Democratic Sentinel, Volume 7, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 July 1883 — Page 4

NEWS CONDENSED.

atelegrapblG Summary.! EASTERN. The owner of the horse which wm driven continuoudy from New York to Btx>ny Creek, ninety miles, in a contest with a catamaran, has been arrested for cruelty. The Dauphin county (Pa.) Almshouse buildings, except the school-house, was destroyed by fire, involving a loss of ♦2OO,O(XX Great trouble was experienced in removing some insane Inmates, and twelve of them escaped. John Halliard, late President of the wrecked bank at Jenny City,has gone to the State prison for a period of eighteen months. At the Tewksbury (Mass.) Almshouse investigation, a letter to the State Board of Health was read, showing that from Oct 1,1882, 630 cadavars had been delivered to colleges, for j which they paid ♦8,827. Of this sum but ♦COO found its way into the State Treasury. • Trouble was caused at Elmira, N. ¥., by the Mayor and a gang of men tearing up the track of the D., L AW. road, which crossed Fifth street when the ordinance permitted that it merely run to it Railroad employes ran cars on the track to prevent its being demolished, and were arrested for blockading the streets, while the Mayor and his chief assistant were arrested for malicious mischief Cornell won the inter-collegiate boat race at Lake George, University of Pennsylvania second, Princeton third. Three persons were killed by lightning during a thunderstorm at Dover, N. H. Bleakie & Co.’s mill at Armstrong, Mass., was struck by lightning and burned, entailing a loss of ♦100,030. John Armoy Knox, of the Texas /Siftings, and one D. B. Sheahan, said to be a sculptor, quarreled about politics at a wine supper in New York, the matter culminating in a duel across the river, in New Jersey. JThe combatants were placed twenty paces apart At the second fire Knox felt his left arm twitched, and found that Sheahan’s bullet had passed through his coat and shirt, slightly grazing the skin. Sheahan was untouched The pair then shook hands, and the proceedings were over.

WESTERN.

McVicker’s Theater began its twentyseventh season at Chicago, on Monday, with the Boston Theater Company, the opening attraction being Charles Beade and Henry Pettit’s melodrama of “Love and Money.” The chief element of the story is the for-, tunes of a loving father and daughter, who have been long parted by the evil chances of life and the schemes of the wicked; and the contest of sentiment is in the young girl who has to choose between her real father and poverty and her adopted father and riches. The climax of unhappy life with these two loving hearts in their burial in a coal mine by. an •explosion effected by the villain of the piece, from which they are rescued by a sensasional miracle. The play was very successful in London and Boston. Near Cincinnati, Ohio, on the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton railway, the “Thunderbolt Express” train of the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Company ran into a wagon in which were a family of six persons and a driver. Only one of the party escaped alive For unknown reasons the four Commissioners and Clerk of Grand county, Col, were shot by masked men, two being killed Instantly and two others being mortally wounded. It appears that Commissioner Mills, of Grand county, Col., was one of the three men who assassinated the other Commissioners and the County Clerk. The whole affair grows out of the removal of the county seat Astoria, Ore., was visited by a disastrous conflagration. The loss is placed at $225,000, upon which there was an insurance of $50,000? A number of convicts in the Oregon penitentiary, at Salem, made a desperate dash for liberty. Three of the fleeing felons were shot and instantly* killed by a guard, three were mortally wounded, and eight escaped. Hon. S. P. Hosmer, a member of the Ohio Board of Public Works, died at Zanesville from the effect of a sunstroke. The large bonded warehouse of the Atlantic (Iowa) Alcohol Company was struck by lightning and burned, causifig a loss of $28,000. Eleven convict soldiers, destined for the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, escaped from the guard-house at Fort Omaha, tunneling the structure.

SOUTHERN.

A duel between W. C. Elam and R. F. Beirne, two'Richmond editors, was fought at New Hope, near Waynesboro, Va, The parties met in a strip of woods, and when the distance had been marked off all not connected with the affair were requested to retire. At the word “one” both pistols were discharged, without effect At the second call the weapons were heard simultaneously, Elam being shot in the right thigh. As he staggered his second placed him on a cushion which lay on the ground. The combatants were pale, but cooL Beirne was taken away by his second and went to Baltimore by rail Elam was placed in an ambulance and taken to the residence of Lieut Gov. Lewis. Enoch Pratt, of Baltimore, gave a deed of the Pratt Free Library to thgt city, and beside drew a check for >833,333.33, which will be invested in city funds for the support of that institution. J. T. Brown, Jr., late United States Marshal for the Eastern district of Arkansas, has been convicted of perjury and forgery, and will pay a fine of SI,COO and undergo imprisonment at Detroit for five years. A Richmond (Va.) telegram says: “Elam, the wounded duelist, is in a critical condition. The ball struck near the right hip and passed inward and downward, almost grazing the bladder. Pyaemia and sloughing are greatly feared” A negro murderer named .Martin Jones was hanged by a mob at Skip with, Miss Col. M. L. Colo wap found near Vicksburg, Miss., Tuesday morning, riddled with buckshot Dr. H. P. Hook and his son have been arrested for the murder. Two blocks of frame stores at Gadsden, Ala, valued at >IOO,OOO, were burned. The first bale of new cotton, weighing 335 pounds, of middling quality, sold at Macon, Ga, at 25% cents per pound A’saw-mill, near Huntsville, Texas, worked by prison labor, was blown to pieces by a boiler explosion. Four convicts were instantly killed and four others seriously wounded. Six negroes, four men and two women, were drowned in Columbus county, N. C. On reaching a bridge that spanned a swollen stream, they found that a portion had been washed away. Determined to cross the stream, however, they looked for a boat, and, being unable to find one, made a raft of logs and grapevines, and on this they attempted to cross. When the middle of the river was reached the raft went to pieces, and the whole party of six found a watery grave.

WASHINGTON.

The President has made the following appointments: 00l HoZabird, United States Quartermaster General, to succeed Gen. Ingalls, retired; William J. Galbraith, Associate Justice of title Supreme Court, of Montana; Samuel J, Kirkwood, of Iowa;

