, still continue to suffer untold 1 misery during their passage across the 1 Atlantic. From the United States there were imported, in icei, to tne ports 01 ; Barrow-in-Furness, Bristol, Cardiff Glasgow, Hartlepool, Hull, Liverpool, London and South Shields, 473 cargoes of animals, consisting of 103,693 cattle, 49,223 shee;> and 1,773 swine; of which 176 cattle, 96 sheep and 10 swine were landed dead, and 110 cattle, 99 sheep and 13 swine were so much injured that it was necessary to slaughter them i immediately on landing; 3,387 cattle, i 047 sheep and 221 swine were thrown 1 overboard during the voyage. < < One little touoh of superstition, iogether with aetrange coincidence whioh will not tend to diminish that superstition, was noticed in connection with ( the death of Garibaldi. So soon as his ' death was publicly announced, all the ( numbers which could be formed out of the dates and hours thereof were freely played in the public lotteries of Italy. Thirteen was the favorite number, hecause it included many of the combina- , tions, and is snperstitiously regarded rs the " death number." And thirteen [ was the first nnmber drawn I The 1 amount of money won by the poor ! people in small sums was something nn- , precedented?a fact which gave rise to ' the popular expression: " Yes, Gari- * baldi alwaya took the part of the poor 1 against the rich." There is a weed in the South known ( as the wild coffee plant, which has ] caused the planters a good deal of ] trouble and annoyance, and has conse- ] quently been greatly despised. It has ] recently been discovered that the plant | has its use, and rope can be made from ( it equal to the best hemp, and stronger j and finer than jute. The discovery was j made by a negro who neeaed a piece of ( rope, but eould find none. On looking 1 around bis attention was attracted to ( this plant, as he cut the stalks and ] treated them in the same manner as he ] had been acoustomed to see hemp treated in Kentucky, and the result wa ( a fiber of good length and of surprising | strength, which the old man soon con- ( verted into rope. The brothers Toeci, born in Turin ' Italy, in 1877, are considered to be even 1 more curious than the famous Siamese ' twins. They have two well-formed ' beads, two pairs of arms and two tho- 1 races, with all internal organs, but at the level cf the sixth rib they coalesce 1 into one body. They have one right ' and one left leg. It is a curious fact ' that tho right leg moves only under the ( control of tho right twin (named Bap- ' tiste), while the other is movable only ' by the left twin (named Jacob.; Aa a result, they are unable to walk. The ' left foot is deformed, and is an example of talipes^uinua. Each infant has a 1 distinct moral personality; one cries ' while tho other is laughing; one is f awake while the other eleeps. When ' one is sitting up, the other is in a posi- 1 tion almost horizontal. ' Bathing in the Great Salt Lake. < A letter from Salt Lake City, Utah, f contains this interesting extract: I do < not think that I ever said anything i about the lake to you, so I'll give yen some idea of our " Cape May." It is about sixteen miles from the city, on the Salt Lake and Nevada railroad, and takes about an hour and a quarter to ? reaoh, owing to tho slow speed made by I the cars. It is a large body of water 1 wi'.h no apparent outlet, fed by several ' large mountain streams of fresh water, ^ is about twenty miles long by three and ! six miles wide. It has several island- * mountains, which are under very little 1 cultivation?used principally as stock ( ranges. The water is extremely salty 1 Tako three gallons of water, evaporate 1 it, and you will have a gallon of salt ' with soda and other minerals combined. There is no living thing in tho water;, it is as clear as crystal. You can see * the bottom in the deepest portions j plainly. Owing to the salt the water is dense, so that it is impossible to sink, nor can you make very rapid progress 1 i- i : A 1L! 2L Z JZH2 in BwimuuHg. vjiib