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inirVorn ami cotton. I the
Major Young, near t'oliluibi
icrciore visited
jiktit, Mfetolto
pel wane point*. TJie plantations 1 <*f
throe Kninas-ian* jtiin* that of Uii* gentle
man. The former an* under hi# control
and that of an Aaanddlc. With gn at
liberality, Major Young ban leased them
2*'> aefes for a year, free of rent. He
then areaM them ,ti number of non*
each, at the usual rent of such land—
jN iht acre, per annum. There are three
well, father, son and w.ii-in-hnv. The
father and rtm-iiufcp; inu^thwjr^u^^
ivith them. -v*NS>v*to*« ewwU 'A
Thin vear the son-in-law, Mr. Evan*,Tint
wishing U> over-croi. himSelf. plunfed 21
acres in corn, Id acres in cotton, ami 5J
plant
acres of oats, the usual plan
colored mail is 10 acres in oftoi&ftl J5
corn, and they do not half tUfctlmt"'He
i>laig4xl Ids corn iu thi* latter part of
Marrn. lie layan t«» plant cotton April
11th. lie was very late, starting disad-
vantageouslv in not having quite the
implements he wanted.fiWj jjar'
very late and wet - JH$f
his corn and, cotton with walking culf
vat An*, and left the ground nearly level.
Tliuu* W|s * very *ovcfo drouth, and lie
made a bad mistake once in cultivating
liiseorn too de< jw—euriing off the
the side where he lust worked
looking cnoy they hadreyer seen; but the
weeks’ aroutii, and particularly the
to the Croton in quality, although all
wed it for^ strjiig growth
lb* Fear IlIfNl.
achard at I'nioit Hpiinp'ivuUiiU-4
about fitW Waring trees, and a few liun-
lnd sniullcr ouesj it w«*from tun to fif-
rofit-
teen years qjd gnd had bori
able ir.q»s, vrlien three vei
ago It Mis
•visited ivitktV blight. The dqnd limbs
mltlng rrotn this diacas^ww auwn off
d drawn out. A two li
hligbted branehi s. fjoine. of tho Acves,
probably a twelfth, perished ftjitirelv. A
n il larger number were tmnv <if
-third of the on-
r C
lies
id, not n vestige of tli<
blight hid apuoamL and. aoyie kind
friends remarkelvs-our hwalitv'rtain-
ly,,
The
. . h dipiiul^ned; last
eflr bill little appMred : tlds year none
t all. The it mu* am rauwlly recovering
m,»f*C. l bt*ir lost,branches, ana this year they
• t -j liave Wen loaded with* excel lout fruit,
It iu| l*o many ywu> l«ufpce it uutkci
autotAtosr K\vssep thmmiL orchards. Many
reWMfe* imV fSrtPXiwI, virw^itlXu-
itVT
-rticuil ubierver* thoap which happe
o ho tippled just before the disease pai
iff, haverThc credit of Iving u
cure. \
ed .to moke nl»out * Pv-utamAi d'iH uiij <<
«le«tti money. Thev figured about this”
.m WJ-i „
Twelve bales of cotton attMOpercale,
•S480; 1,200 busbeU of com, at OOP* per
btlahcl, frtW, and bnshels of oaLiat
■M>c, $125 , making a latil- of, $1,203.
Nothing is allowed for .potritr}’, buttey,
hbg^ ; etc. Tim actual result will 1h*
a’viut as'follows: N1ne*bafes0f cotton,
at WO per hale, .&*> bushels of u*r*i,
at 50c per
” Tit making the total
and by another year, under the saluc
ditions, could excel this year’s cro
But as he may not in a life time h;
such a long d*w
He is^catfv pleased and propores to Have
fur next year stefo}* SO'.dtrfcsi-tttbadkwiu
rjbtfc
Alterdeen, Miss., has raised from 2 to 21
bales per aero bv planting iu checks, dig
ging holes and fertilizing well, and piling
the day about thd base of the stalk •
to keep down the gras*. If Mr. E
ehould rai%3 a 6aloto.tl*i*cre lu> willgeV
a good deal of money.