“ 7 _77 ~ Silas B. Dutcher, of New York, and Anthony Gilkeson, New York, a Comrnisdon to examine forty-five miles of railroad and telegraph line constructed by the Oregon and California Railroad Company southwardly from the city of Roseburg, Oregon. Rear Admiral Benjamin F. Sands, retired, died at Washington last week. Following is a recapitulation of the debtsta&ment issued on the Ist Inst: Interest bearing debt— Three and one-half per cents♦ 32,082,600 Four and one-half per cents„ 550.000.000 Four per cents....„ 737.586.300 Three per cents 804,204.350 Refunding certificates 355.000 Navy pension fund 14,000,000 Total interest-bearing debt<l,338.229 IM Matured debt.. 7.831,415 Debt bearing no Interest-Legal-tender notes.. 846,740,001 Certificates of deposit. 13,375,000 Gold and sliver certificates„ 170,995,471 Fractional currency....... 7,000,690 ratal without interest.... ♦538,111,102 Total debt (principal)ll.Bß4,l7l,72B Totalinterest. 12 309 382 Total cash In treasury. 3*5 3r*’oo2 Debt, less cash in treasury. 1,551,09L207 Decrease during June , a w Decrease Ot debt since June 30. 1881 137’823’253 Current liabilitiesinterest due and unpaid. 1,702 345 Debt on which interest has ceased.. » ? 831 415 Interest thereon 306*821 Gold and silver certificates 170995'471 U. 8. notes held for redemption of certificates of deposit. 13,375,000 Available assets— Cash in treasury. 845,382,902 Bonds Issued to Pacific railway 00mganies, interest payable by United Princtnal outstanding.♦ 64,623,512 Interest accrued, not yet paid. 1.938 705 Interest paid by United States 67,283,888 Interest repaid by companies— By transportation service. $ 16,777,880 By cash payments, 5 per cent, net earnings. 665,198 Balance of interest paid by United States 89.850.809 Attorney General Brewster has rendered an opinion that the scheme to store American bonded whisky in Bermuda is not an exportation within the meaning of the law. j ,

POLITICAL.

The Notional Anti-Monopoly Convention, with 325 delegates in attendance, assembled in Chicago on July 4. Hon. Allen W. Boot, of Nebraska, was called to the Chair. After a hot debate of an hour, Dennis Kearney was ruled out by a vote of 118 to 74, and took his departure. John F. Henry, of Brooklyn, was elected Permanent Chairman, and C. C. Post, of Indiana, Secretary. At the evening session, principles were discussed by Capt. Stickle, of San Francisco; a/armer named Dean, from the Pennsylvania oil region, and J. K. Magie, of Illinois. James F. Jones, Democrat, has been elected to Congress from the First district of Alabama He takes the seat made vacant by the death of Herndon Ex-Gov. Ramsey, Chairman of the Utah Commission, states that its members were treated very civilly by both Gentiles and Mormons, although the subject of much criticism. He thinks the election in August will be the test of the experiment toward reform In Utah. At the second and last day’s session of the Anti-Monopoly Convention, in Chicago, Mar.in Todd, of San Francisco, spoke on the oppression of labor. Mr. Crocker., of lowa, thought railroads the most damnable of all monopolies. W*. 8. Wolf, of New York, regarded the tariff as a question which should be left outside the convention. Bev. Gilbert De La Matyr, of Ind., de r nounced class legislation for the robbery of labour. AJ. Streeter, of 111, presented the report of the majority on platform, which was adopted. It pronounces all corporations subject to the control of the States or the Federal Government, and demands an investigation by Congress of the cost of railways and transportation. It urges the establishment of a postal telegraph, postal savings banks, a graduated income tax, and the amendment of the Patent laws. It opposes the issue of currency by banks, and favors paying of the national bonds in lawful money. The tariff is denounced as being wholly in the interest of monopolies.

MISCELLANEOUS. Incidents and accidents of the Fourth: Henry 0. Bowen’s annual celebration at Woodstock, Ct, was a great success Rutherford B. Hayes delivered the chief address, and Mrs. Hayes was forced to step to the front of the platform and receive ; a round of cheers. Bishop Coxe, of Buffalo, spoke on national topics, and was followed by Senators Aldrich and Blair. A poem written for the occasion by John G. Whittier was read by Clarence Bowen. Nearly 8,000 persons assembled at the cemetery on the farm of the late Gov. Williams, of Indiana, to witness the unveiling of a suitable monument All the State officers were present, and addresses were delivered by ex-Benator McDonald and Senators Voorhees arid Harrison. At Erie, Pa, Albert Kuhn and several companions, who were somewhat intoxicated, fired from the windows of a street-car in which they were riding. Mary Steiner, who was on the sidewalk, was shot through the heart, and Kuhn was arrested for murder. Two hours later Kuhn’s brother was found in a cellar, where he had hanged himself. Prince L. Moody, of -Streator, 111, after assisting to fire a cannon, early Wednesday morning, sat in a widdow to get cooled, and fell asleep. His wife called out to him in .warning, and he awoke so suddenly as to fall into the street and break his neck. While 2,030 citizens of Goodland, Ind., stood in the park listening to the Fourth of July oration, a liberty pole beside them was shivered to fragments by lightning, but no one was injured. Hon. David Davis presided over an old-fashioned celebration at Bloomington, HL, where John H. Oberly was the orator of the day. Michael Davitt addressed a massmeeting at Innishowen in celebration of the anniversary of American independence. The people of Portland, Ma, celebrated the 250th anniversary of its settlement by dedicating a monument and placing memorial tablets at various historic spots. H. H. Ludlum made a balloon ascension at Montrose, Pa At the height of forty feet the trapeze rope caught on a tree, and' the aeronaut was hurled to the ground, fracturing his skull The feature of the celebration at Quincy, 111, was the unveiling of a bronze statue of the late Gov. John Wood, the first white settler of that city. ExSenator Oglesby delivered the oration. In New York the Continental Guards of Charleston helped the veterans of 1812 to raise the stars and stripes at the Battery. The cadets of the Military Institute of Virginia were received by President Arthur at the Fifth Avenue Hotel,’ and returned a flag captured from the One Hundred and Sixtyfourth New York regiment.

FOREIGN.

Mr. Parnell has been making a thorough Investigation of the “assisted” immigrant question in Ireland and, it is asserted, will shortly, in Parliament, make a speech on the subject in which he will charge the British Government with having corrupted New-York officials, and by that means effected the landing at that port of thousands of indigent persons. Senator Jones, of Florida, was given a banquet by the Lord Mayor bt Dublin, at which Parnell, Sexton, O’Connor and Healy were present A cable dispatch of the 2d insL, says that 119 deaths from cholera occurred at Damietta in. twenty-four hours. Most of the physicians, becoming panic-stricken at the horrible mortality, had fled the city. Persons attempting to pass the sanitary lines in Egypt had been ordered to be shot The French Government *has decided to quarantine all vessels suspected of having cholera on board, ae the British authorities

have been known to grant dean bills of health to ships from infected porta The annual pilgrimage to Mecca has been prohibited by the Governor of Algiers. Every' precaution has been taken to guard the British troops in Egypt Healy, the Parnellite, triumphed in the County Monaghan election. Father Tom Burke, whose tour in America some ten years ago, is Well remembered by many, died recently in Dublin. He was a scholar and Orator of groat renown in the Catholic church of Ireland, Italy and America. An Alexandria dispatch of the 3d inst rays: There were 141 deaths from cholera at Damietta yesterday. There were fourteen deaths at Mansourah and five at Port Said from the same disease Spain has imposed ten days’ quarantine upon all vessels arriving at Spanish ports which left Egypt since June 22, and a fortnight’s quarantine upon vessels with sickness on board. Regarding Errington’s statements oq Irish affairs, Cardinal McCabe, of Dublin, has received a communication from the Vatican asking if his health will permit him to visit Rome The steamship Daphne was launched on the Clyde, near Renfrew, Scotland, with 2CO workmen on board. She slid very rapidly off the ways and rolled about in an alarming manner. Those on board became frightened and ran to and fro in confusion, when the ship rolledgover and nearly disappeared in the water. One hundred and fifty persons found a watery grave by the disaster. English iron-workers on strike, to the number of 10,000, marched to Dudleyport, Tipton and Maxley, entered the mills and quenched the fires in the furnaces. Near Ennis, Ireland, a farmer named Griffey was shot and seriously Wounded for taking possession of a boycotted farm. The Duke of Marlborough (Lord Churchill) is dead.