unug, it is a uiuioult matter tc learn to keep feet and ! arms under at the same time. You go to " kick oat" and find your feet in the ' air. It is dangerous, though, to one unaccustomed to it. For instance, you must keop the mouth closed when swimming. If you inhale ever so little of the water it will cut the lungs and bring on bleeding, which, in several instances, has proved fatal in a few hours, At nrBt tne water gets in tne eyes, and it seems as though they were being burned. I remember the first time I went in. I supposed it was no worse than ocean water, so jumped in. When I came up and opened my eyes ?well, no one had to tell me to shut them. I thought I would lose my eyeBight. Even yet I oannot get my eyes accustomed to the water. The railroad runs a train out every evening at 5:45 1 o'clock, which gives one a little over an hour for his bath and to get back. Ex cursion tickets are fifty cents. From seven to eight hundred go out every t night. There is also a train in the , morning, which enables families to go r and spend the day. There are three places,1' Black Rock,"'' Garfield Landing" and "Lake Point. ' "Garfield," is the favorite resort, as the bathing is better. The bathing is the only attrac> tion, as the shore is destitute of trees } or bushes, the only shelter being the dancing platform, whioh has a roof. One end of the platform is devoted to lunohes, having long tables on whioh to spread your luncheon. We eDjoy the 1 bathing, although you cannot dive into 3 the surf, and on stormy days there is quite a surf. I I c \ THE rTMILY DOCTOE. Hlutao. Smamer Slckneuea. It is well 'or people in summer to provide a fen simple remedies, whioh *?ow Via noa/1' ?nUVi oo fnfw in aaoao a! MO UOOU VTA WAX OJMOWJ XAA VdOOO V* accident or Bidden illness. The fluid extract of girger is to be named first as a valuable remedy. It is a cordial aromatic, nsenl in sndden colds and chills, for disturbances of the digestive organs and biwels. It is all that is needed as a nmedy in more than one half the indispositions of travelers. Mustard plasters are now prepared in very neat anc permanent forms, and should be plated in the catalogue of useful agents; and also adhesive plasters, to be n&d in cases of outs and other wounds. Aperient remedies are often necessary, and Roohelle salts are about as safe and useful as anything. A dootor is not always to be had the moment he is wanted, says Miss E. R. 3oovil in the Christian Union, and if he were there are a great many cases which the mother conld treat as well as he if she had the proper medioines. "A stitch in time saves nine" in mending the body as well as its habiliments, and J LIU L1LUU UUUOUUICU ILL ^UtCALIg nLUfcL Is necessary from a distant apothecary's shop may make.the rent bo large that it is beyond repaid. A wooden box should oe got, divided into compartments large enough -o hold a two-ounce bottle, rhe box should contain castor-oil, paregoric, peppermint, extraot of ginger, rasaline, etc. With this equipment any woman of ordinary common sense can carry her children through the summer without baring recourse to a doctor. The mere mention of castor oil is enough to make a child weep with anguish who has once taken it as it is ordinarily given. If a little milk is poured in a jup, a teaspoonful of essence of peppermint added, the oil is put in last, the whole stirred and taken through a glass tube, the nauseous taste is effectaally disguised. As a boy remarked after swallowing the compound, not knowing what it was, "It tastes a little like custard." A fow drops of paregoric mixed with ylvceririR mnkan a Rnnthintr c.ftnirh mir rare. From twenty drops to a teajpoonful, according to the age of the patient, will check diarrhea. A little ax tract of ginger mived with hot water and sugar will counteract the bad effects af a wetting. Soda mint pills are ex aellent to correot a slight acidity or to relieve nausea. In case of a sprain or a bruise, after it has been well bathed with extremely hot water, the extract