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La>t Niplit;Last night, with in the curtained room.Where the gay music sounded faintly clear,

And silver lights came stealing through thegloom,

You told the tale that women love to hear;Jfou told it well, with firm hands clamping

mine, .(

And deep eyes glowing with tender light.31ere actiug ? But your power was hall

dhine !Last night, last night. <

Oh, you had much to otter; wealth enoughTo gild the l'utnre, aud a path oi case j

For one whoso way is somewhat dark and ]roush;

New friends. life as calm as summer 3cas,And something (was it love ?) to ket-p ustrue, jAnd make us precious in each other's sight. (

Oh! then, indeed, my heart's resolve I knew, sLsst night, last night. ]

Let the world go, with all its dress and pell! |Only for one, like Portia, coald I say, (

" I would be trebled twenty times myeelt." ]Only for one, and ho is far away;

JJis voice came back to me, distinct and dear,And thrilled me with the paino! lost delight;

The present laded, but the past was clear.Last night, last night.

It others answered as I answered then, .

We would hear less, perchance, ol blighted ,

lives;There would be truer women, nobler men,And fewer dreary homes and faithless wives;

Becuusc I could not givo you all my best,I gave yon nothing. Judge me.was 1

right? JYou may thank heaven that I stood the test

Last night, last night.

THE SIEGE OF BERLIN.

A STOKY OF THE WAIt BETWEEN FRANCEAND GERMANY.

We were walking up the avenue ofthe Champs Elysees with Doctor V ,

gathering from the wui's shattered by 11the bombs and the pavements torn bythe shot the history of besiege Pardis, j

when, just before we reached the Eond 11Point de l'Etoile, the doctor paused and 11pointed out to me one of those tali cor-ner houses so oompously grouped around <the Arc de Triomphe. i ]" Do you see," said he, " those four j'closed windows up there upon that, i

balcony? Early in the month of August! 1.that terrible month of August of last ]year, so full of troubles and disasters.I (was summoned there to look after a

fright ful case of apoplexy. The victim £was Colonel Jouve, a cuirassier of the ifirst empire, an old fellow wedded to t

glory and patriotism, who at the com- <mencement of the war had come to livein the Cfiamps Elysees in an apartment e

with a balcony. Can you guess what Ifor? To witness the triumphal return cof our troops! Poor old man! The cnews of Wissembourg reached him as c

he was rising from the table. When rhe read Napoleon's name signed to thatj tbulletin of defeat he fell ;is if stricken fby a thunderbolt. I \

,lI found the old cuirassier stretched f* .-..IIh . h..fl,,. ! c

VUt at iUil ICUgUU U Hit }JV/Ll U1 bUW> V,

chamber, his lace oloody and inert, as iif he had been hit on the head with a tclub. Standing he must have been ivery tail; lying down, he seemed gigan- ftic. Ho had tine features, superb teeih tand a lieece of white hair ail in curls. 1.Eighty years age, he did not look more tthan sixty, lieside him, upon her rknees and bathed in tears, was his a

granddaughter. She resembled him. a

Seeing them side by side one might have ccalled them two beautiful Grc li medals \

stamped with the same iui;ige.one, ahowever, antique, earthy, somewhat iseffaced at the eiiyes; the other shining a

» and sharply defined, with all t.he bril- tliancy and gloss of the recent impres- fsion. r"The grief of the child touched me. 1

S he was the daughter as well as the c

granddaughter of a soldier. Her fatherwas on MacMahon's staff, and the sight tof that tall old man stretched out be- ffore her evoked in her mind another £vision not less terrible. I reassured Iher the best I could, but in my heart 1 rhad little hope. We had to deal with JIa serious case of hemiplegyand ateighty- tone cannot be restored. For three tdays in laet, the patient remained in tthe same state ot immobility and stupor. 11Meanwhile the news of Reisehoffen ireached Paris.you remember in what! "<

strange fashion. Until evening we ail 1L~ 1 A «ucueveu iu 11 mczit victory.twenty i

thousand Prussians slain and the prince iroyai a prisoner. I know not by what imiracle, by what mnguetic current an Jecho of the national joy found its way 1through the paralysis of our poor deal (mute," but certain it is that that even-ing, when 1 came to his beaside I found <him quite another man. His eye was talmost bright, his tongue less thick. JHe had the strength to smile upon meand twice iaitercd out: i

Vie-to-ry!' 1" 4 Yes, colonel, a great victory.' i' And, as* I gave him the details of

MacMahon's glorious success, I saw chis features|unbend, his lace light up." When 1 came out of the room, the £

young «irl was waiting for me at thedoor. She stood there pale as death. (She was sobbing.j t c" * But ne is saved!' I cried, taking her 1

naruls in mine. I (" The untiappy child had scarcely the 1

courage to speak. They had just poatc-U 1up the true oulletin irom Reischoflcn. tMacMahon in liight, the whole army ]crushed. We looked at each other in 1consternation. She wept as she thought j:of her iatlier. As for me, 1 trembled at 1the thougut of the old man. Surely he inever would be able to withstand this i

W !>.«* - -V... «. J-O -new buvih. uul w ma vvcic wc tu uurLeave him his joy, theillusions that had

. brought h;m back to life! But then wemust lie! jVery well, I will lie!' said the,heroic child, as she quickly wiped awayfcer tears, and with a radiant face sheentered her grandfather chamber.

' It was a hard ta.sk that she had undertaktn.At lirst things went on swimmingly.The old man's he;iu was weakand he allowed himself to be deceivedlike an iutant. But with health hisideas became clearer. It was necessaryto keep him posted as to the movementsof the armies.to prepare military bulletinsfor him. It was truly pitiful tosee that beautiful child bent night andday over her map ot Germanj, pricking

\ it with little tlags and striving to combinea whole glorious campaign; Ba-zaine marching upon Berlin, Froissartin Bavaria, MacMahon at the Baltic,In nil this sliw slrItpiI rnv 1 ! -

/- .J »*VVj UiiU X >

helped lier to the best of my ability;but it was the grandfather who served rus most in this imaginary invasion. Hehad conquered (Germany so many times Iduring the first empire that he kneweverytiling in advance! ' Now they will i"]go in this direction.this is what they tare gnins to do!' And his predictions 1were ai«vayt realized, which made him 1excessively proud. |," Unhappily, no matter how many jtowns we took, how many battles we f

gained, we could not get on rapidiy fenough for the old man. He was in-satiable! Each day, when I arrived, 1 slearned of some new feat of arms. I»" 4 Doctor, we have captured May- !,

encc, said the youDg girl, coming to jmeet me with a sad smile, and I heard ithrougti the i oor a joyous voica c-ying )out to me: ,

4t4t f T Y"> row.. >

vjwim* gwvu a la <* iv m unvs wc 1

shrill enter Berlin!'" At that very moment the Prussians

were only a lew days distant fromParis. We consulted at lirst as towhether it would not be better to take jour patient into the country; but, us ]soon as out of door:. lie must inevitablydiscover the true state of France, and Ithought him still too weak, too muchoverpowered oy his great shock to lethim know the truth. We, therefore, I!decided to remain."The lirst day of the investment I

ascended to their apartments. J re-,monihrr that I was L'reatlv asitated andlull of that heart-anguish we all felt atseeing the gates of Paris closed, the hat-tie at our very walls, our outskirts becomefrontiers. I Jounri the old mansifting up in his bed, jubilant andprv ud.

Well,' said he, ' the siege ha3 begun!''.! stared a', him in amazement. I

* His granddaughter urned toward <

me; .

" * Yos. doctor,' said she. 4 It is ^rent' i

-news The siege of Berlin has begun! :' She spoke t:.est* words gravely and ;

quietly as she plied her needle. How s

jou dhe have suspected anything waswrong? He could not hear the cannonuf .he forts. lit* could not see unhappy ^

Paris, woe-beeone and in confusion.What he could perceive from his bedwas a section of the xlrc de Triompheand around him, in his chamber, a col- }lection of bric-a-brac of the first em- r.

pire well calculated to keep up his illusions.There were portraits of mar- ®shals, engravings of battles, the King aS!of Rome in baby clothes; also great 0firm brackets ornamented with brass triitrophies, loaded with imperial relics, (tuerials, bronzes, a Saint Helene's rock muunder a glass shade, miniatures reprc- q

renting the same dame with curls and .. £bright eyes in ball attire, in a yellowiress with leg-of-mutton sleeves. ..

*ind all the?e.the brackets, the King of nS'tiome, the marshals, the yellow dames Cwith well-developed busts and short ver

waists.displaying that cramped stifflesswhich was accounted grace inBrave colonel! It was this atmosphere cA victories und conquests far more than ^ill we could tell him that made him he- "

ieve so implicitly in the siege of Berlin. *

"From that day our military opera- mo

ions were very much simplified. To tW(

;apture Berlin was now but a matter of S>r»rionr>o Vrnni tinip to time, when the piejid in:tn grew too weary of all this, we da]rend him a letter from his son.an jimaginary letter, of course, lor nothing gQ1?ntered Paris, and beside, since Sedan, CUIMacMahon's aide-de-camp had been ^sent to a German fortress. Imagine the ..

lespair of the poor child without news ..

3f her fatlier, knowing him to be a pris-jner deprived ot everything, and per- *

(laps sick, yet obliged to fabricatf joyous ?V(letters from him, somewhat brief letters, in

such as a soldier in the held would Wl1

write as he pushed constantly ahead £through a vanquished country. Some- shitimes her strength failed her and we ov<

had no tidings for weeks. But the old wliman, when such was the case, grew Iuneasy and could not sleep. Then a nelletter quickly arrived from Germany, wo

and she read it to him gayly at his bed- faiside, the while forcing back her tears. jIhe colonel listened attentively, smiled najwith a knowing air, approved, criticised pj.and explained to us the obscure pas*sages. But he was at fois best in the ,

answers he sent to his son: ' Never ;or- .Jset that you are a Frenchman,' dictated tll(

lie. * Be generous to those poor people.Do not make the invasion too nam ior ,

them to bear.' And there were recom- ae'

tnendations without end, adorable ser- j

tnons on respecting private property<md the politeness due to ladies.an en- hli

iire code of military honor, in fact, for 8h<±c use of the conquerors. With it co'tverealso mingled some general political sar

)bservations upon the conditions of ne:

aeace to be imposed on th« vanquished. (There, I ought to say, he was not exact- a

ng: ' The war indemnity, but nothing thenore. Of what good is it to take their berprovinces? Can w« make Franci out car

)f Germany?' rul" He dictated all this in a firm voice, jet.

ind there was so much sincerity, suchidmirable patriotic faith in his words borhat it was impossible not to be affected sn_t:>n hearing him. vet" During this time the siege was con- yei

tantly progressing.alas! not that of 0fierlin! It was the period of intense totsold. of the bombardment, of epidemics,>f famine. But thanks to our care, to>ur efforts, to the indefatigable terderlesswhich multiplied itself about him,he serenity of the old man was never Tor an instant broken. Until the end J sen

vas able to procure white bread and Afrresli meat for him. There was only thenough for him though, and you can 1magine nothing more touching than sixihese breakfasts of the grandfather so I loo!anocently selfish.the old man in bed, terresh and smiling, with his napkin fairucked under his chin, and beside him ]ylis granddaughter, somewhat palehrough privation, guiding his hands, 0fDaking him drink, assisting him as he tw{.te all Uio.'.c lorbidden delicacies. Then, thrinimatcd by the repast in the comfort t