LATER NEWS ITEMS.

A negro named Nelson Howard was taken from the jail at Mound City, HL, by a mob and hanged to a tree, for the murder of a railroad contractor on the Fourth of July. He fought desperately when the mob attsnpted to remove him, and was shot several times by the lynchers before he was strung up Two men were boiled to death in the North Side Bolling-Mills ajj South Chicago. They were inside a boiler mak'ng repairs. The valve which held the steam away from them broke, and they perished at once. Bradstreet’s Agency estimates the total wheat crop of 1883 at 443,360,000 bushels, nearly 61,000,100 less than the yield of 1882 as figured by the Washington authorties. A steamer with yellow fever on board arrived at Galveston from Vega Cruz, and was iso’a ted from the rest of the shipping. A rigid quarantine has been established. The bark Vega, from Vera Cruz, arrived off Mobile bar with alfher crew saye four down with the pestilence. The Board of Health of Pensacola has issued an order that yellowfever infected vessels arriving shall remain at quarantine until frost comes. Joseph Brewster, a soldier, who had been convicted of rape, was executed at ysleta, Texas. With the aid of a bottle of whisky, he made a long speech from the gallows. John Cone, colored, convicted of a similar crime, was hanged according to the forms of law at Houston, Texas. Striking coal miners at Ely, Vt., have been causing such serious trouble that the Governor called out the militia. Attorney-General Brewster’s opinion that whisky cannot be exported for purposes of reimportation has canted great excitement among the dealers in New York city. Ex-Commissioner Baum advises the Exporters’ Association that the opinion is good law. Thirty assisted emigrants, mainly from the workhouse at Ballanisloe, arrived in New Yoijk by the steamship City of Bome. It is positively asserted that Carey, the informer; left Ireland in disguise. The Irish Catholic hierarchy, at a meeting in Dublin, has declared against the State deportation of Ireland’s poor. Floods in the Surah district, Hindostan,have effected great damage. Whole villages have been destroyed. Holders of Confederate bonds in London have subscribed £IO,OOO to be used in endeavoring to have some of the Southern States recognize their debts, and trustees of the fund have been appointed. Mr. Trevelyan, Chief Secretary for .Ireland, stated in the House of Commons that of I,OCO emigrants who had gone to the United States two families had beenjnmates of the workhonse at Balmullet, and they had received money on landing. 'He said he understood emigrants were being sent 'back because they were undesirable settlers.

How to Cook Lake Trout.

A correspondent of the American Angler furnishes the following as the proper method to prepare lake trout for the table: Clean and split your trout open on the back; if then too large for a frying-pan, divide again vertically; if still too large, cut into pieces four or five inches wide; roll the halves er sections in Indian meal or cracker crumbs; some prefer to dip their fish in eggs, white and yelk beaten together. Fry some clear fat pork in a frying pan over a hot fire, and when the fat is fried out, put in your fish, flesh side down; finish cooking with the skin side down. Cook quickly and serve hot, with pepper and salt. When the crust which the frying forms is broken, you have the delicious, white, moist meat, with all the richness which a fat trout affords, making a dish fit for a hungry angler.

THE MARKET.

NEW YORK. Beeves..., >5.60 @6.72 HOGS 6.85 @ 7.12% Flour —Superfine 3.40 @ 4.25 Wheat—No. 1 White 1.14%® 1.15 No. 2 Rea 1.17 @ 1.17J4 CORN—No. 2 .61)4® .62 )ATS—No. 2 J. .4014® .41 .’ORK—Mess 17.75 @17.8714 Laud.... 9%@ .914 CHICAGO. Beeves—Good to Fancy Steers. 6.00 @6.05 Cows arfd Helfers 4.60 ® 5.10 Medium to Fair 5.40 @ 5.74 1005...’...,,. 5.70 @6.35 Flour—Fancy White Winter Ex. 6.00 @ 6.25 Good id Choice Spr’g Ex. 5.50 @ 5.75 WHEAT—No. 2 Spring9B%@ .99 No. 2 Red Winter 1.06 @ 1.0614 CORN—No. 2 SOJ4@ .50 H JATS—No. 232%@ .33 (YE—No 2 .55)4® .5512 I ABLE Y—No. 268 @ .70 Butter—Choice Creamery2l @ .22 Eggs—Fresh .14)4® .15 P08K—Me55....,...’ [email protected] Laud... -9)b@ . 9% MILWAUKEE. Wheat—No. 2 96)4® .9654 Corn—No. 2.-51)4® .51 & Oats—No. 2 32)4® .32% Rye—No. 2 52%@ .53% Barley—No. 2 65)4® .66% Pork—Mess... 15.90 @16.60 Lard 9)s@ .9)4 ST. LOUIS. Wheat—No. 2 Red j.06?4@ 1.08 Cobn—Mixed44 @ .44*4 Oats—No. 2 33 @ .34)4 81K......47H@ .47% Pork—Mess 17.40 @17.50 Labd - .9 @ . 9J* CINCINNATI. Wheat—No. 2 Red 1.06 @ 1.C6J4 Corn a ® Oats. 36)4® .36% RYE ,57)4® .58 POBK—Mess 17.00 @17.00% Labd. .9 @ .9% TOLEDft Wheat—Na 2 Red J.06%® 1.06)4 Cork.. .53%® .53)4 MHH" -*• ■“ FLOUR 4.25 @4.50 WHEAT—No. 1 White J. 12 @ 1.14 Corn—No. 2. .55 @ .56 Oats—Mixed 45 @ M POBK—Mess ; 20.50 @21.00 INDIANAPOLIS. Wheat— Na 2 Bed 1.02 @ 1.02% CoitN—Na 2. is @ .48)4 Oats—Mixed...,, .3214® .32% EAST LIBERTY, PA. * Cattle—Best mo @6.25 Fair 5.85 @ ('.OO Common 5.J5 @ 5.75 Hogs., e.so @ 6.70 Sfflpp, 3,50 0 5.60

A FATAL LAUNCH.