of witch-hazel tieated, poured on flannel and bound on ;he part, will relievo the pain as quiokly is if it really possessed magical properies. Oarbolic acid diluted with warm ffater and poured into the ear is a sovareign cnre for earache. The mother ivhose child suffers from toothache must find a corner in the medicine chest for i vi?l of powdered alum saturated with sweet spirits of nitre. This mixture put in the cavity, if there is one, or rubbed on the gum, if there is not, will jive immediate ease. Bicarbonate of soda is for use in case )f burns or scalds. It should be wet ind bound on the place with a soft linen iloth. The prepared mustard-plasters leed only wetting before being applied. Tliey Missed the Boy After All. Jack was not a bad boy, but he was i terribly mischievous one, and his parents really felt relief at the thought ;hat be was to start for boarding-school ;he next day. His father thought of it vben he found Jack had used his razor ;o whittle a kite-stick. He thought so igain when ho discovered that Jack's :>all had gone through the parlor winlow. Jack's mother thought so when she [ound muddy footprints all over tbe parlor carpet and a great scar on the piano leg. They both thought so ivhen their chat at the supper table was interrupted by whistling and the upsetting of the milk-pitcher md thev told Jack so, when, after having driven almost wild his father, who was trying to read the evening newspaper, by getting up a fight between the dog and the oat, he sat down on his mother's new bonnet Bhe had jnst been fixing and utterly mined it. Early the next morning Jack wa? packed off. Oh! what a relief from nnipft and trnnblft it wan. His fsthftr'f razors remained undisturbed, no sound of breaking glass was heard, the parlor carpet was unstained by mud But somehow the house didn't seen very cheerful to its occupants. II was a long day. Tea was Berved, There was no whistling and upsetting of dishes to interrupt the conversation but the talk didn't seam to run ec smoothly after all. And when it cam< to reading the evening paper and fixing up another bonnet, the dog and oat slep serenely on the hearth-rug, and no dis turbance interrupted the proceedings That's the differenoo between having i boy in the honse and having him away and the gentleman pnt down hiB pape: and remarked as mnch to his wife when he noticed a quivering about he mouth and two big drops on her cheeks and there was a kind of mistiness abou his eyes that bothered him about seeing "Yes," she answered; "it?is niceand quiet; uh, uh, ou, u-u 1" and h got up and went to the window an< looked out and blew his nose for twelv minutes steadily. The sorrowful tree?so named becaus it flourishes only at night?grows upoi the Island of Goa, near Bombay. Th flowers which have a fragrant odor, ap pear soon after sunset the year round and olose up or fall off as the sun risec t V I Origin of the Croat. An English trade journal gives this account of the early days of the oravat: " In 1636 a foreign regiment arrived in Paris, in the dress of whioh one characteristic was muoh admired by the people?a neck wrapper or scarf of muslin or silk for the officers, of common stuff for the men, alike tied in a bow with pendant ends, and used by them, it is said, to support an amulet worn as a charm against sword cutti. Parisians speedily adopted the novelty, styling them at first Croats, from the nationality of the regiment, and afterward cravat. The rich then nsed embroidered and richly-laced era vats, snch as We find shortly afterward nsed by Charles IL, who is charged ?20 10s. in the last year of his reign lor ' a new oravat to be worn on the birthday of his dear brother.' James II. paid ?36 10s. for a cravat of Venice lace to wear on the day of his coronation. Toward the end of the last century the cravat was revived and worn of snoh extravagant size that whole pieces of muslin were sometimes nsed, and_even shonlder cushions, over which folds of buff were draped, so that it was as impossible for a man to