His father-in-law, Air. Kilmer, hadJti
acres of cotton, 221 of corn and 3 of oat*.
He and his young son tilled these. The
father is considerably past hard work.
They paid $8 for work. Thev will make
about the *ame crop as the’first men
tioned gentleman. 1 nearly forgot to
that when their cotton was just
\ ^iiwii)l\rtjilr«»li»rrl«v. V.
tiNiypN to He>m 1 uii # vV v i\M-
r *rienoe hn» Ux ii thill it Is a iletrimmt:
1mA tmrvWfi M Mn«a)k«4a.ot' gaid<iw
'trawlicrries beh»fr Hasted by the awn of
nlanter hi We gaiden. It Is used about
hereon field* whereparties wiJi to run out
the fields or wild .strawberries with ruef
ul • M. H. K.
I^itcb field Qp up tv. Conn.
Koom for tirapevines, . ^ ,
* fret—fieri tirWiluumis'rtanee of
aT!6Wlng rptree -for stw»ng-ur**wing iqtb e
vine.*.; ‘Wu-ubseivv an additional pro«»f
of itsidvsuifcigojn ap a«Fr»» of rresi-
dent wifnet «»f |he Opt;irio Phiii44r*w-
ers* ^UmivKkioiK .tSTnada^/H^kJOi 4 ''
that W. I Task in-, of HannTlbn. aTfmdied
a wire from the jhiIc sustaining his vine
to the chimnev of his cottage, and trained
liearer of the shortened mclliod thus was
tfiJhle tit *wMd miMn]>refn-elv when al-
W
‘Wilt'
fairly up, they dragged it across the
rows, much to the astonishment ,.f one
planter, who *aid they would ruin it.
But this harrowing, almost every one
88 y®* was lienefieial, as it made the
earth very mellow for the tender roots
of the young cotton. These men plow
with a big plow—I forget their favorite
—and use riding plows and walking cul
tivators. % Tln*se are king introduced
into the neighkirhood-where they live,
and many p«-ople are watching them and
propose to imitate them. Indeed, I verilv
believe that I vetlie unmistakable sign’s
of a revolution iu that cotton culture.
Many ,K.q,le have Wnto.^ their work.
They all adnnro it: sav it was never
equaled, and that thev intend to imitate
it. Several, years ago, the late Dr. M.
I.. Dunlap of the Chicago Weekly Tri
bune, when on a visit here, told me that
lie thought level culture of cotton, with
the cultivators in vogue in the prairies
west, would lie better than the Southern
style. The work of these Kansas inen is
a verification of Iris judgment.
Finding that they were so well pleased
T wanted to learn what
ountry and whst
Tlie old gen-
they thought of tli.
asjiects most strpek ti
tlenian was a rapid and gond talki'r.niid
J nact to take my notes very roughly,
lmt here arc the most salient* oontrasts:
He likes the climate and soil bettor than
anv country he has ever seen ; thinks ii
a tine country for grass-, rowing and
raising stock; thinks it a bettor corn
country than any other, and the corn is
better in quality; thinks it better for
oats than any state except Tew York I
told him' that there had heOn oler 100
bushels raised to the acre in Mississippi
which rather staggered him. He tliiiffcs
it delightful for breezes, and not m hot
a*in more northern states; like* the
nights in summer; climate all right; n<
insect nests except the kill-worm; iv
housc-fiiefe here compared to^tlio north
bar^ij any mosquitoes he^fWrfea*: ne
• ftkfltq IfoqH* sUipk : no nets needed f«
horses; never has seen a 11 y yet on a co
when milking her; thinks ho can make
more off 10 acres hero than 80 elsewhere
,bf
(He had many Will*
These, in a rojifib way, give hi a ini-
pressiohs, and are of inf crest -to niKnar*
ticularlv, as corroborative of what I have
said about thoeuuutry as to health, fer
tility of soil, exemption from insects,
etc., in my letters and (alks. Those men
are delighted with their experience; with
the climate, soil and people. Seeing
they were so j/easantly impressed with
everything, I told them thev had kttcr
2?o'™ to£tnrkvilla; so, tli«y, with the
Messrs. \ oung, went over, and saw grass
to their heart's content at the Jersey
stock farm of Col. W. It. Montgomery;
and bow they add to their other favora
ble Unprcsfeiuu*. Unit grass and tliuruugh-
bred stock can he mis*l.