A Terrible bisaster ofi th® River Clyde. One Hundred find Fifty tlsopfc Drttwnei A cable dispatch from Glasgow, Scotland, rays the steamship Daphiie tipped bver oii her tide, capsized ana sank in midstream while being launched in the Clyde. About 100 persons perished. The vessel, with upward of 200 workmen aboard, left the ways at a very rapid rate. As she gained tire water she rolled from side to side. When opposite Renfrew, about five miles above this city, the human freight was seen rushing to and fra The ship gave a furious lur jh, rose clear above the water and disappeared as if bv magic. Those who had citing to floating pieces of the wreck did their utmost to save their drowning comrades Eye-witnesses raw a great number struggling and shrieking tot help Many were bruised and covered with blood, having been struck by the debris. Boats were pulled hard to aid in rescuing the unfortunatra; many were thus raved. A number of men at the ship’s yard, on the opposi.e tide of the river, witnessed the disaster, but were unable to render any assistance. They Immediately set to work saving the people struggling in the water They say some of the men on the steamer jumped overboard and others were thrown overboard and that a quantity of loose fittings fell from the deck find crushed many unfortunates struggling in the water A number of swimmers were’ visible directly ' after the ship capsized, but many of them were afterwafd seen to sink. Six men were teen clinging together. Four endeavored to climb upon the steamer as she wps sinking, but were forced to desist by tush of steam from the port-hole. Some climbed upon the keel just before the ship was submerged. Many who were dashed into the water swam ashore. Several of Aose picked up were so exhausted that it was found necessary to remove them to hospitals According to the stories of witnesses and gprvivors, the vessel left the slip too rapidly, causing.her stern, which entered first, t j sink deeply in the water. She was then caught by the strong current of the river, by which, as well as her topweight, she was caused to keel over so far that the water entered her port She had all her machinery aboard when launched. She is now completely under water. She was constructed for coast trading, and was of 500 tons burden. Crowds of stricken relatives lined the quays all day. Whenever a dead body was taken out and recogn’zed heartrending cries drowned the splash of busy oars. A later despatch says: A diver reports that the bodies in the hold of the Daphne are so closely packed that he was unable to move them. Preparations are being made to raise the vessel Fifty-two bodies have been recovered. It is now estimated that 150 persons were drowned by the sinking of the Daphne.

MEXICAN RAILWAYS.

Nearly Twenty-five Hundred Miles Completed. The Mexican Financier give the following list from official sources of the railroads completed in Mexico up to the ehd of April: Miles. Tlascala railroad 2.60 Orizaba-Ingenio 3.00 Nuetla-Tlasciaco 3.76 San Andres.. ......... 7.-00 Tlalmajialco 9.00 Pueblo and Matamoras Izucar 19.00 San Martin 23.00 Tehuacan-Esperanza 81.00 Tehuantepec 31.00 Sinaloa and Durango 36.00 Vera Cruz-Medelin 39.00 Hidalgo railroad 56.00 Pueblo San Marcos. 67.00 Yucatan lines k . 68.00 Mexico-Tlalpmalpam...'. 76.00 Sonora railway, Guaymas to Nogales ..234.00 Interoceanic, Mexico to Cuantia and branches 183.00 Mexican National, Mexico to Acamblaro 178.00 Laredo southward 208.00 Branches 87.00 Mexican Central, Mexico to Lagos. .811.00 Paso del Norte to Chihuahua. 302.00 Tampico to San Luis’Potosi 62.60 Mexican railway, Vera Cruz to Mexico ...264.00 Pueblo and Jalapa branches 89.60 Total 2.379.25 The table foots up 2,379% miles, although the Financier gives the total completed road at 2,437 miles. The Mexican National, the Interoceanic, the Hidalgo, and the Yucatan lines are narrow-gauge, the i;est standard gauge. A number of the shorter lines given above are worked by horse-power, and some of them have been in existence a long time. v

THINGS CURIOUS AND NOTABLE.

B. D. Barnes, of Wilson county, N. 0., is the possessor of a well-developed pig that has horns similar to a lamb’s, one over each eye. A curiosity for pomologists to ponder over comes from Hamilton county, Fla., in the shape of an appla It is a perfectly formed specimen, being half russet and half bellflower. The Jumbo radish was grown in Florida. At least Owen* Keen claims to have in his possession a specimen of this vegetable measuring two feet in length and eight inches in diameter and weighing fifteen pounds. A queer and an easy method of shoemaking is practiced by the dwellers on the island of St Helena. It consists of wrapping around the foot the soft, warm skin ot the pot-fish, which, in drying, retains the shape of the foot For twenty-nine years there has been a Tow Society connected with the Baptist church at Hemel, East Prussia. It buys worn-out cables and ropes of vessels, picks them to pieces and sells the tow to ship-re-pairers for calking purposes. Thousands of dollars has been received in this way. The Glasgow Daily Mail is responsible for the statement that, while two miners were at work taking down the coal in the splint seam at the Ferniegare colliery, at a depth of nearly 100 fathoms from the surface, a frog leaped from the face of the coal in quite a lively state. The coal, which was very hard, showed a cavity that had been the singular abode of the frog. The animal at the time of writing was still alive, but much attenuated. It measured eight inches in length. A child has been born in Turkish Kurdistan with a full beard and mustache, a perfect set of thirty-two teeth, and no fewer than forty distinct and well-formed fingers Naturally such a prodigy attracted great attention, but several visitors it at their cost, for it snipped its thirty-two teeth at everybody who came within range with such energy and success'that it became necessary to extract all the front ones, It is a wonderful thing to see the infant lying in its cradle, stroking its beard with its forty fingers.

PERSONAL.

Dom Pedro, of Brazil, wears white silk and white satin when he sits on his throne, a necklace of immense diamonds and emeralds, and a rich lace cravat A ninety-year-old Pennsylvanian, who never smoked, never drank, never fell i n love, and never went out of his native town, has just started on his first journey. He went in a hearse. Olive Logan has discovered a Scotch girl to whom the Prince of Wales sent a nosegay, which terrified her parents to such a degree that the Caledonian lamb was promptly shipped to the North of Tweed. Richard Henry Stoddard has set his son to learning the publishing business One poet m the family is enough. In the Stoddard fsmily there are two, Mrs. Stoddard being very felicitous in the use of blank verse. Gen. Sherman’s idea of Washington recalls one of Horace Greeley’s letters: “There is so much villainy going on in this place,” he wrote in 1850, “that I am almrst afraid to look in the glass lest I shall see the face of a rogue. ” Richard Rowley, the hero, who, in the memorable fight of the Kearsarge with the Alabama, p eked up a 100-pound she 1 from the Kearsage’s deck, while the fuse was burning, and threw it overboard, was up before the Bangor Municipal Court last week on a charge of drunkenness.

FISH TALES.

A Jerseymax caught an eel in a small creek and found in<dde of it a rfeeve-button which he had lost some years before. Thebe is in Lake Tahoe an immense fish which jumps up out of the water, seizes the bowsprit of vessels in its mouth, snaps them off, and disappears. Fish are so plentiful in the Hackensack river that they appear to be crowded for room. It is not an uncommon sight to see them swim up alongside of boats and mutely plead to be taken in. A Long Island angler threw in his line the other day, and fastening it to a stave went home to dinner. When he returned the weight was so great that he was compelled to call for assistance. Hauling up the catch he was surprised to find that thete was only one immense catfish, but on uniting it open he discovered another fish which, when dissected, contained a smaller one that had swallowed the hook.