turn his head without wheeling bodily round, as for an early oo*ch to turn within its own length." An inexhaustible mine of corundum stone, the next hardest known substance to the diamond, has been discovered in Butte countr. Ga. It re sembles the sapphire, is susceptible ol high polish, and is valuable in many ways. One of the best rules in conversation is never to say anything which any of the company can reasonably wish had been left unsaid. ' Language Cannot Describe It. Mr. Robert Gould, bookkeeper for Walker & Marey, whb are lumber dealers, recently said to our representative: "About one year ago 1 was taken with the genuine sciatica. 1 employed the best physicians, but they could only relieve me for the moment. Finally I used St Jacobs Oil and it effected a complete cure."?Kennebec Reporter, Gardiner Me. Germany surpasses all other countries in the consumption of matches, the number used there daily being as great as from ten to fifteen per head of the population. Mr.,Gail B. Johnson,business manager -? .L, TJ ?? P,.ot l,oo ncuwt lb U1 U1C IIUUDIUII I. vow, HUO uovu wn Jacobs Oil with the greatest benefit for rheumatism, says the Galveston (Texas) News. The professors ol the Baptist university, tJea Moines, resigned in a body in consequence of the inability of the nstitution to pay them their salar ies. aovice to conaaitipilvev. On the appearance of the flrat symptoms? as general debility, loss of appetite,"pillor, chilly sensations, foliowod by night-sweats andcough ?prompt measures for relief should be taken. Consumption is scrofulous disease of the lungs ?therefore use the great anti-scrofula or bloodpnrifier ahd strtngth-restorer?Dr; Pierce's 'Golden Medical Discovery." Superior to cod liver oil as a nutritive, and unsurpassed as a pectoral. For weak lungs, spitting of blood and kindred affections it has no equal. Sold by druggists the world over. For Dr. Pierco's pamphlet on Conenmption send two stamps to World's Dj3Penbabt Medical Association, Buffalo, N._? The locomotives now in use in Kansas, it coupled together, would cover eight miles of track, and the passenger cars would cover about four miles. Cnncets nnd Oiber.TnmoM ?.ri? trAfitpri with nnnmiftl miipppra nv Di-peu.-ary MelicjJ Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Send etanii) for pamphlet. In 1792 Now England had thirty-eight electoral votes?one-third of the whole number. 8he now has but one-tenth of the electoral votes. Fit*, Flip, Flip, sucsresfully treated by World's Dispensary Medical Association. Address, with stamp for pamphlet, Buffalo, X. Y. About $25,090,000 are now giveu to foreign , missions where but $l,O00,0G0 was given aixty years ago. ' 25 Cent* Will Bay a Treatise upon the Horse and his Diseases. . Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. Sent postpaid by New York Newspaper Union, 150 Worth I Street,'New York. . _ . . . Thonsands of bottles of Carboline, a deodorized extract of petroleum, have been aold;/rom 1 all over comes one nnivcraal cry, " Carboline ie i (lie best liAir restorer ever used:" Sold by all druggiets. THE .HAIIKM5. 1' . Pnflr rout; Beef Cattle?Good to Prime, l.w 9 (fa 12% Calves?Com'n to Piime Veal*. 6 (fa 8% Sheep *1%@ 5% Lambs 5%@ G% i Hogs?Live tVli? 8*H ' Dressed, city 1 ??<<? 10% Flonr?Ex. State, good to fancy 5 ..() @ 8 CO Wostein, good to choice 5 s'O (fa 0 50 i Wheat?No. 2 Hod i.,;;. 1 19%@ 123% No. 1 White 121 @ l 25% > Rye?State 81 @ 82 i Barley?Two-rowed State 1 l>7 (fa 112% Corn?UngradedWesternMixed 81 (fa 83 l Yellow Soutberp 92 (fa 92 . Oats?White State............ G5 (fa G8 Mixed Western 58 (fa G8 ! Hay?rrinie Timothy 70 (fa 95 i Straw?No. 1, ltye GO (fa 03 Hops?State, 1881, choice 3) (fa 38 Pork?Mees, new, for export,..22 25 @22 25 i Lard?City Steam 12 37%@12 50 Refined 13 0) @13(0 l Petroleum?Crude G%@ ay, k Refined 7%@ 7}J ** " *"' ? " - /a n/?i j Butter?state ureamery, nae.. * * us > Dairy 18 @ 20 . Western Im. Creamery 20 @ 23 ' Factory 15 @ 18 , Cheese?State factory 0 @ 11,V . Skims 2 @ 5 Western 7 @ 101/{ i Eggs?State and Penn 22 @ 22^j Potatoee-L. I., bbl 3 75 @125 5 BUFFALO. t 8tcers?Good to choice 6 75 @ 7 50 Lambs?Western 5 35 @ 5 75 " Sheep?We-tern 5 00 @ 5 25 Hogs, Good to Choice Yorkers.. 