>f his warm chamber, with the wintryvind without and the snow whirlingiround his windows, the edged ouiras- °{ier recalled his campaigns in the North, .

md related to us, lor the hundredth gtime, the story of the terrible retreat s^'erom Russia, during which there was an(jlothing to eat but irozen buscuit and .

lorse llesh. ' Can you understand, my 1

:hild, we ate horse desh!1 * ?uOf course she understood it. For wu

wo montlis she had eaten nothing else. ^rom day to day, in proportion as hejrew better, our task with the patient)6came more difficult. The sluggish- jr';ess of his senses and limbs, which hadjeen of such service to us up to that *

ime. began to disappear. Twice or Pro;hrice already the terrible cannonade at,he maillot gate had made him leap up P'{1with ear as attentive as that of a huntngdog, and we had been obliged to in- $°Prent for Bazaine a recent victory before *ftl(

Berlin and salvos tired in honor of ut at J11®».« ihrc,u«j ail v uuj, wucu wc

lad pushed his bod up to the window. Iit was, I believe, the Thursday of Bu- outsenvai.he saw quite plainly some na- int;ional guards massed upon the Avdnuc orie ia Grande-Armee. she'" What troops are those?' asked the pai

)ld man, and we heard him mutter be- a s;ween iiis teeth: 'Wretched looking wrlien! Wretched looking men!1 stil" Nothing further came of it, but we sui

ealized that for the luture we would amlave to be very careful. Unfortunately Yo,ve were not careful enough. the" Orie evening on my arrival the child of

:ame to me in sore distress. tht'"They will enter to-morrow,'said hai

she. evt" Was the grandfather's chamber ma

ioor open ? The fact is that since then,>n thinking the matter over, I remem- 1

jered that the old man's face wore an 1>-vti-ir»rrtinnw PYnvpaeinn thnt. niolit hoi[t is probable that he had overheard us. lo\3ut we spoke of the Prussians and he rig,bought of the French, of that trium- isdial entry for which he had waited so rulong.MacMahon riding down the exiivonue anid llowers and trumpet actlourishes, his son beside the marshal, ofimd he, the old man, upon his balcony, hon full dress, sis at Lutzen, saluting-the 6ni;attered flags and tiie eagles black with lasjowder. of s"Poor old Jouve! He evidently im- pai

igined that we wished to prevent him W]roni witnessing this display of our arcroops to spare him too great excite- ch<nent. Hence he said not a word to any the>ne; but on the morrow, at the very malour the Prussian battalions cautiously arcinter<d the long thoroughfare leading pecrom the Maillot gate to the Tuilleries, orlis window opened softly and the col- to>nel appeared upon the balcony in his A.nlelmet and all his glorious old cuiras- is leur uniform. I still ask myself what sir<iffort of will, what sudden accession of thiife thus put him on his foet and into lovlis harness ? Bqt certain it is that he forr«e Hipvp orpr-t hpliinH t.hf halnat.r»pH whistonished to find the avenues so de- ter:erted, so hushed, the blinds of the siniwellings closed. Paris as ill-omened- quiooking as a pest-house, llags every- eocvhere.but such singular ones; all doivhite, with red crones .on them.and the10 one going to meet our soldiers. on" For a moment he seemed to think wo

lis eyes deceived him. br>i"But no! down behind the Arc de un!

rriomphe there was a confused noise. toi black line advancing in the growinc quiiglit. Then, little by little, the hem- befets bpgan to glisten, "the drums to beat, fittmd beneath the Arc de TEtoile.accom- bei>anied by the heavy tramp of the actquads, by the clanking of sabers, burst meortli the triumphal march of Schubert! It"Then, amid the sad silence rf the wo

square, arose a cry. a terrible cry: effTo arms! to arms!.the Prussians!' efifcknd the four Uhlans of the advance hetlUnrd saw. up on the balcony, a tall old cle

liauvtilll upiilicu ll.llivi^ UUU W A

all like a stone. This time Colonel emIuhvc wns, irnieed, dead!".Translated iittrrom ike Freti|}, in Philadelphia Times. nei

P»vact

An Epit»i>h. ^Eoitaph found in a cemetery in the

northern part of Ireland: 11To the iiM-mory ol ILa'ly O'Looney, maWi'o of Sir O'Looney, and gram'niece ot vaj

^Jjtirke, commonlv called " The Sublime. C01She was Bland, Passionate and deeply Re- .i,.

ligious;likewise she painted in

Water Colon,and sent .several pictures *1.al

to the cloinhibition. an<

She was tirs-t cousin to W1L'idy Jones, ma

and ol such :s the Kingdom ot Heaven. a tfrcofthe

The supremo court of Indiana decides du;;hat the lezal name of a person consists soi^f a Christian name and a surname, ex:Any one may have as many middle plfnames or initials as are given to him or arf

he chooses to take. They do not th(iftVct his legal name, and may be in- Isorted or not in a deed or contract with- wc»ut all'-cting its validity. Nor does a dismistake in the middle initial ol a name infin a deed in any way affect its validity. Ba

FOR THE FAIR SEX.

Fashion Notes.

LU shades of red are fashionable.?herc is a revival of spotted fabriilignonette has become fashionatlin.Jypsy bonnets look best with no fnturnings./heviots and English homespuns a

ich worn.

Ueeves will be puffed in the armho]3 summer.fun's cloth is the most worn of ai

lit woolpn summer dress fabrics.)ld gold straws are very popular ai

y becoming to brunette beauties.Velvet spotted or polka dotted grerics appear among summer fabrics,lalmon-yellow and summer sunstwo new shades of reddish yelloVhite chip hats and bonnets are tst becoming for young ladies undsnty.iurnh, a very heavy but soft and su

silk, gains in popularity from day7.,ittlegirJs wear tneir nair loose a;

wing down the back, not braided'led.Jo matter how short the sleeves ai

gloves must be long enough to covarms.

Soth short and Jong sleeves for eitlining or daylight wear will be puffthe armhole in the next turn of tleel of fashion.Spanish lace bonnets in Fanchiipes are becoming to nearly all worn?r twenty and under fifty year^ of a

ten they are not fat.,ouis XIII. capes of jetted net,; and chenille, or of other oprked jet beaded passementeries, br to be very fashionable.Srocaded or figured skirts with po]ises or overdresses and basques.in stuffs are more fashionable th:i reversed order of arrangement,.'aris polonaises are made longer thi skirts of the dresses they are wo

er, and are looped and turned uprious fanciful styles to show the u

"skirt, which is generally plaited.Co make a pretty Louis XIII. ca;e many rows of any lace preferrcick or white, run them together ir>ulder cape set on to a straight hilar of silk or satin, and fasten tne with a large bouquet of flowcir the left ear.

^asaquins made entirely of beads s

decided novelty. Like the .Terseiy are molded to the figure, but tids are so close set the foundatiinot be seen. They are made)y, emerald and amethyst, as welland recall the days of the Amazoi

)ld gold colored Tuscan lace strainets are lined with old goid colorin next to tlie straw, and black v<

also under the brim, while gold shlow satin ribbons and ribbons wov[jold thread, ana gold net strings a<

ihe rich effect of the bright flowcI feathers used in trimming them.

Newt and Rotes for Women.

'lie great quantities of sweetmcat for sale by England to the Souican colonies are said to have robbyoung ladies oi their teeth,'he Queen of Denmark, although ov

ty, is so youthful in appearance ask like the elder si-ter of her daug; she is very active in musical s8.Irs. Grossman, of Berlin, Canada,:nty-six years old, and in seven yeamarital life lias given birth:lve children, in ones, twos aiees.n the United States lady doctoviV>n»» Hontiato 49.fl whilpsirt.ht are preachers and twenty practiaw yers. Some ladies adopt twoee callings at once. A lady livingLouis notifies, on her door plate, this an elocutionist, poetess, washironer.'here is a young woman nineteirs old in Trinity county, Caiiforni0 has never seen a wagon; ytt sheomplished,being a good housekeep*iter, singer and conversational^; is not blind, but lives in the lowt of the county, far away from tiveled roads.1 " Banjo club" has been formediminent young ladles of Washingtoeral of whom have become very goiyers on the instrument. The ladiprefer the banjo to the guitar, aiae of them have pet instruments i1 with mother-of-pearl and ornnted with silver, with daintily eilidered cases.t is said that wrinkles are paint; of faces by a process now comiio use. The coloring, whether whipink, is moistened with fine, thiliac varnish. Then the wiinklits of the skin are colored and heldsufficient tension to smooth out tinkle3. The varnish penetrates ai[Tens the skin in drying and a smooface is left. A bottle of shellacong the toilet articles of many Nerk women, it is claimed, and someim have acquired a wonderful degiskill in using it. The drawbackit it soon cracks, roughens andrd to remove. A renewal is need;ry day, and 'the result must be pi.nently injurious to the skin.

rVoman'it True Source of Strength.rhe strength of women lies in thiirt. It shows itself in their stro'e and instinctive perceptionht and wrong. Intellectual courararely one of their virtues. Asle, they are inclined to be restless alitable, allowing theirjudgments aiions to be swayed by quick emotiDtill kinds, but. above all, it is in th<pefulness and endurance that thd their chief power. Who is tt person to give up hope in the cux member of the family who has a

rently gone altogether to the bactiat mother or sister with deep ailent love for such will ever cease?rish hope or to endure suffering <ir account ? The patience of a wn is proverbial, and their whole livbound up in their affections. Fe

)ple will deny that love in one foianother makes up the beauty of liwomen. It enters into all she do<y work outside her immediate circmdertaken most often from pure cb to help some one el«e to know son:

I>a mrrofnrmno honninoccIlg Wl MIC UlJfiJIVilWUO UU.M|JiHV,JO

e. Unlike men, women chiefly lo<personal intercourse, witli those 110m they are working. If their iest lies among the poor, they are dcms of sympathetic personallintance with them, and very litl)d work of a lasting kind has bele by women without their own iindividual case. Without dwelliithe greater physical weaknesses>men in general, it is a fact that th<tins are more easily deranged, ailess they change greatly they are a

deteriorate in essential womanilitiec if thrown much or prominentore the world. They are seldced to rule, emulation and jealoung generally strong in their cluer, while their feelings and judnts are otten rapid in the extrenis in the heart, therefore, thatman will more especially feel tc!s of agnosticism, whether the;cts be for good or for evil. IIjUl limy K:lIil 111 U1wu

arne&s of views; but if ber hea:th all its powers for good, is wea!fl and discouraged, she will g:i,1c ultimately by the spread of tv views. YVhen the heart is diited, or thrown back upon itself, t!ion that springs from it tends iitably lo fali lileless to the ground$$ Lalhbury, in Nineteenth Centui ylow An Arnb I>a<ly I'erfumeH Ilerxeli

n the floor of tho tent or hut, as

,y chance to be, a smail hole is ex<U'd suflieiently large to containnmon champagne bottle; a fireireoal or of simply glowing emberside within the hole, into which t>iunn about to be scented throw.1ti.lful of drugs. She then takes oil'tth or "tope" which forms her dr<\ crouched naked over the furuli'.e she arranges her robe to fall as

.ntle from her neck to the ground li

.ent. She now begins to perspe!y in the hot air-bath, and the roithe skin b"ing tlius opened and mo

»nil fhfl cmnlrp nf t

rning perfu'ues is immediately n

bed. By ilic time that the HVe Ipirt'd the scenting process is co:'ted, and both her person and ro

! redolent w»th incense, with whi>y are so thoroughly impregnated tlhave frequently ymelt a partyimen strongly at full a hundred yaiitance wlien the wind has been bior from their direction..Sir Willu,ker.