Not That Kind of People.

bed; Thßm aS tile setdisf; On this point there was a utile difference of opinion throughout the army. Thomas always seemed on duty. He was nfcvef in ttndrhss. He was always the stern, conscientaoiis BtHaief ifibhis fearing, and comes up in the memory of every soldier now as the representative commander of the war. He was not all “IrUn Duke,” as those who were nearest him during the war cftil testify. He loved a good story, and often told the following with great relish: After the battle of Perryville the army moved after Bragg, to the mountains in Southeastern Kentucky. Many of the Kentucky troops passed very near their homes and had a great desire to visit their families. .In tnahy cased they did, without permission, but in other cases men more conscientious labored hard to secure permission, The Colonel of a regiment, raised in the mount; ain districts, one day received a cftil from a backwoods specimen of the Kentucky soldier, who was biassed as a “six-footer.” He proceeded to state his case in a deliberate, drawling tone: “Kernel, Pm now about four miles from home. I would like to go over and see the old woman and the young uns and get up a little wood and fix ’em for winter. I kin ketch you afore yen git to Cumberland Gap.” “How do you know we are going to Cumberland Gap?” questioned the Colonel. “Waal, yer headed that way now, and I'coula soon get- up a little wood, and find you, unless Bragg chaws you up, which isn’t likely.” He was informed that the Colonel could not grant a furlough; that the qply person who could was Gen. Thomas, but that before his application could reach the General in due form and be returned he would be out of Kentucky. t “Six-footer” was disconsolate, but determined to visit Gen. Thomas in person, and he did. He caught the General unawares, and was half through his story before “Old Pap” comprehended the situation. Surprised he turned to hear: “About four miles from home —want to go over and get up a little wood—kin ketch you in a day or two, etc.” “How long since you' saw your wife and children?” questioned the stern old Major-General. • With a woebegone expression, the six-footer replied, slowly and solemnly: “Waal, Gineral,it’s nigh on to t-w-e-l-v-e nyjnths since I was to home.” “Why, man,said the General, briskly, “I hav’nt seen my wife for two years, and don’t expect to see her until the war is over.” The Kentuckian, putting on an air of one resenting an insult, said, sadly: “Waal, Gineral, me aftd my wife is not that kind of people.” This was too much for the dignity of even Gen, Thomas, and the old- Kentuckian, wondering what tickled “Old Pap” so, departed with a furlough in his pocket.— Chicago Inter Ocean.

Teaching Swimming.

“Our process of teaching is a simple and easy one. When the pupil presents herself and has donned her bathing suit, which consists of a sack, skirt and broad trousers, she is taken to the preparatory room and taught the proper motions of her arms and legs on a carpet. These mastered, she is taken to the bathing pool, where a strap, so padded as not to hurt her, is passed around her body, and she is placed in the water with her face down and kept afloat by a rope passed through a pulley. Here she goes through the motions of swimming, which, like her music lesson at home, are indicated by the voice of the female teacher, who counts one, two, three*in a monotone that gives the time to the motions of the limbs. The next stage is swimming with a float or life-preserver around the body. In this the action of the limbs are perfectly free, and the pupil, accompanied by the teacher, often succeeds in making a round of the bath in the second or third lesson. All her motions are closely watched, and her attention is sharply called to any false stroke or laggard movement. The motions once perfectly learned, the pupil soon gathers ponfldence in her ability to swim, and it only in a few cases that we are not able to dispense with the float at the fifth lesson and send the young lady out to swim without any other aids than those given her by by nature. Girls are taught the same stroke as boys, but I think there is an essential difference between them in the matter of using the propelling power of the lower limbs. The boy is more vigorous and more propulsive in his legs than in his arms, while with the girls the reverse is the case. Many of our lady swimmers dispense with the skirt, which somewhat retards their motions, and wear simply the sack and the trousers. I think that is the most reasonable swimming costume, for the skirt is apt to hold the water and lessen the speed of the swimmer by giving her a heavier load to carry.— lnterview with a Professor of the Art:

Thurlow Weed’s Inability to Make Speeches. I never possessed the power “to speak in public on the stage.” This defect has been the cause of frequent embarrassment and mortification, for there have been many occasions when it would have been both proper and pleasant to have been even moderately gifted with the power of speech-making. Aware of my infirmity, I of course never attempted to participate in debate; but, eta one occasion, when a bill which I reported myself from a standing committee of which I was a member was in committee of the whole, a member desired information .in regard to the object and effect of a particular section. The information desired, though proper, was very simple; and if it had been asked in a committee room, or informally, in the presence of a dozen or twenty persons, I should have given it without the slightest embarrassment. And, forgetting myself for a moment, I rose to reply. Before uttering a dozen words, however, I became confused, then stammered, finding myself utterly incapable of proceeding, ended in a regular muddle. This was my first and last attempt, either in that House or in the Assembly of 1830 when I was again a member. — Weed’s Autobiography.

To Cleanse Silk Goods.

None but ribbons of excellent quality and of one color, with plain surface of silk or satin, will bear washing, but such Vibbons can be made to look “amaist as gude as new” by this method: Take half a pint of cold water, half a teaspoonful of strongest alcohol, and dip the ribbons into it several times and draw them through the fingers. Then make a lather of white-curd soap and lukewarm water, and dash the ribbons up and down in it several times or until all the soiled spots and creases are gone, and rinse thoroughly in cold water, squeezing carefully in the hands. Pull out straight, and snap through your fingers, until nearly dry; then iron under brown or white paper with a moderately-heated flat-iron. To set the colors: If green, add a table-spoon-ful of vinegar or a little bit of alum to the water it is rinsed in; if pink or blue, four or five drops of oil of vitriol; if cream-white, a salt-spoonful of cream tartar should be mixed with th* soapsuds and rinsing water. Silk handkerchiefs and neckties, if unfigured, can be cleaned by the same process.— Country Gentleman. Waltkrboro.B. a—Dr J. M. Klein says: -Brown’s Iron Bitters have given universal satisfaction.*

NO HOME EXEMPT.