8 20 @ 8 35 Flour?C'y Ground N. Pi oceaa. 8 25 @9 00 1 Wheat?No. 1. Hard Dnlutn.... 150 @150 Corn?No. 2 Mixed 83%@ 83}/ ' Oats-Na 2 Mix. West 60 @ 02 r Barley?Two-rowed State 90 @ 90 , BOSTON. Beef?Extra plate and family.. 18 00 @20 00 r Hogs-Live 8^@ 9} Hogs?City Dressed...... ^ ? Ity ' Pork?Extra Primo pet bbl 18 JXJ @i'J ou t Flour?Spring Wheat Patents.. 8 60 @9 50 Corn?High Mixed 91 @ 95 * Oate?Extra White 71 @ 78 - Bye?State 90 @ 92 . Wool?Washed Comb & Delaine 16 @ 48 Unwashed " " 28 @ 30 1 WATEBT0W3 (MASS.) CATTLE MABKET. Beef?Extra quality 8 if @ 9 25 8 Sheep?Live weight 1 @ 6 Lambs 5l^@ 7! HogB, Northern, d. w 10# @ 10/ PHILADELPHIA. 0 Flour?Penn. Ex. Family, good 5 87%@ 5 87} Wheat?No. 2 Red 1 20 @ 1 22} Q Bye-State 97 @ 97 e Corn?State Yellow 69%@ 69} Oats?Mixod 69 @ 69 ~ Butter?Creamery Extra Pa 26 @ 26 Choeee?New York Full Cream. 11 11; ' Petroleum?Crude 6 @ 7 i.] Refined * 7 @ 7 " Entirely Disappeared." 77 Georor Street, J I New Bbuxswick, X. J., Sept. 3, 1881.) i H. H. Warxer & Cu.: Sirs-A. severe attack I of kidney difficulty entirely disappeared after \ using your Safe Kidney and Livor Cure. I Jonx B. Lvslee. Oml hnndrod and fifty soldiers of the war of 1812 still live in Kentucky. Memsmax's PzproxizsirBEnr toxic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire, nutritious properties. It contains blood-making, force generating and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, overwork or acute disease, particularly if rosulting fvr\tv* ntilmnnarw nnmnlointn n^aanroll TTivorrl I & Co., proprietors, Now York. 8old bydrnggiata The new circular of tho Cayuga Lake Military [ Academy, Aurora, N. Y., is a handsome book of 40 pages, full of information. Maj. W. A. Flint is Principal, Henry Morgan, Esq., President. Flies nnd Bags. tlieS, toachos. ants, bedbugs, rats, mice, gophers, chipmunks cleared out by "Rough on Bats." 1&. . i Teachers wanted. Address witistStop for"ap- < plication-form," Teachers' Ag'cy, Cincinnati, O , The Science of Life, or Self-Preeerratlon. a medical work for every man?young, middletged or old. 125 invaluable prescriptions. 25 Cents 'will Bay h Treaties upon the Eores and his Diseases, Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner at horses, Postage stamps taken. Bent postpaid by NEW YOBRSEW3PATEB UNION, 150 Worth Street. New York. AJ.LKN'H BRA IN FOODJ-Most reliable tonic for-thc Brnin and Generative Drains. It positively cures Nervous Debility and restores lojt virile powers. Sold by druggists, 911, ft tav 95. Freo py mail on receipt of price. JOHN H. ALLEN. Cnemlst, 315 Fiat Avenue New York. What a Three-Cent Stamp-WffTbo. It wDl do more than any other piece 0f paper of its size and valno In tho world. It accomplishes what would, a few years ago, have been deemed impossible. That talismanic placard on the corner of an envelope or package commands tho use of capacious nnd ncauutm buildings ; i wherein to receive your letters, orders trains of J ca rs to carry them, and starts an array of men to ! deliver them. It brings information from every section of the country and tidings of pleasure as well. But the crowning consideration is tho fact | that a three-cent stamp sent to A. Vocelkb&Co.j Baltimore, Md.., with the applicant1* name and address, will procure a copy of St. Jacobs Calendar, replete with Interesting reading matter, and, better than all, containing specific instructions ! fur the treatment and cure or rheumatism, neuralgia and all painful diior.