I ain Toofefug In see a godfl niaiff i>oor
out iudustrious men come down and fol
low the example of these Kansas emi
grants. f have not liefore advocated cot-
ton-raising, but wbep it in such a success
as above, let u* have riowfc lien- the ho e
and sinew of the north and east, who can
make from $000 to $1,000 clear mone>
f° r a season’s work.—[Conntrv CSentlc
Mobile, Ala#
The Whin urn|H«.
A large mnnk»r of the native white,”
or rather light green grapes were ex
hibited at tlie time of the meeting of
the American Poniologteal Noeiety at
lbadiester, and were examined side by
sale, by a number of the prominent fruit
growers. Among these sort were the j
f>uches*, Prentiw, Lady, Allen’s Hybrid
Niagara, Rek*eea and Home others, ft-v-
eral exprersod surprise at the similaritv
of flavor |s>ssessed by all, or rather at
Du* i*qual degree of merit in each, on
tasting side by side. The Duchess ranked
If Naked in deduce from the physical
teraction of the brain-molecules the
least of the phenomena of seiuation or
thought, we must acknowledge our help-
THe mechanical philosopher, i
ill never place a state of eonsc:
and a group of mole
The UlntorjMOf a Famous Poem.
Pope’s ode, oil led ‘‘The Dyiiw Chris-
thin to Hi# Soul,” luma history of itsotrn
hich is curious and lutorestVng.
The Emperor Hadrian, whose reign ex
tended into the second century after
Christ, was a cultivator of literature in
a desultory aort of a way. and whilo
upon his death-bed composed a littlo ad
dress to his soul, ball playful and half
containing no tuoui
passing
Seduction k
the olio to the
blank which the logic
unable to fill.
Physical considerations do not lead t«»
ihe fiim! explanation of nil that we (eel
ml kuow.
We meet a problem which transcends
uy eoneeix able expansion of the jtower*
riiieli we now posses**:
paUietii.
the level of heathemsm, and ,
ful in expression that it has
pretty much all of the more ponderous
works of his contemporaries, it ran
thus: tuTY# ,
UADMAKl MORIICXTIS AD AMMAN.
lauduU,
We may think over the subject agaiu
•I hnt-it oludo> alLintellgctual
iM iimtion. JA.ii a
Having thus exhaustial nhysies and
reached its terf riui, a migluymystery
till Ukimabeyond us. We lutvy. in fact.
<HiW»wwwep>N*Nii»ik*iB>iiliitiiiii _ Wi; try 8
Ufe*. vm-uuiu \vhyi we eiuleavyr TJ
1 bHilD’ ,
the
frbtfi IHrf
Helitfioil*- fevling-i^is myelin vojitv
UN anv other part of human conscfoitwrfes.*;
and amiinst i#oH«tfc»«^iiW»^*. the
waves of science kut in vain.
1 could see that llis ( Carlyle’s ) eon-
tentiou ut bottom always was that the
human -mil ba> claims’ and yearnings
which thejphysiral science cannot satisfy
It seemed high time to hiin ( Virchow)
to enter an cnen^tie- protect against lit* -
attf nq.ts tlmt are made to pctidaiui tin
problems of research as aotuid & u ;k, «nd
the opinioua td •oieutkts.