HEWS OF THE WORLD. |I,

Eastern and Middle States. l

:s.a

' Two men wore attempting to cxplod* a /"e nitro-glycerine torpedo in an oil well on the s

border lands, about eight miles northeast of tce Bradford, Pa., when there was a terriflo ex- n

plosion, which scattered the engine house, tiboiler house, derrick and machinery in a t!

irc thousand different directions. The oil caught i<Are and shot up into the air a hundred leet in c

les a blazing column. The ground for miles a

around was covered with a thin layer of oiland oil soaked leaves. A strong wind was t

y blowing from the west and the fire spreadwith lriyhtlul rapidity in the direction of "J

nd Kew City, a village ot about 100 houses. The toil-well property, tanks, rigs and machinery

ia. were one sheet of flame lor a distance of two ,

miles to Kow City. The people of that place £

were paralyzed with fear and tried to remove t>et their household goods before the Are reached 8

W. them, but such was the awlul speed of the ]

jjp flumes that nothing could bo saved and the c

|er village was totally consumed. The people 4ran for their lives and nought a place 01 sliol- c

terin an open field While this fire was in

p- progress an oil well in tho town of Gilmore, s

to about six miles west ol Kew City, ignited, and 0

etilla third fire broko out at Custer City, four 0miles south of Bradlord. The country for tlmiles around was one seething mass of flame j,and about 800 oil wells wero burned in an >,

hour, together with hundreds of thousands ot i,"p- I barrels ol petroleum.er The Now Jersey Republican State conven- c

tion, hold at Trenten, elected four delegates- v

at-large and seven district delegates to the 5. national convention, and adopted resolutions g

declaring that the presidential nominee at (]Chicago would be cordially supported by 0

them. On the same day the Now Hamrahire>n Republican convention, held at Coireord, 1

Pn elected delegates to the national convention ,

(Tg and adopted resolutions declaring that while jthey wore in lavor ol sending an uninstructed ,

delegation to Chicago they believed that ,or Blaino was "tho man for the times," etc.en The Delcwaro Republicans, in convention at

id Dover, appointed an uninstmeted delegationto Chicago and adopted resolutions declaringthey would support any candidate indorsed by t

\ the national convention. c

The jury ol investigation Into the reo<U)t r

111 fatal accident at the Madison Square gardenin New York, by which four persons lost their I

an lives, rendered a verdict censuring the owners S

rn ol tho structure and the department of build- t

jn ings, and recommending that the entiro r

n building bo torn down. s

At a meeting ol the Loyal Legion of the liUnited States, held in Philadelphia, General

pe W. S. Hancock was re-elected commander.>(i, A flro in Williamspoit, Pa., destroyed two f(l a lumber yards containing three million leet ol c

rrjl lumber, and six tenement houses, entainog a

Jie loss ol §55,000. r

;A lire which broke out in the house ol J

» Justice Cline, at Rexlord, Pa., communicated e

to tho adjoining structures, and belore the c

ire flames could be subdued eighty buildings wereiya laid in a^hes. Tho houses burned embraoe <he the principal hotels, stores, business places, a

on and several large oil tanks containing many e

thousands ol barrels ol oil. On the same day s*"

t he business part of the village of KinderftooK, fN. Y., was destroyed by fire, and at Alle1S*gheny City, Pa., about thirty building were a

,W burned to the ground. r

ed Lately there have been a large number 01 \

?1- suicides in Central Park, New York. Hardlyot a ilaypns^ts without the discovery of a corpse lien in the groat pleasure grounds ot the metrop- bId °^18'jrs Samuel P. Diehm, ased flfty-four years, 1

a rent collector, while on ti collecting tour in r

New York, was kicked to death by Eugene 1Gardnur, a colored boy eighteen \ ears of age. r

An explosion ot one ot the hti^e boilers in b

, the Meichants' iron mill at Korne, N. Y., i

| shook the whole city, and the report waa r

heard for miles nroun-J. The boiler, which t

was twenty-two feet long and Ave feet in s

diameter, was blown through the roof aboutei- fifty feet into the air and landed four hundred p

jo feet away in a vacant lot. Four employees hwere killed and about a dozen more or less iiseverely injured. v

The Now York senate, by a vote of 17 to 16,hns passed an amendment to the constitution b

is giving women the right to voto.rs The annual dinner ol the J»ew York cham- 1to her ot commerce was adi ressed by Secretaryid Sherman, Mayor Cooper and others.

Fresh lorest fires are reported from sectionsof Pennsylvania and New Jersey, and preat

irs damage to property has been done. At Porty- Republic, N. J., nearly thirty houses were j(je destroyed.or Another body has been crcmated at thein Washington (Pa.) furnace. The body ere-

®

at mated was that ot Gustave Poetz, and the "

er ashes will bo taken to Europe by a daugnter ;ol deceased. ,

An attempt was made the other day to killthe Spanish consul-general in New York by tmeans of a packet) containing explosive

1S materials, which was sent to him by mail?r, lrom Philadelphia. The iniernal machine was £St. loosely constructed and exploded without doering any harm. .

lie A few days aeo a large crowd ol roughs 1

and "sporting" characters congregated at c

Buffalo, X V., h orn all parts of the country c

y for the onrpose of witnessing a prize light in c

n» Canada between two men named Rooko and £3d Donovan; but the Canadian police and mili- 1

es taiy were in readiness, and the " bruisers," 8

Cld who lelt BulFulo tor Canada in tug boats, weren compelled to return without pummeling each p

ia- other. ^n- I

Western and Southern States.ed t

A few days ago an anti-third-term national ^Republican convention was held at St. Louis,

. General Henderson calling the meeting toin J T.' TT..1.1 I. I !.* . A .1. c~ oruer. jd. xmuuiirua, ui x\.u , »uo j

-Q culled lo the chair and afterward a permanentat organization was effected, witli John B. Henhederson, ot Missouri, as president ot the cou- (lid vention, thirteen vice-presidents and iourth secretaries. Telegrams and letters ol sym- t

jg pathy were received ircm Congressman Butwterwoith, ol Cincinnati, Rev. Jam. a Free c0f man Clarke, of Boston, Governor l'ierrepont, jtp ol W« st Virginia, Thurlow Weed and Itov.

. H. VV. Bellows, ol New York, Gov. John G.: Long, ol Massachusetts, and others. The^ resolutions, adopted without debate, declare r

an adhesion to the principles ol the Repub- i

5r- lican party and aflinn that " the nomination jofa third-term candidate will put the party on jtlio defensive by reviving the memory of the fpublic scandals and official corruptions whicbi t

ajr brought the party to tfce verge of ruin."! d* The resolution close by,resolving that " u] cH national committee of 01Tb hundred be ap-.01 pointed and instructed, in the event of thi< i£e nomination ol General Grunt, to meet in thi-ja city of New York at the call ol the chairman, \

tld ol this committee, and there to act in such a. ,nd manner as they 6hall then deem best to carrj'ns out the spirit and purpose ol these resolutions.] £jir the said committee to be selected by a com-i (ev mittee ot thirteen and published at its earliest' |

convenience." A committee ol five was in-l ,Btructed to present the resolutions to the' ,Chicugo convention. j

I P Republican State conventions were held the, (\ other day in Maryland, Tennessee and Miss-!

issippi. In Maryland a resolution requesting £the delegates to work and vote lor Blaine at < fCincinnati was adopted; in Tennessee the] ,

O- convention lavored Grant for presidential; <es nominee, nominated Alvin S. Hawkins lor, (

!W governor and declared against repudiation; ,

m in Mississippi an uninstructed delegation was 1

ife elected to the national convention. j?8. The Ohio Democratic State convention. <

»le held at Columbus, appointed four delegates- <

|g. at-large to the national convention and twenty[e_ district delegates, lie resolutions adopted inf request the delegates to present to the na-

tional convention the name ol Allen ix. inur- <

?K mau as presidential nominee, and instruct tor them to vote as a unit at Cincinnati. f

,n* At Danville, Va., J. B. Pace's tobacco war©- '

le" house and several adjoining buildings wereif- destroyed by Are and two men perishtd in the c

tie flames; and on the same day at St. Louis c

n 10,000 tons of ice stored in the extensive ice- tE- bouses ol Huse, Loomis & Co. melted away 3

in the flames. '

of At Ciarksville, Ivy., two constables went to 1

jjr the house ol a colored mnn, named Lyle, to 1

a(j arrest him upon the charge of disturbing public 1

pj. -worship. Lyle and his wile had become perjvlect monomaniacs upon the subject of re- '

litiion, and the former on various occasions J' y appeared at places of worship, both lor white '

'm and colored people, and insisted upon ofllcia- 1

sy ting as minister. Lyle offered a turious re- 1

if- eistance to the constables and was shot by 1

g- them three times before he could be secured. 1

IC. Upon entering his house the officers smelled Ia putrid flesh, and on making scatch found two

lie of Lyle's children, aged respectively three,se and five years, with their necks broken. Lylegr is supposed to have murdered the childreD in

a moment ol Irensy.. A disastrous cyalone visited a large section

ol Illinois the other day, leaving death and. destruction in its track. The thriving villagelin ol Olsey was nearly destroyed, twenty buildheings being demolished by the wind. In Arrow!S-smith township twelve buildings were deliestroyed, and in Empire township many personsn- were injured, Mime latally. Mr. and Mrs.

Reese, while lying in bed, were carried a

j quarter of a mile and set. down in a wheal jfield. The town ot (iutlino, containing oniy

r, hall a dozen buildinge.wus struck by lightning ?and everything destroyed liy <lro.During » tiro at a lodging house in St. Louis t

lour men perished by suffocation.ji A Ann of Baltimore junk dealers had pur- A

of chased a quantity of condemned shrapnell tis shells at Fort McJIonry, and several men \Jjp wort- breaking tlio shells up with a liainrner «]

j a when one of them exploded. The grape shot jt. with which the shell was filled flew in every

" direction, instantly killing Mix uiijii and badly Jwounding tin others. All tlio intsu killed ,

e3, were terribly inungled, L' e body ot one being' a literally torn to fragments. '

Kb xiio West Virginia, Michigan and Nevada Jll'fc Republican delegations to the national con- '

res vention ut Chicago have been instructed by I

1st their respective State conventions to vote for the Blaine, and the Florida delegation has been :

ib-I insttacted to vote for Grant. t1!ls Tho Wisconsin Democratic State eonven- {

t:on hus chosen an uniustruoted delegation to i

the national convention at Cincinnati. ..