-cs by the use of St. JACf^GiLT" Concerning the efficacy of this wonderful substance, tho followItic must Impress the reader:?Hon. Thomas L. James, PostmasterGeneral of the United States, when Postmaster of the City of New York, concurred in the following testimonial from Wm. H. Wareing, Esq., Asst. General Superintendent Third Division Mailing and D.'sltfwutlng Department, New York Po?tofllcc: "1 take pleasure in advising that the samples of St. Jacobs Oil left for distribution among the clerks of this office, have, as far as thej have been tried, proved equal to all that Is ctaimea for the Oil. The reports from the several super. intendents and clerks who have used the on, agree In praising it highly. It has been found cmcaclotis In cuts, burns, soreness and stiffriess of the Joints and muscles, pnd affords a ready relief for rheumatic complaints." Col. Samuel H. Taylor, Washington, Ind., and ex-Postmaster of Cumtierland, Md., was cured of rhenmatfsm by 8t. Jacobs Oil. ~ ~yy.Nt?30 It la tbo concurrent E. 1 I P testimony of the " %|P|\ public and the mediA CIltBSATtl - ^ cal profession, that llostettor's Stomach . ( Mes.^lloreorre'rlt is ; bi5I?A.?toC tJSssiJFSH o* a WP For sale by Drug^SITfc" generally? ii is n! Parsons' Purgative Pills make New Rich Blood, and will completely change the blood In the cntiro system in tbreft months. Any i>er?on who will take one pill each night ffdtn 1 tq 12 weeks mar be restored to sound health. If snch a tnlug be possible. Sold everywhere or sent by mail for 8 letter stamps. I. 8. JOHNSON A CO., Boston, Mom., formerly Bangor, die. I FRAZER AXLE GREASE B'Kf in the world, (ici llift tmnlnp. Evcrr parkiige fcti* cur trnrir.iiiark mid J* marked FrnzeHi. 80LI) EVERYWHERE. VP fl ft In abundance.?S5 Million nounda I (L* oa Imported last year.?Prices tower I i? U m\f. ihan ever.?Agenta wanted.?Don't I tea 35 **?te tlmec-Bend lor circular. 10 lbs. Good Black f>r MI?ed,forM. . 10 lbs. Fine Black or mixed, fbr fa. 10 lbs. Claoice Black or mixed, for $3. I Pond for pound sample, 17 ct<t. extra for postage. Then get up a club. Choicest Tea In the world.? Largest rarlety.-Pkflse8 cverybodv.-OMest Tea House In America,?No chromo.?no Humbug.? Straight business.?Valuo tor money. IIOB'T WELLS. 4* Testy fct..5.Y..P.O.Box 1287. civ war wastc money i t?.j >u ?r ois ? 7?? * I.ux'iriasi mouiusb*. XK&SA Q rflnltw t ft hrrowrh of btir on biid ^ Loodo. cr to rniCFKN, ATIIK50THKN or4 1-1 gjW IN VIGOAaTU tbo H MR an-votr* J?o*l l?* Lutnl.ijc/o-l. Try rtn pill Aptniih ?ll*0otrrr which liu N Kt7." TKT 5v /A1LID. Sood ONLT SIX OA.NTS to |?r. J. COXSALZZ, Bex 1540, Coo'oa. U*<i. ?r a!'. imU*.k<o4. vB|ffHy "*i Ptinnotrrnphr, or Phonetic .Shorthand Catalogue of works, with Phonographic alphabet and illustrations, for beginners, sent on applieatioh. Address. Bi-ini Fitman. Clneinnatl, O. HULLERSS3S ? - Tag AUI.TMAN' A TAYLOR CO. Mamfield. a i 1225'*? Address Jay ni-nmoii, Detroit. Mich. .<1 llflfT'owry on Marriage. Send for circular. The * ,UUUUniversal Beu. Awocia'n.of California tor unmarried |?-mou?, 6SI B'dway, IS. V. Agents wamcu. Jetvrlora fell "rllttdn Pcata mineral Clock*." ' PA ltl>?A handsome set of cards for 3c. stamp. ' v collectors. A. K. IIA??SKT"r, Rochester, N. i\ i i,-a, wi ESPOSIZIONE ] ' 11 AI v 801(0 il Fatr I I HL 1 Palazzo D jgg ' AT THE GREAT IT Herently rinsed Milan, was probably the MO INSTRUMENTS, old and new, ever brought together; made And present high excellence in this department test- and comparisons, extending through a period of 1 nmde of medals aud diplomas, in recognition of d departments of musical art and manufacture. For . moniums of all descriptions, European and American, THE GRAND SI being the only highest award in this 1 MASON & HAI Their manufacturers value tliln extraordinary diat the occaaion. especially a? an IXTEltNATIONAL MTJ8 SO PRE-KM1N ESTI .Y >[L\SICAL. The Mason i Huml the Royal Court by Carlo Dncei of Rome, and warm con At all the arcat WORLD'S INIMJSTRIAL have received the IINJUKsT HONORS, being the o IMPRflVFMfcNT*? Durlnrt the year just close IITirnUVCIYlCIM I O, preatcr valuo than in anyal Orjjan by then), twenty years since. CI tf2A\iT CTYI CC now received from th . tLCuAlvl 31 I Lto inucti anything which has 4 ranked with the very finest mcsical jnhthumf.ntr n ? * ????