•stabhslied
We
gin
,1'irch'
. a certainty
trifie; this i:
*r our liyjk*thesis
.■vliifl-fil'ic. -j
Tim iM-.^.f
runnn-dM ia a,cW«rk.t,e<fl- ,ml £ m "J
tlK- ,Tvi'akm'» o7V-icmY a. «f
stlf
gtll.
loWjT\l heal
T 0.
alwa
IK-a
ldsoil^
Yes. but I know dial a
pear tqe* 3 wh*o». \if k beiifitur fruit
denuiqdTa great iteaTof watfir:^ Pave
grown j ears for many years, but never
becames* ftilly satiiifieti.of thn*tr .actual
need for water as this sejson., I liave
watered some of the trees iii niyganh n
with liquid manure, .every -day thi-
*"* ght <0 H?e
X11UUS* 1- and fall
the fruit
quality. Oh, >
r from the l.«
, that liqui'l
•lianiher slope
and tin
» Ke<>i> l'|»w Is LyvinR.
r to keei> your fowls lay
1.1 good 1
1 plenty
quai-
riglit, j
If not attended t<
but few egg- in cold
•me vears since dttmg tlie extreme
re of' poultry keeping a breeder was
thought to f*c hardly worth notice who
kept but one breed. The prevailing sen-
lent among fanciers then was that
hone must keep at least half a dozen
•cds and the ability of standing as a
•odor depended upmi the nunikr of
rieties he kept and advertised. Re-
gihncr- were slow iU» appK-eiatqglie cau
tions given by more expprionded men,
andwoulu not l>e iatisfiW wifh less than
three, live, eight or a dozen breeds.
These ambitious fellows always came to
grief: they undertook more than they
could accomplish, but tluy would iqd
learn Uie i<mm in 110 oilier school hut
that of experience.
For the lieginner one lined is enough.
Let him take the one he thinks will liest
suit his purjIA . give it good treatment,
and if ho is dismtisfied wiJi the results
he. can take another, but only one,breed
at a time. This advice co-ts nothing
:in«l if heeded may save ir.tu h heedless
trouble aiul loss.—[Sjutlk-ru Poultry
Journal.
Hnmlln and Lliioln.
|Kwh.i.s*.]
Senator Hamlin says thit while vice-
Vrcsi;l«Bt(Mi jxl.itiom wich Mr. Lincoln
wore always amicable* Mr.'Lincoln often
consulted him. 44 1 was always more
radical than he was,” says Mr.’Hamlin;
* I wns urging him, he was holding back
0,1 Bj”P l0 Llc-n»f*, and he vas the wiser,
pfobfijily, as cvcmN’fcrorn. I desired to
jirm tlvt bltclw aid I4iejl»e proclama
tion soonvr than ni«Tj*nf(r was always
for urging. I was the first person ht
Cfcrahourd ttoMfclninaton to. I saw
it before he submitted it to the cabinet.
He met me one day and said, 4 Where
vrlll you bo this evening?’ ‘ I am going
out of town,’I replied. No, you are
not, sir.’ ‘ Indeed I am, lir, unless you
command me.’ ‘Well, Ido command
yon. 1 want you to spend the evening
with me at the Soldiers’ Lome.’ I mot
him ut the executive maision, and wo
start ad to drive to the Home. As soon
as we had started, lie <tcw from his
pocket thrt rough draft ol the proclama
tion and rend it over to me. Naturally
I was delighted, and told him no. He
war much moved at tha atep he was
taking.” •
Type-Selling Machines.
An English newipa|»er, die Liverpool
Daily New, has fora yoarpast used four
type-setting and revcii tyl*-distributing
machines, at a saving of about $2,000
per annum, as compared Vlth the same
auiouut of work hy haul. The com
positors working the inachkic earn better
wages than their fellows at the case,
while the saving to the es:nbli*hmcnt is
over thirty per cent. Tin machines arc
used for every kind of ccmpoaition ex
cept tabulated and displayed work, tho
matter being set, spaced Mid justified
with greater accuracy than by hand
labor. Each machine cost $710, and the
average «peed is 6,000 etna per hour.
ftiNCK these largo wlitc surcinglo
,vests came into use amiug ladies, it
makes a very bashful yousg man blush
whenever he comes upon a young lady
suddenly. Young Joe sav one for the
first time yesterday, and blushing to lli«
roots of his hair, whiaperoi, “Alius, ex—
exeusc me, hut yeuVe g6'„ your corset
on the outside.”—Oil City Ik nick.