» Tno Methodist genera! conference at Cin- 1cinnnti eiccted lour bislLfij»J, in lollows: Tho ,

1!l^ Rev. Henry W. Warren, «4' f'liilailelphia; i "

Cyras D. Foss, I). I)., I< I,. 1)., president of '

'ds Wesleyan universi'v, Middleiowii, Conn.;W* John F. Hurst, pr«.-ideni oi Drew theologicalim seminary, MaHibon, N. J ; and Dr. 10. O. I

, Haven, chancellor of the Syracuse university, j e

From Washington. j gA dispatch has been received in Washingonfrom'Panama announcing that the presilentoi the Nicaraguan government has made

i very liberal concession to a number ofunerican capitalints to undertake the contructionof a canal across any portion oi tieerritory of that country which may seem 1

lost advantageous. This concession is likely0 be the basis oi an important movement inhe interest of a canal under control ol Amer:ancapitalists, and it is undeistood that an ^eHcTganizHtion will soon be effected in direct tbeiintagonism to De Lessep'sscheme. «1 *

The President has been presented with a th,t

lumerotisly-signed petition praying lor theippointraent ol Postmaster James, ol New dleeifork, fai the place in the cabinet made vacant tbeiily the retirement ot Po3tmaster-General Key. ManFrom a statement made by the secretary ot

^ar, in reply to a resolution of the Honso, it ty"8Iippears tliat there wax on the retired list ot in b

hr United States army on December 31,1879, poar1 total ot 397 officers, with the following rank: dnD'!

Hajor-Generals, 5; brigadier-generals, 18;:olonels, 59; lieutenant-colonels, 34; majors, e|^,i9; captains, 132; first lieutenants, 77; sec- it Ismd lieutenants, 15; chaplains, 8. If

Mr. Augustus Morris, one ol the commisioncraat the Sydney exhibition, reports thatur exhibitors have been very successful in $j0btaining awards. In all cases our manuiac- Ilealurcrs have eithor excelled all others or stood Thea the first rank. The result will he a largo '"P*ale of American articles ot several kinds that JjjJJjave heretoloro beeti uuknown in Australia. oth(During the October term ol the supreme from

ourt, which closed a lew days ago, 408 cases Wrere finally disposed ot, 214 being affirmed,0 reversed, 31 dismissed, 5 questions an- eMewored. 77 settled and dismissed, and 31 infoiocketed and dismissed. The total numberil cases remaining on the docket is 794.Ex-Senator Isaac P. Christianoy, now T1

[Jnited States minister to Peru, has instituted tepa1 suit lor divorce from his young wile, Lizzie "J.®M. Christiancy, whom he married a lew yearsigo, and who at the time of her marriago was thei treasury employee. skin

Rcari. I ihao

Foreign news.

Two Mcxican editors-one a member of haTeho notional congress and the other secretaryif the senate.recently lought u duel whichesulted in tho death ot the latter.Strikes in tho cotton-spinning districts of ^

rranee have assumed largo proportions. Mtylixty factories have been closed at Roubaix, tor

hrowing 15,000 operatives out of employ- !m*laent, and at Tourcoing 5,000 operatives havetruck. The strike is for higher wages and °|{;ess hours. etc.A deputation of the Dublin relief committee head

raitod on Mr. Forstor, the new secretary nlshor Ireland, and called his attention to the ,®.ontinued distress in that country. Theord mayor of Dublin said the distress was afraitot likely to be mitigated before tho end ot watc

luly, and read telegrams stating that it imnediaterolief was not given people would die "

if famine by the score. F1Hon. George Brown, editor of tho Toronto ,frec

rlobe, and one ot the leading figures in Can- }uwedian politics, died a lew days ago from the mon

iffects of a ballet wound inflicted some time andince by an engineer whom ho had discharged j:omlrom his employ- ao(jA hail storm in "West Hungary destroyed rftj |

ilmosc all the windows and roofs of houses in skinnost ol the towns and villages and crushed warc

ines, fruit trees and green corn to the earth. uP°rThe law recontly passed by the Spaniards

3r the gradual abolition of slavery in Cuba Krcaias gone into cfleot. log,Considerable comment has beon excited in

Snglish and American literary circles by thenarriago ot " George Eliot," the greatest of Biiving English novelists, to an Englishman sinklamed Cross. She is about sixty years old,ind when George Henry Lewes, the writervith whom she had lived many years, although herelot married to him, died about a year ago she tuticvent into a retirement lrom which it was

mppostd she would never withdraw.The village ot San Luis, in Cuba, has beon jtch,ntircly destroyed by fire. Three hundred Toouses were burned, soven persons perished suflcn the flames, and threo thousand wore leftwithout shelter. Min1Since January last moro than 600 persons twei

lavo starved to death in Persia. suttiiNine Turkish villages have been pillaged »ecoi

t>y the Bulgarians. .

. In? i

CONGRESSIONAL, SCMMABI, t,on;prodSenate. the.and

A favorable report was presented by Mr. deanCaton, from the committee on appropriations, baldm the House bill appropriating §250,000 toontinue the public printing. .»ir. Windom ^noved to add: " For payment of the fees and baseixpenses ot United States mars,mis and their due

leputies, earned during the fiscal year ending tentiudo 30, 1880, $600,000." The amendment J^eJ»as rejected by a party vote, and the bill was rJ1jthen passed without a division. slonMr. Bayard offered a bill regulating thfe ensef

iay and appointment ot special deputy marfill DC

A resolution wns submitted by Mr. Voor- flouriee8 directing an inquiry into the expediency c'-'pl<if declaring nil lands gmnted in aid of the ar^t'Obstruction of railroads which have not beenlarncd by compliance with the tenns of the enrti

;rant«, open to public entry and sett lenient Athe same aa other government lands. Printed 1110nd laid on tho tablo. 8008

The conference report on the Indian approbationbill wait agreed to alter di.scus.sion.Mr. Hoar denounced tho attempt to unseat "j1

\Ir. Kellogg and paid a high tribute to hiaidministration while governor ot Iouisiano. 9f fThe report ot tho conference committee on mere

he diplomatic and consular appropriation bill )f tc

*ras adopted.The Senate concurred in tho Hoofo amend- and

nent to the joint resolution authorizing tbe of d'resident to call an international sanitaryonlerence.Mr. Conkling introduced a bill providing Bi

or the erection ol a monumont at Schuyler- that

ille, N. Y., commemorative of the battle of fe*

Saratoga.Mr. Hill made a speech advocating the skin

:laims of Mr. SpofTord to the seat in the ewci

Jenate held by Mr. Kellogg. menof tl

lllouae. fe-tli

A bill was reported by Mr. Atkins, chair- fontnan ot the committee on appropriations, ap- blo<><tropriuting $*r2-50,< 00 lor carrying on the thelublio printing oflloe for the current fiscal cefaj'ear. Mr. Atkins stated that the sum appro- 90_

'-> L_ rewttrialea was iae samu as umu ajjjuujirmuju uy foctlhe bill which had been vetoed by the Presi- bloo<lent. The bill wa3 then passed without a to a

livieion. tubeThe postofllco appropriation bill was passed P£CU

vith eeverul amendments.Thejoint resolution requiring the President sum

o call an international sanitary conl'ercnce to heroncetat Washington, D. C., was passed. caseMr.Atkins, cliair.nan ot the committee on

ippropriiitionn, reported the legislative, execuliveand judicial appropriation bill. Ordered woi

x) b# printed and recommitted. It recom- »kinnends an appropriation ot $16,120,931, as w'/bigainst §15,r27,038 appropriated by the bill ofa*t vear, and as against an estimato ot* $16,- to e

592,920. viz.,At an evening session for general debate cons

ipeeche 3 wore delivered by Mr. Simonton in eir®"

lupport ot the bill pensioning Mexican vet- je)jjrans; Mr. Dibrell, for the relief of producers Jitatijl tobacco; Mr. Stevenson, relative to the and,sounting ot the electoral votes lor President "Sind Vice-President; Mr. Tyler, in opposition causi

x> the pendin. " political assessment" bill; ,n5Mr. Parsons, in favor ot the appointment ot a

sommission to inquire into the ravages ol the »^jottonworm; Mr. Kitchen, in support of the slble'political assessment" bill; and Mr. MurchIn opposition to the " funding" bill. of ^

In the Pennsylvania contested election casecure'

jf Curtin agiiinst V'ocum, speechos in favor ot;ho former were made by Messrs. Beltzhoover

' 1' >.« K. Mojd^Q I'IIKI ituiunuit, mm IUI uiu ujgjonStevenson and Calkins. who'In the Curtin-Yocum contested election co,ni

:ase an amendment to the minority resolution,ieclaring that Seth H. Yocum is not entitledo the seat, was defeated by 115 nays to 75 malt,-ca8. The minority resolution, declaring that cinu.scth H. Yoctnn is entitled to tho seat, and ,|llr"

hat Andrew G. G'urtin is not entitled thereto, l«*prcivas then adopted by a vote ol' 113 yeas to 75 "£5ia^S. propIn committee ol tho whole on tho legislate,executive and judicial appropriation bill,

uuendments providing that tho salaries ol II(Jenatora shall be at the rate ol £350 per andnonth; that Senators and Representatives or c

ihall be paid only lor the months during inedlivbicli Congress is in session, and that the s'*'Jn<

alaries ol Representatives ho reduced to54,000 per annum, were all ryectod. Kind

Bills have been introduced: For tho ap- to <1

pointmont of a commission to select a site on casethoNorthwest coast lor u navy yard; to establislimarine hospital? at Biltimore and New ]^s jOrleans; to provide for double stamped envel- sa)popes and postal cards. utterIn committee ol tho whole on tho lcgisla- »>" I

live, executive and judicial appropriation bill, tCst

the amendment reducing the salary of thoPresident alter tho first ol" March, 1881, to

825,000 was rejected.yeas, 25; nays, 73, tiim. HUlli'

liulky Horses.Anions tho suggestions Paid to ho pub- Th

islied by some anti-cruelty to animals l5(V,Ioeiety are those: If the horse when he n ?kinlks'can have his atlenlion diverted (!orf'

here is usually no trouble in starting ncclim. This may bo done in various it is

vays, of which "the following are a lew 111,8

hat have hern employed: Take thelorse out of the shafts and turn him audiiround quite rapidly. This will make enlim entirely dizzy and lead him to lor- P

;et that lie does not wish to draw theoad. A stout twin*, twisted around the nraioreleg has heen used as a remedy with and i

;ood results. A string tied around thear has t he same effect. We have seen actiolorses of the haikiesi sort started in a resto

noment by putting a iump of earth intoheir mouths. Even a piece of sujjar or ^"lY

t. handful of fresh grass will so divert and<lie attention of a halker that he will(fieri start off without trouble. Some;iiill treatment like these that set the t'ie <

.... - , . ^ . ncicrminnl to thinking ol soim-unne ioroitin lt3 vo iiis work is viistly In-tler tlinii miy tromiinoujil. of whipping. mid is mncli «nsior Cl,l0r