*.? ??.?? ot *i.'t nneh nrlfi h'UT, MA11UUA.M, Aail, auuaiaxas, civ., at ... - ...... ... ... ' nmlSUOU. / DftDIII AR CTVI PC including, also, the most i \ rurULMn ol ILto, alluses, publicand prlvat Pt 9(16, 972, SSI. S90, 993,899, $102, SI03 to 5 / EASY PAYMENTS. SShSSSS ' A NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOCUE, ffl >uick lists and cijriilnri". will lie Kent free to any one / any oi fjan tciihont hatlmj teen thtue circular*, ichlch ? MASON & HAMLIN OR 19* Trcmont Street, BOSTON; 1C East litb Street (Uni " 7&~ Merchant'* ?. wnsmsanm awwimm WW LINIMBNT rm for human, fowl and animal fleah, was JJL first prepared and introduced bv% Vr. Mj Geo. W. Merchant, In Lockport, N. T., /X U. S. A., 1835, since which time it baa I ih* steadily grown in pobllc favor, and is I law now acknowledged and admitted by the I Km trade to be the standard liniment or the KJM country. When we make this announce* iKM mentwe do ao without fear of contra* jKE diction, notwithstanding we are awar* ' jr\JM there are many who are more or lees JmvB prejudiced against proprietary remedies Jjlffyf. especially on account of the many humr I r I lJ fT the market; however, we are pleased to state that such prejudice does not exist agahtft GARGLING OIL. We do not claim wonders or miracles for our liniment, but we do claim it la without an equaL It la put up in hot* - ties of three sizes, and all we enw^fflrlra,lr 11 yon give U a fair /eCXmMj trial, remembering that the Oil AwaEiigMEwHil tmt np with white wrapper j82f?fWgU|P (small) la for human and road nesh, and that with yellow wrapper (three daea) for anl* mal flesh. Try a bottle. * \ Aa these cuts Indicate, the Ofl is used successfully for all diseases of the human, fnrt and animal (Uth. Sto&fi woQ before using. Oahrtot be Disputed. jm. -..One of tin principal ressona of . liK the wonderfid success of MsrK3i chant's Gargling Oil la that it is mannfactnred strictly on honor. llfiwflW Its proprietors do not, ss is the 'Haasa^ caw with too many, after making 4mSV tor their medicine s name, diminish its coretire properties by using inferior Com- I pounds, but cm toe rery bettgoodsto bebongatfa | ' Jf Gargling Oil .LMment for Internal MjjjktfjM,', and external nee, and tell yonf TOflNHPf neighbor what good it has done Don't fail to follow directions. Keep the bottle well corked. cures fjijj * 5ffi?gs,a|g8sk Chilblains, Froat Bites, Foot Rot in Sheep, Scratches or Grease, Foundered Feet, Chapped Hands. Roup In Poultry, External Poisons, Sore Hippies, Curb, Sand Cracks, Poll Evil, Crackod Heels, Old Sores, Galls of all kinds, Kplrootle, Lamo Back. Swellings, Tu mms, Hemoorholdsot Piles, Flesh wounds, bit/oet. Toothache, Rheumatism, Ringbone, Foul Ulcoiv, Spa-rins, Sweeney, Garget in Cows, Farcy. Corns, whitlows, Cracked Teats. Weakness of the Joints, Callous. Lameness. Contraction of Muscles, Horn Distemper, Cramps, 8wolled Legs. Crovnscab, Quittof, Fistula, Mange, Thrush, Abscess of the Udder, Caked Breasts, Bolls, Ac. $1,000 REWARD lor proof of the existK jA eucc of a bettei lieiment than "Merchant's Gargling 011," or a * better worm medJetae than ><J, "Merchant's Worm Tablets." Manfactored by M. G. O. Cd.. Loc?port, N. Y., C. 8. A. JOHN HOPCE, Sec'y. Sellable, Durable and Eeonoralcd. Aw v pcicef trWA M Usxfiui and water IAot ow?* t'ngi.u tmlU, not titled with an Send tor illustrated Catalogue "J, for teto^SSrSr y Priors. B._W. Paynk At ttoxa. Box 8(10. ConngfrgJL' AiiEJfTS WASTED FOB THE HISTORY ^ U. S. BY ALEXANDER H.STEPHENS. Hcrueat and to the moat completo and vafnable blatorv "vor puUUbed. It la eol5 by aub^ptlos o^y. and Agents arvt wanted In every ?>unty. Sena n* drcnUrs and extra terms to Agents. Address, iur.osuii Ppauflutso Co.. Philadelphia. n. HnB OAAn UBllfB BeTfEtffflflEEfB uvvv^imnip HiEnSiiMi T. A T->Tm?if i BjH Get up Club* tor osr CM BHaTSD TSA8, ud mwi ? (44 pl?ci?,) ourown laportitloa. &* -?