Ha SottMß Those Mysterious Trouble, that toiAe to Kvaty HotMohoid Explained. The following article from the Democrat and Chronicle, of Rochester, N. Y-, is of so Striking a nature and emanates from so reliable a source, flint it M herewith republishe d entire. In addition to the tkluable ir atter it contains, it will be found exceedingly interesting: To the Editor Of the Democrat and Chronicle: 8m: My motives foi the l»«HMMtiono« the most unusual statements which are, first, gratitude for the fact that I have been fared from a most horrible death, and, second y, a desire to wirm all who read this statement against some of the most deceptive influences by which they have ever been sutfotinded. It is a fftro that to-day thoirsailds 6f people ate Withifi ft foot of thb grave andahey do not know it Tg tell how I wfts cftught away from just this pbtiton ahd to warn Albert against near.ng it, are my objects in this communication. On.thC Ist day df June, 1881,1 lav Mt my reidence lit this City surrounded by my friends and waitirig for dbath. Heaven only knows the agony I then endured, for words can never describe it And yet if a few years previous, any one had told me that 1 was to be brought so low, and by so terrible a disease, I should have scoffed at the idea I had always been uncommonly strong and healthy, had weighed over 200 pounds and hardly knew, in my own experience, what pain or sickness Were. Vety many people who will read this statement realize at times that they are And cannot Account for it They fftel dull and Indefinite pains in various parts of the body And dd not understand it Or they are exceedingly hungry one day and entirely without appetite the next This was just the way I felt when the iclentless malady which had fastened itself upon me first began Still I thought it was nothinm that probably I had taken a cold which would soon pass away. Shortly after thia I noticed a heavy, and at times a neuralgic pain In my head, but M it would come one day and be gone the next, I paid but little attention to it However, my stomach was out of border and my food often failed to digest causing at times great inconvenience. Yet I had no idea, even as a physician, that these things meant anything serious or that a monstrovs disease was becoming fixed upon me. Candidly, I thought Iwas suffering from malaria, and so doctored myself accordingly. But I got no better. I next noticed a peculiar color and odor about the fluids I was passing—also that there were large quantities one day and very little the next, and that a persistent troth and scum appeared upon the surface, and a sediment settled in the bottom. And yet I did nob realize niy danger, for, indeed, seeing these symptoms continually, I finally became accustomed to them, and my suspicion was wholly disarmed by the fact that I had no pain in the affected organs or in their vicinity. Why I should have been so blind I cannot understand. There is a terrible future for all physical neglect, and impending danger always brings a person to his senses, even though it may then be too lata I.realized, at last, my critical condition and aroused myself to overcome it. And, oh! how hard I tried! I consulted the best medical skill in th& land. I vi sited-all the prominent mineral springs in America and traveled from Maine to California. Still I grew worse. No two physicians agreed as to my ma'ady. One said I was troubled with spinal irritation: another, nervous prostration; another malaria; another, dyspepsia; another, heart disease; another, general debility; another, congestion of the base of the brain; and so on through a long list of commcn d senses, the symptoms of all of which I really had. In this way several years passed, during all of which time I was steadily growing worse. My condition had really become pitiable. The slight symptoms I at at. first experienced were developed into terrible and constant disorders—the little twigs of pain had grown to oaks of agony. My weight had been reduced from 207 to 180 pounds My life was a torture tomySelf and friends I could retain no food upon my stomach, and Jived wholly by injections I was a living mass of pain. My pulse was uncontrollable. In my agony I frequently fell upon the floor, convulsively clutched the carpet, and prayed for death. Morphine had little or no effect in deadening the pain. For six days and nights I had the death-pre-monitory hiccoughs constantly. My urine was filled with tube casts and albumen. I was struggling with Bright's Disease of the kidneys in its last stages. While suffering thus I received a call from my pastor, the Rev. Dr. Foote, rector of St Paul’s church, of this city. I felt that it was our last interview, but in the course of conversation he mentioned a remedy of which I had heard much but 'had never used Dr. Foote detailed to me the many remarkable cure's which had come under his observation, by means of this remedy, and urged me to try it As a practicing physician and a graduate of the schools, I cherished the prejudice both natural and common with all regular practitioners, and derided the idea of any medicine outside the regular channels being the least beneficial So solicitous, however, was Dr. Foote, that I finally promised I would waive my prejudice and try the remedy he so highly recommended I began its use on the Ist day of J une and took it according to directions. At first it sickened me; but this I thought was a good sign for me in my debilitated condition. I continued to take it; the sickening sensation departed and I was able to retain food upon my stomach. In a few days I noticed a decided change for the better as also did my wife and friends. My hiccoughs ceased and I experienced less pain than formerly. I was so rejoiced at this improved condition that, upon what I had believed but a few days before was my dying bed, I vowed, in the presence of my family and friends, should I recover I would both publicly and privately make known this remedy for the good of humanity, wherever and .whenever I had an opportunity. I also determined that I would give a course of lectures in the Corinthian Academy of Music in this city, stating in full the symptoms and almost hopelessness of my disea*e and ths remarkable means by which I have been saved. My improvement was constant from that time, and in less than three months I had gained twenty-six pounds in flesh, became entirely free from pain and I believe I owe my life and present condition wholly to the remedy which I used. Since my recovery, I have thoroughly reinvestigated the subject of kidney difficulties and Bright's disease, and the truths developed are astounding. I therefore state deliberately, and as a physician, that I believe more than one-half the deaths which occur in America are caused by Bright's disease of

the kidneys. This may sound like 'a statement, but I am prepared to fully verify it. Bright's di-ease has no distinctive symptoms of its own, (indeed it often develops without any pain whatever in the kidneys or their vicinity),. but has the symptoms of nearly every other known complaint. Hundreds of people die daily, whose burials are authorized by a physician's certificate of .“Heart Disease.” •‘Apoplexy,” “Paralysis,” “Spinal Complaint,” “Khematfsm,” “Pneumonia,” and other common diseases, when in reality it -was Bright's disease of the kidneys. Few physicians, and fewer people, realize the extent of this disease dr its dangerous and insidious nature. It steals into the system like a thief, manifests its presence by the commonest symptoms, and fastens itself upon the constitution before the victim is aware. It is nearly as hereditary as consumption, quite as common and fully as fatal Entire families, inheriting it from their ancestors, have died, and yet none*of the number knew or realized the mysterious power which was removing them. Instead of common symptoms it often shown none whatever, but brings de£th suddenly, and as such is usually supposed to be heart disease. As one who ba, suffered, and knows by bitter experience what he says. I implore every one who reads these words not to a Leet the slightest; symptom of kidnejr culty. Certain agony and possible death will be the sure result of such neglect, and no one can afford to hazard such chances. I am aware that such an unqualified statement as this, coming from me, known as I am, throughout the entire land as a practioner and lecturer, will arouse the surprise and possible animosity of the medical profession and astonish all with whom I am acquainted, but' I make thp foregoing statements, based upon facts upon which I am prepared to produce, and truths which lean substantiate to the letter. The welfare of those who may possibly be sufferers such as I was. is an ample inducement for me to take the step I nave, and if I can successfully warn others from the dangerous path in which I once walked, I am willing to endure all professional and personal consequences. J. B. Heston. M. D. “Don’t you think, Clara, that you could love me a little?” And Clara answered, with her most engaging smile, “Yes, Fred, a very little.” Vbbt few people nowadays suffer from suggestion of the brain.— Mr>. Partington. Dyspepsia. Dyspepsia and sick headache do not return to those who have used Great German Hop Bitters. Bold by all druggists. ▲ arax> has been attested while disguised as an old woman. The old woman disguised as a girl is still at large. A Happy Wife. “My dear husband, I never slept so soundly as I ao now, after using German Hop Bitters. ” Sold by all druggists. Does a man make a rye face when he asks if it is good for a drink? Conyeb’b Ga.— Dr. W. H. Lee says: “Brown’s Iron Bitters is a good medicine and many are usin£ it in this place.”