>f appiifiilion..American Aijrictilluri.il.1 (oilcl

Iti Sweden. :t nmn who is seen drunk itd<our timi'S is deprived of liis vote :it JjJdiileetious. niot

EAUTY BUT SKIN DEEP. JSand n

v to Beautify, How to Preserve, and *b®ncHow to Treat when Diseased, cause

the Skin and Scalp. {he^_ _ color,

Sy K. E. JOS8ELT N, M. D. of New Tttk. repa;Thl

Is call

jart from the suffering caused by skin dlscaaes, 2jinrlnflncnco on the happiness of those to whom a oer>1

ate and pearly complexion Is the dearest wish oflives Is paramount to all others. No lady afflict>lthcutaneous eruptions, or losa of bair, will deny great

, to obtain a fair skin and luxuriant tresses, she EcsoId gladly exchange the disfigurations that now niar in tlotherwiso handsome lace, hands, or hair, for other reme»aes of greater severity,.even danger,.could htiniexistence be concealed from the public eye. gptci

y an estimable lady's life has been embittered by Hebonoous affections, she Imagines that every ono doseand comments upon her looks. She avoids socle- ealWtid public placcs, and endeavors to niae ner misery met( elusion. Here the struggle to Improve her ap- circuance Is renewed. No remedy Is tco repulsive or testarerous to be used. Arsenic Is dsvoured in large patleitltles, mercury is taken internally and applied ex- provi»lly, until the teeth rattlo In their loosened fockmiltho system groans beneath the load of polsoiy everjobliged to carry. leavebucU be tbo "feellDSS of one afflicted with alight the bblemishes, what must be the condition of those fn[ p.Ting from salt rheum, tetter, ring worm, pemphl- flnci iisorlasls, ler'rosy, lichen, prurigo, and scald head ? of sci

pen can ftilly describe- ths tortures they enduro. eagclh In many cases might be considered ft blessing. whlcburning heat, Inflaminitlon, and itching nearly bred

si the sufferer to do violence to himself In order to Btomhis sufferings. I havo seen patients tear their mitwith their nails until the blood flowad In stream*. 8trenrs have told me that they could cut the flesh a|i tltheir limbs, eo great was tbo agony they endured. d)aca

1th a view to impart some useful information on Haconstruction and preservation of the skin, scalp, ets olhair, and th; nropnr treatment ol them when dls- moniJ » .. ..l.i ^ 1._ t.u, 1 uuvu ucre Luuuiuai'u iu ayuyuuu mui bcuijjrmation as Is most desired. 1 km

THE CONSTRUCTION OP THE SKIN.ic skin Is comprised of two layers, which may I e u, thrated from each other by tho action of a blister. broa<thin portion which Is raised np by the blister Is reserd the scarf skin, the cuticle, or the epidermis; greatwhich remains In connection with the body is chetisensitive skin, the cutis, tho derma, or the true and |Each has separate 'duties to perform. The epom

f ekln Is horny and Insensible, and serves as a existth to protect the more tenHUve fkin nnder it. rlt)g\e tie ecarf skin taken off we could not bear to ecaldanything- touch us. The derma or true skin, hum

Its elands, oil tubes, etc., are the seat of all cuta- exteiis diseases. kmc

andTHE OIL AND SWEAT GLANDS. mett

lat the skin may bo pliable and healthy it Is neeesto have It oiled every day; aad for this the Crea-has wisely provided by placing in the true skin1 glands and tubes, whose office it is to preparepour out upon the surface the proper amount ofOn some parts of the body they do not exl6t, but Hiabundant on the face, nose, ears, head, eyelids, yThey produce the wax of the ears, and ou thothey open Into the shoath of the nslr, and fur- exaC|

It with nature's own hair oil or pomade. When .«]skin Is healthy thesa little vessels are always at 0bgt|c, and constantly respondlug to the demands amie upon thoai. Consequently no person should be |D grd to wash thoroughly every day with soap and jkllllir, lest, as the " Boston Medical Journal" once yearbt, tho rkin be Injured by having the oil removed f0rmit . have

SEQUENT WASHINGS WITH PUBE SOAPfrom caustic alkalies) and lukewarm water, fol- my

d by brisk rubbing with a coarse towel, will do conti3 to preserve the healthy action of the oil glandstubes, upon which depends a clear and wholesome anno

plexion, than all tbe cosmetics in the world. 80 Thoirtant is the free and perfect action of the sweat le:iclfat or oil glands In the preservation of the gene- l°wlealth, as well as the special condition of the finallthst psrticular attention to them will be re- "v'n

led by Increased physical health. They discharge but <

the surface of tho body about two and one-half timoids of matU-r per day, and their importance in the tbroiQcation of the blood and fluids of the body is so handt that were they closed by an Impervious coat flngelike 1 ubber or oiled silk, death would soon ensue. UfcjeIE GREAT SKIN AND SCALP DI8EASE8. » boi

said,it bad as arc minor forms ol skin diseases, they 0De ]into insignificance when compared with tho great the tand scalp diseases with which thousands are af- )mmd during their whole lives. ThU tbe reader may comjv more about them, the principal affections are tbie<named, omitting such as are symptoms of consti- wstenal diseases, like measles, rash, etc. The most 0ppnirtant are salt rheum or eczema, tetter, ring t£mn, psoriasis, impetigo, leprosy, lichen, prurigo, g^inera' itch, Jackson's itch, bakers' itch, groundscald head, and dandruff. «»jiwering above all others in extent, In duration, In ,lflSrtng, U.

ECZEMA,monly 'called salt rheum. WUson divides It Intove species, and others into many more; bul it isciently clear to the average reader, and will bernized by its small watery blister, about the eiza cure'

plnhead, wherever seen. Prurigo, impetigo, and badInt'is are but little behind salt rheum in tbe suffer- man1 a., ia 1 Im .a»UA. anpHLAt'y caiiac. CLOIU IJCUU 1£J UUUVUCi UUSllliUkU ancu*

defying all remedies, destroying tho bair, and "1 bucing great misery and suffering. The scalp, like Cutiiftcin. is subject to rait rheum, tetter, dandrufl, *'reeother eruptive and scaly diseases, which generallyroy the hair follicles, and produce permanent '

ness. ycTI1E TREATMENT Um'-j

Iscases of the skin or scalp has been for centuriesrl upon the mistaken theory that they arc entirelyto torn" inipuiity of the blood. No ipedal at- rron ban ever been directed to the Important part u.

sweat and fat glands play in the propagation and str*itenance of dlseise.is no unjust rejection upon the medical prof*tosay tnat Its efforts in the cure of sktn dlsihave been a failure. What with mistaken theo- i"j>dpoisonous remedies, and Mind adherence to "J.wds and practices originating in ignorance andrstition. silt rheum, scald bead, and psorlas'sish and increase upon systems shattered by tho,u« use, both internal and external, of mercury, .~i.ilc, zinc! and lead. °\r,0.ir centuries it has been the popular notion thatscs of the skin and ecalp must be cured, if1 at all, by purifying the blo6d. i~,.linittlng that this Is partly true, what has been ' '

method or what the remedies by which it washt to be accomplished ?

m

MERCURY AND ARSENIC. 8.

ittlng aside tbc senseless "sarsaparilla," "dock,"'"dandelion" "blood purifiers," and consideringthose remedies that hove receivtd the sanction

iliyslclans, hospitals, and colleges, we find that Jf?:ury and arsenic are the only medicinal agent* .*i-day, ua they were hundreds of years ago, which £: |,iregarded by the "regular" aa having specific 5?"?leal properties for the purification of the blood,hence tin-only remedies adapted to the treatment Tiiin and scalp disease*. ton,

cntiiT11E TRUE THEORY. almi

it a little light is being thrown upon the darknesshas surrounded the intellect of the past. To aGerman and French physicians and specialistsowo what true progress we are making at the

" Kent time in tho cure of obstinate affections of tho n'°e

and Bcalo. They teach and prove, (1) thst dlsiof the skisi and scilp are caascd by a derangetof the secretory and exc.-etory tubes and vessels hairhe true ekla; and (2) that such diseases (ft afonsare acgravatod and ir-alntilned by poisonous _,yscontaining the virus of scrofula, malaria, «r "°,li

iglous disease, which aro discharged from th? J'ct(ri and cic'i'atlrg fluids upon tho skin through JJj"ivreat ar.d fat glands. From these facts they sue- *"s<'uJly mahtain thnt skin diseases cannot be cured «*

y by internet rcmcaku, nor soleh by externalidles, but by a judicious u*e of both. These nf>nsare rot wholly caused by impurities 01 tho1 and circuhtlr.g fluids, nor are they due entirely ..

diseased condition of the fweat and fat glands, zvfj1vesse'f, and cells of. the true pki\ but to u

liar and inseparable cbndit'on of both. .For iitreat the or.e to tho neglect of the other, no ?.llrcress is made; lut with attention to both at the ,i time, and the use oi such remedies as 1 can J"

recommend, a cure is possible in nearly every

"WHAT WE WANT,-"

mo

a distinguished authority on the skin, "whatnost co:nc»tly desire in order to c re obstinateand s alp aflections, are thrie great remedies, *

as main specific properties, namely :. J J1®'. An internal remedy possessing cathartic, j'

and alteiatlve properties, which will enable It "?'xpr-l through the natural pnrillers of tho body,the lungs, liver, kidneys, bowele. and skin, the ,

'

titutional t>oi>on which floats In tho blood and 7 01

ilatlng fluids of the bodj'. lot"!. An external, unchangeable application of leJ*consistence that may trrest inflammation or ironand destroy fungus or parotitic growths;

I. An emollient and healing soap, free from Ittic alkalies and Irritating properties, for cleans- J"8'-'diseased surfaces, ami partaking, in a milder ^utl, tho medicinal properties of the external appll and

n. «n<lVith threo such remedies as I conceive it pos- totttto prepare, out which I do not now know to face

, I will ventnre to assert that ninety per centum headio skin diseases In existence may be permanently e;Inllj

!_<> birtlothc

THE USUAL REMEDIES FAILURES. <*«.of w

I have uppeared severe upon tho racdlcal prores- micaI have not been unjustly so towards physiciansadhere t<> practices at variance with reason andncn-sense, and, withal, latnontable Cillures. I yjassert that no ointment, salve, cerate, lotion or ,]|C8[wund. for externel application, nor alterative, or tr|u,od puiifier," for interna! use, to be found In tho cj ^;ria medica of the schools and colleges of tnedl- n;.anil there are thousands of them,.will cer- »j«cy cure a case of chronic salt rheum, psoriasis, or aiui,ify. 1 have tried them with all tho care and rep'srienco suggested by a liberal education, but (.'lowu iisatisfactory results as to specific curative mantrtles. Tii

ofthHOPE FOE THE AFFLICTED. cu a

wora:nce, when Messrs. Weeks & Potteb, Chemists hair,Druggists or Boston, Mass., informed me that tlve''Izht years they had been experimenting with uric-1icinal agents, and had obtained.mostly from sub- destlres never letoio used In medicine, and by a pro- andoriginal with themselves.three great remedies, andh thev believed to be an infallible euro for every hefoiof skin, ecalp, tnd blood disease, from salt rbeum ieajilaodriitl', whether caused by a scrofulous or dlstalntedblood, or by a morbid condition of tho XewIs, tubes, vessels and cells of tho true skin, orI was gratified beyond measure. As niy llfo 44.|

icen and is devoted to the treatment of skin and "

diseases, to which I bavo given much study and t.ition 1 eigerly embraced the opportunity itlordfd . ,,

ly .Messrs. Weeks A> I'otteb, to tnuko a thorough 'lfl.ilof these remedies In my practice, determined, if havissful, to give them such publicity as their merits jumled them to. This I now do after two years ofordinary success with them, with the object of *

ytbyicssenin;/, as far as In my power, the great Mr.ring caused by the diseases under consideration, wilt