^3oK;."HHaB of f httt bcft&UtslTda Seta rim ivav to th? iwrtTMOulnc ? Club for *1X44.. Bbwir* of Um ao-ea53 " CBKAPTKA4" that an tela* rdTrrtlard?tbrjanducnoss ' r> ad dctrlmtaul toh?lth ?luw polroa. Dul only wllh rrlliMe Bootes and with flrtl bud* IT possible. Ho bam bay. The Great American Tea Co, Importers. r.O.Borl?a. BIS TBKT gT, K?w Tarfc. MAKE HENS LAY. An English Veterinary Surgeon and Chemist, now traveling in this country, says that most olthe Hons and Cattle Powdewsoldhere are worthless trash. He says that Sheridan's Condition Powders are absolutely pure and immensely valuable. Nothing on earth will jnako hens lay lire Sheridan's Condition Powders. Dose, one toaspoonful to one pint of food. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail (or 8 letter stampe. 1.8. JOHNSON k CO.. Boston. Mam., formerly Bangor, M?. vniINC MPM Ifjou want to learn Telegraphy In YUUNu liiCii p (ew months, and be certain of a situation, addtess Valentine Bro#.. JanesnBe. Wit. A.ltS?MAPLET0DJ3^: ONI MILLION COPIIS SOLD. JSYEBYB0DY If ANTS IT I v EVERYBODY NEEDS IT! the science of lifei or, self* preservation, Is a medii',1 treatise on ExhanetedTltality, Nervous odd Physical Debility, Premature Decline Ja Ran; k an indispensable treatise for ersrr man. whcttot forme, middle aged or old. the science op life) or, self. ' preservation, Is bevond all comparison (the mpet extraordinary work on Physiology ever published: There is nothing whaterer that the married or single can either require or wifh to now but what iatoUy explained^Toronto Globe, the science of life) ob, selfpreser v ati ok, Instructs those in health how to remain so, and the Invalid how to become well. Contains one hundred and twenfr-flre invaluable prescriptions for all forme of acute and chronic diseases, for each of which a first-dies physician would charge from 93 to 910.* London Lancet. the science of lifei or, 6elf* preservation, Contains 300 peace, fine steel engravings, la superbly bound In Tronoh muslin, embossed, full frill. It lea marvel of art and beauty, warranted to be a better ? _ medical book in every,aeeeeJUiap ckn^TihialaaaLi, ,- ^ etscTThe re for d out! o iL e price, or theaoney Will to refunded in every instance.?Author. mnt ? error ms of xafei or,: self* PRESERVATION, It to much superior to ?a other treatise* oa eutycct* that comparison i* absolutely impossible.? Btmon Herald. THE feCIENCE OF LIFE; OR, SELF* PRESERVATION, U Mnt by man. Meanly Moled, postpaid, on receipt of price, only 11.36 (new edition). Small illurtrated ample*, 6c. Send sow. Tbe author can be consulted on all iUir?eoe requiring tldll and experience. Xdirest PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, or W. H. PARKER, M. D? 4 Balflnch Street, Rotten, Man. MUSIC ALE IN MILANO. ocinlo di 8. M. la Regina, el R. Conservatory. ALIAN MUSICAL EXPOSITION ST EXTRAORDINARY COLLECTION OF MTT8ICAI fully illustrating the great progress which bat beer ; of manufacture*. After exhaustive examinations, several mouths, more than '2.50 Awards were spiers of sui*>r-excellence attained in tho rarlout REED INSTRUMENTS, including Organs and Hap LVbtt mciiMb, department, was conferred upon the HUN ORGANS. Inction the more highly because of tho importance o) ICAL INDUSTRIAL COMPETITION IN A COUNTRY In Organs were honored by especial exhibition befor* emendation from their Majesties the King and Queen EXPOSITIONS for fourteen years theso Organ* nty Anuria a orgaiu which hare rectlctil ?uch al any. / d this Company have introduced Improvements o! / imiiar period since tho introduction or the American / .oir factories daily, surpassing in capacity and excel/ * i before been produced, and certainly worthy to bit t the world They are in cases of solid blsck wat5'240,8330,8360,8390,84S0, 8370,8f?fl valuable of the recent improvements, and adapted to e, in plain and elegant cases, are at S'-W, 830, 837, JviOO and ap. / ' cash or easy payments, or will be rented uatil rent t issued, fully describing and illustrating MORB AN ONE IIUNDRED^TYLES OF ORGANS, with n*. desiring them. Certainly no one ehoitltl buy or ren; mtaln much uerjul information about orgaiu. !CAN AND PIANO CO.t / Ion 8q.), NSW 19Mi 11? Y??to*U ATmtow CSJ$AGG