Look well to the Name.

The only genuine German Hop Bitters have the word ■German" blown in the bottle. Bold by ftU druggists. “You have lovely teeth, Ethel" ‘Yes, ’Oeorge,* riid foudiy lisped, “they were a present ffom Aunt Grade. * Nor a drink, not sold in wbar-room, but a reliable, non-alcoholic tonic medicine, useful at all times, arid in all seasons, is BfoWn'i* Draff Bittors “In case I am fecalled," announced a young vocalist to a WesterS Audience, “I shall sing ‘My Grandfather's Glock.’" Bhe was not recalled. ■ Goew health * the greatest of fortunes; no remedy MW trf ten restored this prize to the Buffering as Hood's SftMAparillA Try it Ten old saw, ‘flue words buttdr flo nips,” to now rendered, “elegant diction olih omargarines no pastinaca edulia ”

Personal!—To Men Only!

Th* VoLTaIC BnM Cq., Marshall Mich., Will send Dr. Dyd’s Celebrated ElectroVoltaic Belta arid Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to men (young Or Old) who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing speedy and complete restoration of health and manly vigor. Address as above. N. B.— No risk is incurred, as thirty days’ trial is allowed. ' ______

A Bonanza for Travelers.

When in Chicago, stop at the Gault House, corner Madison and Clinton streets. The GAuli has been rebuilt, refurnished, and enlarged, to accommodate 300 people It contains evdrg improvement of the modern hotel And is located in the heart* or the wholesale fcfld manufacturing district. Check your baggage to the Gault Terms, |2 and |2 50. MW. Hoyt, Proprietor. ■ i - Pure Cod-Liver Oil, made from selected livers on the sea-shore, by Cabwkll, Hazard A Ca, New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have decided It superior to any of the other oils in marktt ■ <* * ' Cabbqlinb, a rtattital hair restorer and dressing, as now improved Arid perfected, is S renounced by competent authority to be re best article ever invented to restore the Vitality of youth to diseased and faded hair. Try It Sold by all druggists. Sticking, irritation, inflammation, all. Kidney and Urinary Complaints, cured by “BuobuPaiba." |L All our lady friends will be delighted to hear that! L Cragin A Co. ,lltt B.4th st ,Phila, are giving first class Piano Sheet Music, vocal and instrumental, gratia (No advertising on it) Write for catalogue Mention this paper. Don't die iq the house. “Rough on Rats.” Clears out rats, mice, flies, roaches, bed-bugs. 15c. Chapped Hands, Face, Pimples, and rough Skin, cured by using Juniper Tab Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. Wills’ “Rough on Corns.”—lsc. Ask for it. Complete, permanent cure. Coms, warta,bunions. Ladies A children’s boots A shoes can’t run Over if Lyon's Patent Heel St i ffeners are used. That husband of mine is three times the man he was before he began using Wells’ Health Renewer.

FIVE REASONS

Why the public preference is, and should be, given to Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Because the superior strength of well-chosen ingredients in a combination peculiar to itself and possessed by no other preparation, with the skilled pharmacy used in its manufacture, make Hood’s Sarsapv rilla the best medicine in the market for purifying the blood. Because Hood’s Sarsaparilla has, in numerous well-known and verified instances, eradicated Scrofula, cleansed the blood of Humors, and restored weakened invalids to health, in which condition they remain. Becans s Hood’s Sarsaparilla has really and truly cured oases of Dyspepsia, long standing and chronic, of Indigestion, of General Debility, of Salt Rheum, Catarrh and all Humors which riot In the blood and break the skin in festers, pustules, pimples and boils. Because Hood’s Sarsaparilla has been found to be the best medicine for ailment* produced by the season or climate, wonderfully sharpening the appetite and markedly toning up the system ggainst debility and nervousness. Because Hood’s Sarsaparilla is everybody’s medicine. No one is so poor that he cannot pay $1 for a bottle of Hoodfis Sarsaparilla—loo doses—or 1 cent each dose; and none Are so rich and lofty as to be beyond its benefit. Sarsaparilla, Sold by druggists. six for 85. Prepared only by C.I.’HOODS CO., apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.

Another Life Saved.

J. C. Gray, of Dadeville, Ala., writes us: T have been using your Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for the Lungs, and I can say, of a truth, it is far superior to any other Lung preparation in the world. My mother was confined to her bed four weeks with a cough, and had every attention by as good physicians as there are in the country, and they all failed to effect a cure; but when I got one bottle of your Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for the Lungs, she began to mend right’away. I can say in truth, that it was the means of saving her life. I knew of five cases that Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam has cured, and my mother is better now than she has been before for twenty years.”

HOSTETTER M?rs No time should be lost if the stomach, liver and bowels are affected to adopt the sure remedy, Hosetter’s Stomach Bitters. Diseases of the organs named beget others far more serious, and a delay is therefore hazardous. Dyspepsia, liver 'corfiplaint, chills and fever, early rheumatic twinges, kidney weakness, bring serious bodily trouble if trifled with. Lose no time in using this effective and safe modicine. For sale by *ll Druggfete and Dealers generally. ♦RR a week in your own town. Terms and *5 outfit ♦DO free. Address H. Hallett * Co., Portland. Me. BONDS BOUGHT. SAMUEL A. GAYLORD, Banker, St. Louis. Mo. ♦TO A WEEK, gu a day at home easily made’. OoeflF f I/outfit free. Address TkueA Co., Augusta, Maing. HE HANNAH MOHE ACADEMY for ORls. Bev. ARTHUR J. RICH, M. D., Beistertown, Md. 15 to S2O You ng Circulars frw. VALENTINE BROS., Janesville, Wis. A GENTS WANTED for-theßestand FtotestA Selling Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced Spar cent. Natiomal Publishing Co, Chicago, DI. /■raaraa ■ ■nfll MORPHINE HABIT. OPIUM WFI S W BIS Marsh. Quincy, Mich.

LOVELY COMPLEXIONS POSSIBLE TO ALL What Nature denies tomany Art secures to all. Hagan’s Magnolia Balm dispels every blemish, overcomes Redness, Freckles, Sallowness, Roughness, Tan, Eruptions and * Blotches, and removes all evidences of heat and excitement. The Magnolia Balm imparts the most delicate and natural complexional tints — no detection oeing possibleto the closest observation. Under these circumstances a faulty Complexion is little short of a crime. Magnolia Balm sold everywhere. Costs only 75 cents, with full directions.