THE FIRST. D°rOt 1

e nanio given to the first of these great remedies jj]itie.ura, from eutii, tho skin, and mini, u euro,. uu cure. In practice, 1 foun 1 it possessed won- t>l"0il cuiutive properties, us they exist In no other hurtiilles of tha t'ay. It is entirely unlike anything P.,:,xteinalapplication that I have ever seen before.

i,f i'lly consistence, freo from grease, oils ornnd does not contain a particln ot deleterious or firstiiolesome matter, and is no easily applied tliat no,tion «r i>aln is caused by its application to rawnflaraeu surfaces. VOC!

tlcura when used as directed, is wonderfully 36VIted to sooth.- and heal the ni'ist Inflamed sur- at (to allay itching and irritations, that havo teen fevertureofa lifetime, to destroy fungus or unnat- . i

growths on the skin and scalp, to heal ulcers wl"M-rofiilous sores, to cleanse and purify tho pores of Oil 1kin and restore to healthy and regular action the jjpglands, tubes, and cells, upon whose perfect ,

n depend tho preservation of n healthy skin andration when diseased. It will not become rancid, .111 flpoll on exposure in any climate. It will be as lentfragrant, soothing and healing fifty years hence .

is to-day. Contrast this with tho horrible salves ,.jintments of the present time I .

I <11 Sr

TOE SECOND. |Suticnra Medicinal Toilet Soap, receives It* char- lirciIstlc name Iroin the remedy to which it owes .rmiduable healing nnd useful properties. It Is free .

caustic alkalies, and is of a delicate, I'Otural green JilW,. Its emollient, toothing, and healing action Is Wassame as Cutlcura. In a modillcd form. Asldo TVIts medicinal properties, It Is mnre valued as a

*'

, bath, and nursery sanative than any other soap,iansus. soothes, whitens, and beautifies the ekln, "

s a natural preventive oflnjury to '.he complexion fliphands trom the hsats of summer and the chills of c ..

er.four

oance of prevention is nowhere rewardedpounds of cure than In the care of the sio remedy or method Is more appropriate tutlcara 8oap. It dissolves sway undue exiof (Creasy matter from the oil glands, wls the akin to shine, prevents clotfgine ofand tabes, and stimulates the circulation

blood through the small blood vessels, giifreshness, and beauty to the complexion, anIDK ever/ ujuuioin. who.

[j »onp is also specially prepared for shaving,l°d Cutlers Medicinal Shaving Soap, and -wllI of great value by gentlemen suffering fromoflamed, or diseued siin.

THE THIRu

remedy submitted to me is called the Cuttlvent, because Of 1U intimate relation to Cutlele cure of skin and scalp diseases. Of alldies for the purification of the blood and ciI fluids that I have ever tested, none approac!lie medical action the wonderful propertlee oflvent. In forty minutu after taking theit may bo detected by chemical analysis In

i,,(weat, fat, and blood, showing that It has ent>lood and circulating fluids, and made the eiIt of the human labyrinth many times. Chenshow It to be present In the water with whichnt has bathed on rising in the morning, w:s conclusively that it has entered and beconof the circulating fluids, enabling It to trayr diseased ceil, tube, and vessel of the skin,Its wholesome* constituents upon the surtadody. But U does more than this. It is a po'urifving agent and liver stimulant. It neutraesolves away blocd poisons, caused by the vrolula, cancer, canker, malarial or contagious, It destroys microscopic insects or para*h infest the water and air of malarial regions,many forms of skin di'eases. It regulates

aoh aud bowels, and perfects digestion so as tcol a rapid increase of wholesome tissuegth. Hence Its power to eliminate from the sysle destructive elements that foster and mainses of the blood, skin, and scalp.,vlng been charmed with the results of my arf these great remedies, my next step was toitrite their value In the treatment of the greatsand blcod affections usually considered Incurt

>w that every word I now write

"WILL AWAfcEX HOPE6 breast of many a lifelong sufferer. Can I,1 and Christian spirit, without prejudice, wit!vatlon, say to tiose afflicted, ' Here In t

natural remedies, which tnay be had oflist or druggist for. a trill ng sum, Is a sp<jermanent cure 1" Wltu u Just s<;nse of theslbllities I assume, I siy I can. There doesa case of chronic salt rehum or eczema, te

vorm,pemphigus,psoriasis, leprosy, lichen, pruihead, d'indrufl; or itching, or scaly eruptloniors oi the skiu, scilu und blood, that Crnoinally, assisted b/tno Cxttiouba Soap, andilvkmt interna'ly. may not speedily, permaneieconomically cure, when all other remedieslOds of cure have utterly failed. I have pro»e<Irfvt* iifth** tnnftt m?pmvQted cajiea.thtlr.'wondiive power, In evldencu of which I'submit theig remarkable testimony's

LEPRA AND 8CEOFULOUS HUMOR.ram E. Carpenter, Henderson, Jefferson Co,cured of psoriwla, or lepra, of twenty yiling. His case Is so wonderful that I givet words:[ have been afflicted for twentv years wltlnate skin disease, called by some il.D.'s psorlothers, leprosy, commencing on my scalp,ilte of all I could do, with the help of the tfal doctors, It slowly but surely extended, atago this winter It covered mv entlro persoof dry scales. For the last three yeabeen unable to do any labor, and suffering

:*ly all the time. Every morning there couiily a dustpaiiful or scales taken from the abeebed, some of them half as large as the envc

lining this letter. In the latter part of wmteicommenced cracking open. I tried everytlst. that could bo thought of, without any nlath of June i started West, in hopes I c

i tho Hot Springs. I reached Detroit and wa[ thought I should have to go to tbe hospital,y got as far as Lansing, Mien., where I hid ase. One Dr. treated me about two wilid me no good. All thought I had but a e

to live. I earnestly prayed to die. Craiogh the skin all over thy back, acrossmy ribs,as, limbs, feet badly swollen, toenails camer-nalls dead and hard as bone, hair dead, dry.96 o«. old straw. Ob, my God : how I did stifftfy Bister, Mrs. E. H. Davis, bad a small parc of Cuticura lo tbe house. She would n't giv<' We will try Cuticura.' Some was applUcland and arm. Eureka! there waa relief; sto|errib'o burning sensation from the word go. 'JedlaU-ly got tbe Resolvent. Cuticura, and Boatnencea by taking one tablejpoonful of Resoltimes a day, after meals; bad a bath once a

r about blood heat; used Cuticura Soap Irecd Cuticura tuornlngand evening. Result, retuy houm In just six weeks from time 1 left, andas smooth as this sheet of paper.

"HIRAM D. CARPEN'TEfltnderioii, Jrffenon County, iV. Y.Iworn to be/ore me this nineteenth day of Jam

u A. M. Lxrnsowxu.Jattic* of tht Ptc

>n. William Taylor, Boston, Mass., pennant1 of a humor of tbe face and scalp (eczema)been treated unsuccessfully for twelve yeary of Boston's best physicians and most i

iallsts, as well as European authorities. He aave been so elated with my auccessfu! use ofcura remedies that I have stopped men lats to tell thom of my case."

ECZEMA RODENT, SALT RHEUM, ETC:zr.M\ I;odknt.-F. H. Drake, Esq., Bgcnjeratid Brothers, Detroit, Mlcb., gives an asto:»ccount of his case (eczema rodent), whlohtreated by a consultation of physicians wit

tit, and which speedily yielded to thu Cullidles. «

XT P.nECM..Wilt McDonald, 1315 Buttei:t, Chicago, gratefully acknowledges a cure ofm on head, neck, face, arms aod legs for seveni: not ablo to walk except on hands and knee

> ~KU In >,olr, Minonlf fnp olollt v<J cur, uui «.u.® . -. ... j.

hundreds of remedies; doctors pronounce*hopeless; permanently cured by the Cut)

idles.obiasis.Thomas Dolaney, MempkN, T<ted with psoriasis for nineteen ycats; compl(1 by Cuticura lemedles.nowobsi..Geo. \V. Brown, 4S Marshall 6tidence, II. I., cured of a ringworm humor gt>arber's, whl h spread all over tho ears, neck,and for fix years resisted all kinds of trentmd by Cuticura remedies.

SKIN IIUMOP.3.MILK CBU8T, ETO.is Hemo*..Mrs. 9. E. Whipple, Decatur, N53 that her face, head, and some parts of her> almost raw. Head c»?ered with sca^a and s

irod fearlully, and tried everything. Pcrmand by Cuticura remedies.ilk Crcst..Mrs. Bowers, 148 Clinton Street,Xl, speaks of her sister's child, who was eurccrust which resisted all remedies for two ya fine, beallby boy, with a beautiful bead ormm op nit Hands..Elizabeth Buckley, LN. 11.. thankfully praises the Cuticura remedli[>g or tetter of tho hands which bad rendered>st useless to her.

SCALD HEAD, ALOPECIA, ETC.

:ald Head..II. A. Ka^mocd, audlto* F. W.R, Jackson, Mich., was cured of ecald be:years' durat'on by the Cuticura remedies.li.limo op tiip. Hair..Frank a. Bean, Steam!De 0, OOSWU, HID vircu Ul BiU^cvia >11. u(j v

by the Cuticura reuiedlej, wbiob complete!id bis b&ir when all said he would lose itiVDRurT..Thomas Lee, S276 Frank fordidelpbia, afflicted wltb dandruff which for tws hod covered his scalp with scales one quartich In thickness, cured by the Cuticura rernf

scalp Is now free from dandruff, and as healtlpossible for It to be.

CHILDREN AND INFANTS.red. Rohrer, Esq., Cashier Stock Growerssi Bank, Pueblo, Colorado, writes: "I am s«sed with Its effects on mv baby, that I a

d to f-e without It In my house. It Is a wond, and is bound to becomo very popular as eo<irtues arc known to the masses."S. Weeks, Esq- Town Treasurer, St. Albans,in a letter dated May 2Stb: " It works to a elay baby's face and h< nd. Cored the head enihas nearly cleaned the face of tores. Imtnended It to several, and Dr. l'lant has onr them.". M. Cblck, Esq., 41 Franklin Street, Boston,y little daughter, eighteen months old, hasdoctors call c'zenu. Wo have tried almost e'

p. and at list have used abiut a box of Cntlshe Is almost a new child, and we feel ve-y hatias. Enyre ilinkle, J?rsey City Heights, Jes : "My son, a lad of twelve years, was cjmflied of a t»?rribie ease of ec/ema by the Cutedies. From tt.o top of bis head to the roles cwas one mass of scabs. Every other remedyslcian had been tiled in tain."EVERT SPECIES OF SKIN DISEASE.would require every column of this paperce to a description of the cures performed bjcura remedies. Eczema of tb<' palms of the bof th« ends ot the fingers, very difficult tousually considered ineursMo; small patcbirand saltrbfurn un the ears, nos; and tides o

; scild-heads with loss of hair without nuns covered with dandruffand scaly eruptions,r of children and infants, many <lf whichhad bten a mass of scabs; psoriasis, leprosy,

r frightful forms of skin diseisei; nciofulouo'd rores, and discharging wounds ; each anMch have been speedily, [Kxmanently and et

Jly cured by the Cutlcura remedies.A TRIUMPIUNT RECORD.

'such a record the Inventors of the Cutlcura r

tnny be Justly proud. Tbey aro a (j.and me

>i[ h; a triumph that wl 1 be trratofuWy remen

Y thousands Ion# after the originators have p«r.relieve and permanently cure diseases of thesc3lp which havo bc.'n th; torture of a lifotlm,co the repulsive evidences of disease wltlof health, and thus render beautiful the Ituor woman, is to deserve the protltudeof minilat Ca'lcura externally applied, with a propere Cutlcura Soap, and the internal use of the (

Resolvent, will cure speedily and permanent!;tfoimsof skin and scalp diseases, with losI thlnK I havo fully demonstrated. Gnnd <blesflni»8 which may be had of any dmeel3 within the reach of all, are thus substitutei-d<aline poisons. Mercury, arsenic, zinc, andu th iiMind and one other revolting, poisoisenseless thine® must now sink into obsci:e Ihe wonderful healing powers of tlie Cutldied.

M. E. JOSSELYN, M.York, April, 1880.

igh-Toncd" Executions ill Englai the course of 14ft years only so"

a dozen men of social posite been convicted of murderc;ed in England. Chief amonfftle Lord Ferrers, who is notorioPaisons, eldest son of a baroi>se baronetcy is extinct; Captie] lan and Captain Moil*. Thee,he iast, though much the latesle known. He v/as a Scotchmther-in-law to Sir Jamee Ilaijnet, a near relative ox Sir Da*d, who preceded Wellington ininiand of the Peninsular army, icousin to Sir William Kae, :it

; of the fatal occurrence lordite of Scotland. He had serintnnn v«i<iru i» tlir> nrmv find wlJibralter nearly died irom yellr. This a fleeLed his brain, :

lie in Canada he inflicted wouilimself with a hatehet; in fact, filiateof liis illness he was a chaini, and from having been cheeiamiable, became morose and v

. In 1828 he left f lie army and t<rm in Essex, and in March, 1830.overing a fisherman, whom he!id repeatedly poaching, at it nguwithstanding repeated warnings,i at him. The shot broke themn, and iie ultimately died from loA petition with 1.000 signatu

forwarded in his behalf to Geobut in vain.

r npvpr Ho thincs bv halves!" s

urchin, when ho ate si whole pieid in the cupboard.

Jjjj1 Exiles in Siberia.tun We have heard it calculated by a very

moderate Russian liberal that there areat least 25,000 men of the higher ranks

of in Russia who are now either in Siberia,or at least exiles from Russia, and aware

lp y that to return there would cost themand their liberty at once.of whom noti b« many hundreds are involved in the Niten"hilist conspiracy. If anything like

that estimate be the truth, the explana- \tion of this wholesale indifference to

curt Nihilism among the higher orders ofthe (raw, Russians is obvious at once. Conceive <

the feelings of a Russian family the mostb in promising ofwhom are eitherm Siberia,tbe or in exile without hope of return,'and

this for no better reason than the sus- Jered picions ot the police department. Of iitir« course, such a family feels, and can feel,'the no sympathy with the authorities, and Jbich no adequate horror at the band whichie o strikes such terror into the authorities,eno And this indifference to Nihilism amongBSD0f targe classes who are .not themselvesver. Nihilists, ofcourse reacts powerfully ontfees the Nihilists, makes them feel them^

selves anything but outcasts, givest!te» them even something of the characterand of heroes in their own eyes, since, withoutforfeiting the regard and respect ofand' their class, they yet go beyond thattern class in the sacrifices and risks they un14111dergo to remove, as they think, theiaiy.evils from which all alike suffer..Lon-de- d'.n Spectator.kin,16 01 Emaciation, dropsy, mental and physicalweakness arrested by Malt Bitters.

..

in > One reason, says the Detroit FreePress, why LeadviUe has no schools is

any because ail tue scnooima ams wuu guuAr there find husbands between the depotre_ and the hotels, and don't care a cent

ttfr> whether school keeps or not.riff"! 1

:b^[ Night sweats, cough, emaciation andthe decline prevented by Malt Bitters.

aUy,jjn Dr. Gibson, ot the Second Presbyteriansrfui church, Chicago, has been called tofoi- London, to St. John's Wood church,

which a year ago urged Dr. W. M.Taylor,of the 'Broadway tabernacle, New^ York, to become its pastor.

Jars' "

"Your Babiea" will always be good il3 an you give them Dr. Ball's Baby Syrup whileagifl Teething. It is a reliable and sure remedyand and costs only 25 cent*.nostitll a A Houaeliold Need.n In A book on the Liver, its diseases aad theirra I treatment sent tree. Including treatise* uponi be Liver Complaints, Torpid Liver, Jaundice,

Rilinrmnpjifl. OonHtiD*tion. Dvsnpn-

lope aia, Malaria, etc. Address Dr. Smlord, 163my Broadway, New York city, N. Y.

ilnt,',)l,e': The Voltaic Belt Co.. Marshall, Bleb.uuld Will send their Electro-Voltaic Belts to the

afflicted apoii 30 days trial. See their luivtrIstertisement in thia paper neaded, " On 30 Daysteks, Trial."eked Lyon's Heel StiSeners Keep boots and shoesrms, Jtraight. Sold by :»hoe and hardware dealers.off,and Veoetxhe has restored thousands to health

^ who had been long and painful sufferers.

I uJ|j C. Gilbert's Corn Staroh is strictly pore. i

jp:d[hey A CARl)..To ill who are snflfcrlng from the erron> I and Iri'llscretlons of youth, nervous weakness, early decay,vent loss of manhood, etc., 1 will semi a Recipe that will cure '

day, TO"- FREE OF CHARGE. Thl» (rreat rerae<ly was dlv Ielv covered by a missionary in South America Sendaself- i

3 J addre.-sed envelop* to the Ezr. JOSKPH L INMAN. t

r^y Station D.Htu lark OUu. ,

Daughters, Wlvea and Mothers. iB. Dr. MAHClUSrS ITERLN'K CATHOLICON" will positivelycure Female Weakness, such as Falling or tor 1ffoir.i), Whites, Chronic Inflammation or Ulceration of

' the Womb, Incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, PainfulSuppressed and Irregular JlensUuatlon, tc. An'old andreliable remedy. Send postal card for a pamphlet, with

let,' treatment, cures ami certificates from physicians andpatients, to HOWABTH k liALLARD Unci, N. Y.

ictlv by Dru8Klstir-$i .50 per bottle.that ..

s by THE MAREETSiffXW YOBK (

ays. *

the Beef Cattle.Med. Natives, Uve wt.. 00#<§ 10^the Galvee-Stste Milk OCX !Sheep 05)i@ 06&Lsmbs 09 JaBogs.Live 01^®W.

Dressed 03^9 C8t toj Floor.Ex. State, good to fancy.... i 05 Q 6 00

Western, good to fancy 6 irt) ® 7 00* Wheat-No. 1 Red 1 3< Q 1 34,hou' No. 1 White 1 (§ 1 2T)icura Rye.State oo C4

,, Barley.Two-Rowed 3tate G3 @ 75field flora.Ungraded Western Mixed.... RO <$ 6t%salc Southern Yellow 65 0 67

itecn Oats-White State 47 0 48,8fnr Mixed Western^40 0 43jars; Hay.Retail gradee 85 0 931 Straw.Long Bye, per cwt 1 CO (4 1 00eura Hop#.State, 1879 27 0 28

Pork.Mess, new 11 05 011 05jPn-i Lard.Olty 8team 7 30 0 7 20"*'y Petroleum.Crude 08*007* Refined 07*

Butter.State Creamery 16 0 23reet. Diary 14 0 20

it »t Western Imitation Creamery 15 0 17ian,i Factory 12 0 15

ent: Cheese.State Factory 12 0 14Skims 05 0 10

Western 10 0 14Eggs.State and Penn 11*0 11*

tlch., Potatoes,Early Rose, State, bbl... 1 25 © 50

tody BUJTALO.ores. Flour.City Ground, No. 1 Spring.. C 25 0 6 75cntly Wheat.No. 1 Hard Duluth. 1 24 0 1 24

Cora-No. 2 Western, 41*0 41*Clo- Oats.State 44 0 . 45I

ill of Barley.Two-rowed State...... 66 0 70ears. bostoh.hoir- Beef Cattle.Live weight 05*9 05*ittle- Sheep .' 0*3(4 08*?3 for Hogs 05*0 05*them Flour.Wisconsin and Minn.Pat.... 8 60 0 8 25

Corn.Mixed and £ellow 53 0 55*Oats.Extra White 61 0 53Bye.State M 0 95

T . Wool.Washed Combing & Delaine.. 50 0 62

"[ * Unwashed. " " 4U 0 42BBIGHTOH (UUS8 ) CATTLE 1HBKZT

F<re Beef.Cattle, live weight 06 0 10,f the Sheep 06 0 08Z Lambs 06 0 08

7 06*0 06y,ive., PHrUDKLPHIA.'enty Flour.Penn. choice and fancy 6 75 0 6 25er of Wheat 1 30 01 31*dies. No. 2 Red 1 31 01 32*ij as Ryo.State >6 0 86

Corn.State Yellow 63 0 S3*Oats.Mixed 40*0 42*Butter.Creamery extra 23 0 24Cheese.New York Factory 13*0 13*

'Na- petroleum.Crude ...07 007* Beflned 07*i well__________

innoterfiil Be Wise and Happy.>n as

If you will stop all your extravagantiirm and wrong notions in doctoring yourself

and families with expensive doctors erlered hnmbuc cure-alls, that do harm always,Sijr. and use only nature's simple remedies forwhat a]i your ailments, you will be wise, wellcurl] and happy, and save great expense. The;p^r" greatest remedy for this, the great, wiseiietc- and good will tell you, is Hop Bittws.,n,b rely on it. See another column.and

When exhausted by mental labor takeKidney-Wort to maintain healthy action

r°tbe of all organs.and.ttreat;s o] EQ 1 b9 Bill pOm B# Al|11h° K$ jg B"1 HI SBibrr

| What EverybodyWants!?"! WHb HAS NOT HEARD AND

READ OF IT Itfltf Nolo tlio Followlnas

PlMRISBCRG, 0.. Miy 19.n Messrs J. S. TIarru k Co..Grntlemen: Permit mc tou- w lli.it for several weeks I suffered with n severe couxh.