OOOD MfWS FROM TEXAS. Mr. Thomas A< Howard, of Honey Grove, Fannin county. Texas, under tote of April 5, 188. writes as follows: *T have been suffering during several years nwm severe llltose. and a general breaking town of W physical aysiettb tod have tried the treatment and prescriptions of many doctors far.and near, and traveled to the Hot Springs and other mineral springs famous for their remedial qualities, drinking the Waters and bathing systematically in their healing depths, but all to no avail, as I steadily failed in health f snd although informed by my, physicians that my ailttMrie tod weaknesses were the result of kidney disease of s daMgerons character, they oosld give me nothing to cure m*- During the past two years my sufferings at times were dreadful, and I had the most indtoffribabla pains in the regions about ths kidneys, the paroxysms st which were so severe as to render it impossible for me to sleep. While in this deplorable and discouraged condition I was persuaded to try Hunt’s Remedy, and after neing lees than half a bottle my great sufferings and p«wr»m» Of tuao were entirely relieved, and I could sleep totter and loagto than 1 had in two years before, and although I am now Oft toy thirst bottle only, my improvement is very remarkable, and I regret that 1 <U<5 not know of the wonderful cundive powers of Hunt's Remedy before, as It would have saved toe years of suffering. I heartily recommend It to all afflicted With any kidney disease or disease of the urinary organa.' . , i ••rflT MY CANE EXACTLY.” ! Please allow me to apeak in the highest terms of “Hunt’s Remedy,” for it hit my case exactly. I had kidney and urinary trouble pretty bad. I waa recommended HunVa Remedy. I took one teaspoonful as directed. 1 felt a decided change at the first dose. I took two bottles, and have felf like a new man ever since. Please receive the sincere thanks of myself for the benefits which I sought vainly for and found only in Hunt's Remedy. I will cheerfully give this same opinion of Hunt’s Remedy to any one who wishes it, by addressing ROBERT D. ARCHER, j 811 Liunard street. Philadelphia. March 14.1881. FARMERS! PLEASE CONSIDER THIS: ■ Perry-Davis Pain-Killer Acte with wonderful rapidity , and nercr fdile, when token at the commencement of an attack of CHOLERA, CHOLERA MORBUS, Ae well as all summer complaints of a similar nature. For Sudden Colds, Sore Throat, Ac., a tablespoonful of Pain-Killer, in sweetened water (warm or cold), taken at tlic beginning of an at* tack will urove an almost never-fluling cute, and save much suffering. > For Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Burns, j Scalds, Cuts, Bruises, &c., Ths Pain-Killer will be found a willing phyalcian, ready and able to relieve your suffering without delay, and at a very insignificant cost. For Colds, Granins and Dysentery in Horses,' The Pain-Killer hns no equal, and it has never been kflown to fail to effect* cure in a single instance. It is riven as a drench, a small bottle of Pain-Killer iliua pint of molassea and water. It is used in some of ths argbst livery stables and horaotaintlniiuries in tbs world. To resuscitate young lambs or other stock fliillcd and dying from cold, a little Tain-Kalles mixed with inilk will restore them to health vei'y lUickly. JO* The pAiN-KiLLEn isAfor sale by Druggists, Apothecaries, Grocers and Medicine Dealers throughout tlio world. PATENTS o p , R gS u P R A° Send Sketch or Model. PATENTS BOUGHT or SOLD. Long experience. Send Stamp for Book. A. W. MOIWAN, Patent Attorney nnd dealer in Patents, P. 0. Box, 720, Washington. D. C. < Lady ApantSnent employnum! and Rood salary selling Queen City Skirt.and Stocking Bupportera, eto yrauSrt Sample outfit Free. Address SSiaeeM Suapender Co.,CinclnnatU» “THE BEST 18 CHEAPEST.” ENGINES, T U pee Lie DC SAWMILLS, Horse Powers Clover Hullen ffiulterl to all sections. 1 Writ e for F «EF. Ill™. Pamphlto Hfr.d Prices to The Auitman A Taylor Co., Ohio.

Tfl CMU WHIRS AU UUMIW. E 4 '' Hi Beet Cough Sy run good, gg Um Use in time, Sold by druggists. i 1! IM CHIOAGO SCALE COL . T 2 TOM WAGON BCALk, »40. »T 0 MJ. _ 'WMtotPld Ton SOO, Benin Box Included. a TiWiiTOEW efsP*- SOO OTHER 817. M. HrdurrS EHR® LIST rUfc • FORGES, TOOLS, 40.< Vfg I I Farmer. time ~o«ry <loln R Job*.' jSS-LJ Blowers. Anvil*. Vico* * Other Artlclgfi = nU'AT LOWEST PRIOES, WHOLESALE * MTAllfa > “EWCATIONTC uu. »'“• Ml CONSERVATORY of MUSIC Beautifully Illustrated. M pages. RENT FBEB to yourself and musical friends. Send nomas and adureMM to X. TOURJEE. Franklin Sq„ Boston. Most. The. Largest and belt appointed Mutlc Ltterary tpt Art School, and HOMEfcr young ladiu, *s the world. t DR.HORNE’S ELECTRIC BELT 'sAAZXx a Will cure- Nervoiisnesj Lumbago,Rheumatism, Pat s' nR- alysis, Neuralgia. BclatlciJ Kidney, Spine ana Liver disease, Dyspepsia, CoosM* nation. Erysipelas, Catarrh, Piles. Epilepsy, ImpptcnoyL Dumb Ague, Prolapsus Uteri, etc. Only sgientMc XIML me Belt in America that sends the Electricity and magnetism through the body, and can be recharged In an instant by the patient. Send Stamp for Circular. Dr.W.J. HORNE, In venter, 191 Wabaah Av.,Chicago. rt COMUNTUD "Ml j TRUSS! _■ la water, adapts Hsstf teaUfiktoe of the body, wMIo toe HUM* too, toe Hernia to keto seeevely day and aigkt. aa< a mdtaal oamoaml tain. It is easy, durable and sheep. Beat by wait Ctasatasgl Eggleston Truss Co.. Chloa|t>. lIL, Iron lovssmM niima. V w JONES. HUB FAWS TSSE Fskiasy. IM f Seldon tri at Warranto » poem. AUatatoaetoW, !■ ■ Pot tree book, addroes IW V i JOKES OF BIMHAMTOH, BIMUUHTON, I ■ 1 • \ , u _ _j .md rkl HKK ' WMM rou ■ >ix u. chilbß'-n H **• l * n . AN AGRICRLTURILLiBRARHI Of Fresh, Practical and Accurateinform arionon. the subject of Agriculture and kindred Industrie*. 1 Elaborately Illustrated by cuts and diagrams.' Three Imprlal Octavo Volumes, handsomely and substantially bound in Full Cloth and Hau Morocco. or one stout volume in Leather, cone; taining One Thousand One Hundred Double Column pages. Sold only by subscription. . | We Want Agents in every State and county ta America. A liberal discount on a book that will' sell. Intelligent Farmers, Teachers and Students.' cither Dailies or Gentlemen, can secure Profitable employment by addressing the publishers sos terms and information. RAND, McNALLY A co., Chicago, 111. (

Consumption Can Ba Cured. Si HULL’S Iun 6S .BALSAM Cure. Consumption, Colds, Pneumonia, en er,Bronchial IMfficul tie., BronehitiH.HoarM, newt Asthma, Croup, Whoopln* Couch, and ItV»U»«* and thedi wUK»,iifflamed c.n.u. WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS,' il tiuSXSr.“ r you * W