I first use.I Denii'a Cou;;!) ]Sa!s.uu. anil after that severalother preparations,cadi of which 1 R.rvc a fair trial, which

i availed me nothing. For the succeeding six days I usednd. qo m 'Heine. liy that linlc I was thought in the llrst

S of Consumption. My cou^h bcini; more severe thanlue ev>-r, 1 Hint cuiiinuneed winy ALLEY'S J.l'A<«ion BALSAM, which i.us eiTeituall.vcured mc. Iconscl1eiitioutly Mieve it to lie an excellent medicine, and can'IIICI assure ymi that it will afford mc the highest p. ssit'lo crati1PSPlicatioH to commend it to any pers>n vou may refer to inc.

US*Vourstruly, NEWlOX JIUKl'UY.

jet For Sale l>y all Jli'dltlnt Dealers.

ISml** «f 7«*. m-4b« *

Vidthe OLD COINS and MEDALSind To he .Soli. »>y Aim I loll by Tlion. Birch <fc4.1.« Sona, Aik tl lews, II HI t'livstiiut St.. IMilla..''If » l . ik ikkl) 11 JI hV!ih k a.. coimiii'iKiii^ .i.ij .... . ,

1(1- large variety o: Ain-iKan ari-l 1-orelt.M silver an.! i ppei3 Coins and Jfec »ls an. lent u tl modem. mclHitinc a varietT

' " of 17»:t. 17lM»an l^O-l Cents. Some of the AnoeM

ijln were co inoil efore thel'iith or Christ, Catalogued byS K. HarzfelU. of Pliila . ami over 2U0 Catalogue* prueil.

Off bowing ilie prices bri-n;!.! since the l.ift thirty yearstnd l'ostage StAniiis. Kngrai n tic ,

g! ON 30 DFnSHL" ;'llll We will M ti l hi* K>i V,.:taic 'Mis ami other

Kle' trle i " 'i Ir. ii ii>rSiilnysto thoseafltlrted1

, Willi X/< .,(« Ii'li,I,u;ii| itoj a )<tr*intil nature.)0K A:~> tiii- i.iver. Kidneys. ItlieuniatUiii, Paralysis,4c._| At aw uuuruntenl urtiupitu. '

°'j Ail.i.. -a V oltMle Item <>., Marilinll, Mich.

u/AWTrn '"'*1 Acu **T*h,r*w t~- C"*"-!Lin, W An) I uU rU»orinr Eitrvu.«Co.. b; Mapl*.u»faMlIls:

'

j|(, I'lall tW. uutai fTM. PIOPU S TI4_C0.JUi_4«M», StUviU,!.n'ri

i ^SRfi A U'KKKIn your own town. Terms and $.1 Ontllt

(,j._ tuu free. Addre>» H. IUllett & Co., PortJand, Maine

r/.v '97'> A M'KKK. >12 a day at home t«*lly made. Conu V''- (nant free. Address T«c*4 Co., Augusta. Wail

ri.'0 .. .

17 ! t..l'{j-.n-tl on »«.' 1.0 5 K ,} s»yr. J1I'ftl-n CT!7*h (ft**! tl i] tl

r'AitSi ¥£.:±t fai [jjaid (lives liisl'tcr 1 ho rHI-rilurrt rilor tho y:\-irrountl.he Tno^swlfltf l):l|r;.i:icn s:iy IT IS I'EKKKCT.

national I'lplonm ?i N. Y.lJalry l air. Ack Vonrdnin11 costs. who Ujoa It. where to jfut It. WKLL8, 1:1

~r "'7

Vegetine.[N POWDER FORM

- .f;V ' (#ii*z zbc< y?50 CTa A PACKAGE,

. IhF .. . ff

Dr.W. ROSS WRITES:

scrofula, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia,Rheumatism, Weakness.

H. K. tuiiai, Boeton: I bar* boon prsotloiafa«4j«ln« for twrnqr-flro yean, and m * rmW)or Screfni*, Llrtr CoapUtnt, Djvpeyda, Ek^um*itm,Woikaeo, uid all di»ca»« of th« blood, Ijure oevar found itt qnii. I h*vs aold Tmriin'o- «eT«n Jftri and htT» nrrer bad oae Milt r*

umcd. I would hearuly reconmaad It toUww is ^jc-d of a Wood pnrttor.

D*. W. SOM, DroccUt,Sept. 18,W78. trfitoa, Iowa.

Vegetine.f)n« PftpVnc-fi in Powder Foils

Cured Scrofula.HOW TO REBUCE YOUR DOCTORS' BILLS

M Bincm Sr., East Baiton, Xw.,?'Sept. 30,1879. f

Mr. h. b. 8t*tms.Dear Sir: My little dang^LerBUlla has been afflloted a long time with Scretf

ula, nferlng oTerytblng. I employed dUferealphyiteiana in Baat Eo«ton, bat they helped betDome. I bought tone of yotrrPtrwr)** tobk Tmirai,u< my wife steeped it ui (are it to the childioeerdl»f to tke directions, and we were sai'iilsslla a fert^fht'iUme to aee how the child had gainstIn iesh sad strength. She la now gaining ererj t

day, and I can cheerfully recommend your remsd)to he the beet we hare eret tried,

Beepsctfolly yours, J. T« WZBB. '

Tegetlne fa Sold by all Drigclito.XYsru.gpf ,

I

^WFERMENTE^

"maiTbitter?^ ,,

^MALT AND HOPS^

THERE Is no greater Blood PrBrmxo and LineGivixo Principle In the world of medicine

ban MALT BITTERS, prepared by the HALTSITTERS COMPANY from Un/ermented Mali and'Inpn. It la a Perfect Renovator of feeble and «x>lai.s'fd constitutions. It'enriches the blood,lolliiifles the bones, bardeno the muscles, quiets /ho uerves, perfects digestion, cheers the mind andiritahzi-H with new life every flnld of the body. Zt8 #<>, bivku;>e it striken at the root of all debility. .

JNFEEBLED DIGESTION and IMP07IB- '

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Mk TT1TUT Itching Humors, Scaly Eropflg\ I |\| tions, Scalp Affections, But\ ilV 1 11 Bhenm, Psoriasis, Soald

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ierforrue'1 miracles of healing onparalleled InTiPdUnl history. Send for Illustrated Treatise,jontaiuini? testimonials from every part of theunion. Prepared by Weeks b Potter, Chemists,Boston, Maaa. Sold by Druggists.'

FRAZER AXLE" GREfiSE./rovr is josT)( VfHAT I SHALL I

M/ \pp AfttB TH|9j^ ^^GREASESJ' *

for fi.A I,KAvoardtd Iht MEDAL OFHONOR at Hit Coi/owu.

and 2'arU Expctitions.Chicago. FRAZEB LUBRICATOR CO,, Ho*to&.P AGENTS WANTED FOR THEICTORIALHISTORYoftheWORLD

Embracing full ami anthcntlc accounts of every nationof ancient and modern time*, ami inc nUlng a hUIory ofthe ris and fail of tile Greek and Mr,man Empire*, themiddle nge-, the crusades. tlie fenda1 system. the ^.formation,tho discovery and scU c-mtut of the Xew Wor.d.etc.,etc.

It conti'ns (173 flne blslorlcil encavlnn and lathemost complete History of the World ever publt-hed Sendfor specimen pajes and extra terms to Agents. Address

Njtio.sal I'cpusnino Co.. t-hl.adelptili, fa

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The most valuable single Book ever printed. Atreasury of knowledge. There hna never before beenpubllth'd in one volume, io much us-ful Informationon overy su'ject. Beautifully Illustrated, price 13.00.A Whole Library In One Volume.-rt\ mriiTp) Sold only by subscription; the easiestTO AucNTSrJook^to t«li ever known. Terma,etc.

G. W. CARLKrox't CO- Publishers, S.Y. Ctty.

SIPflNlFlERIs the " Original" Concentrated Lye and Sellable FamilySoap JlaJcpr. Directions accompany each Can for makingHirrt, Sntt iui'1 Toilet f»oi»p quickly. It Is fullwefeht anil strength. Ask your grocer for HAFUITIFI(lit, and take no otherr.PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., PMIa.

tiflfflliiThis wtwlrrful suUt.wcc is acknowledpcil by physicianstli!<:ii«ii<'Ut tiic worM tu the t>cst r^n»"ly (Us*

Covered fur the (tire of Woun'is. minis, nucunimoui,

Skin Diseases, Pilm. Catarrh, <ii)til>I.iinH. Ac. In onleftli.it every one nmv try It. It is put m> In 13 andM centbottles for household use. Obtajnlt from your drUiistat,and you will riti. 1 It superior to anytiling you have «r«rnwil.

NATRON^VIs the I>est In the World. It Is al*olntely pure. It Is thebi at for Medicinal Purposes. It Is tlio best for T'sklntf andall Family I'sea. Sold by all Druggists and Groccii.

PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila.

ThU EM*ktim«4 IMS.

PENSIONS.If«w Law. Tbowaadi at SokKcn aid bet enUfMPeadoo* date bade to dMcbarp «r dMlk. rimUMta*Addrae, with lUmp,

briLUBUJi M« xiC«mvM|r. ft iinw I'M, WwhiutM, 1».

:

irw «<»rjjs%n* 5 55 *f«iti% 3»ft fioMtn Tonya# *>2'*.. ^n. rflU, Moatf»e,w»r»t'it<l7'»«i«l®»l*®'M» >s,«(cwl, to\frU hofl!t< JH3 to 82o.">. { ?'"'

vul... ,»<-<-tavrflr si*. Illu.tralfdJfW'pip^r^nt »revitjri jjaXIEL F.BflAXTY. Wmhlugtaa, hew Jco..-y.

wiwtrd. rnrr payiiv«

ouTFir FRtt'sr^F7>rY'.un.; Mi n. l.a<licf% Teiuhrrs, mi«l othc-rs in v«rvwwty. $S<it«> $75 per in ntli. Scwl fo piriiilarar. loutll[\ W. Zjioleu A. Co., l.OUO Arcli at, l'lili&.lcpiil.t..i'»

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BucUi. KveiT graduate guaranteed * p.jia. rue>Uoa. Addre«i R. V*.YjiUnc. Japcavble. v. i>

«Kmy my a YEAR and osTv,ns',s toa~entj.fntag Outtlt Free. A-id-ess

V » * ' P. u VIC'KKRY. Auuusta. Maine.

f^RSIIll floriihlne llabKCarfd 'a 10alrflliwl (Ill Ct rod.Mi lVllVI ^>a-J- SlXi'UKXs, Lvbuuun. Uhhj.

$f': 1 n <Zi ) l~l pt day *t hou:e. Sample* worth frr«.j iU AadwSnwon4Co^Portland.Vainr.wiv: ,i'*s « (£-»

H fc :4. Ctf laoi CiTThe litr"t>"t lititt'. t'liyrrs recommend IN uro

.'sivl livri!I;! ; » t .< i:::vnra. Aw.irJi"! tV j'nwsirtstnrr r'i. ' i;: rwrl:.1 f ;i . y; ;CHAB*^""- - *- ..

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