Th •* IIH pin I Una.
••There is a man,” said Ills neigh be
si leaking of a village carpenter, “ who
him done more goed.T really Mb
this eomiminitv than any other .
who ever lUed.in-U. ilejan not talk
ury, well m pnRer n^wfing, and li
doesn’t often trv.’ He isn’t worth tw
thousand dollars, and Its very little lie
can put down on subscription papers f<
any obipet. But a new family nev«
tanvew Auto the. village that liedoesn*
fiml| th< ui (»qt and give tlPein aTiMtrhbnr-
h JloB-oiiusinfl olle/any liMlk^crviwlu*
can rentier. He is usuallyiifi lltf Wik-
out to give stranger* q sbat in his pew a
chuivlu He is always ready to watcl
with a sick neiglilHir and look after hi
affairs for him. and I’ve sometime
thought he and hi* wife kept house
plants in winter ju*t for the Kike of he
ing able to send little lamquets to in
valids. He finds time for a pleasan
word for cYery child lie meets, and you’l
see them elimhing into his oue-hor*
wagon When he. lias no other load. Hi
really iwemi to have a genius for helping
-folks ill alL tyi tsof common ways,
i* doe* me gornl every'meet
him on the street.' 1 ** • ' • •
.v-AftaCO
l -| f jliic *f Joy.
Now. our Savior. T tiring imniiit to
cover the broader and deeper eomlitiod
of life, ami to, iu a measure, take it out
of that realm of simple pleasure and the
aecidfuit# tl^at bring Wpiucss o
torithc MtioffieBi^ ami %o -JiOW
broaden relations to the pernla
joy, a 'joy related to the life
There - A 1)1 tli^ w»iki jqy that v. hieh
may be compared to a fountain f ha
flowing, that which suggtA*
thought of fnllntss. of the piceimial, of
tin' eternal. And now, wheu we ona
tltink ourselves away from the accident)
of life, from the transitions and eircura
stances that effect our modes and states
and lift ourselves into the calmer rcalim
of the contemplation of jov, we liavi
then rcaehetl a field where we can liar
monize all tlie things in life that we re
gard as hard, as uuplesant, as severe, am
s<a* that thev are not incompatible witl
A* an example, suppose some of the
most jovful live*, or the condition
life under which much of the abiding
joy in this world should lie found, would
k“conditions that to the ordinary
ure seeker, or liappincssdiunter, won
entirely devoid of jov. You take the
life of a mother and father, wedded not
>111 v
1 the
tity of spirit and
on. wedded in all tlmt is deep and
lifting up an altar, it may be t
humble and so poor, kindling the fire and
spreading the table, and gathering al
them a little group of children;
mother toiling and working through all
t[tf lieautifuJ yearn of \ oungei\ woman
li 1, the father'giving h1s strength t
hard laborwloariug oqta.farm, laving
the foundations for a little peace and
rest and plenty when the time of agei
feebleness lias come ; the parents de
ing themselves that their children 11
have days iu which to study and prep
themselves for the battle of life; 1
there is more solid joy in such a life
that, that which is deep and abiding and
superior, transeedental to cireumstanc
than you can"conceive of iu all this lc
plain of life, where men arc epnditii
ing themselves uihui what pleases and
what happens, and if thyig.s plea
are pleayd, and if things happen
s-> why then they say they’re nai
hut (rod never intended to pro-
ct Im
id
life
taintii
l- 1 - ■»
should have joy in hardship and i
lliiniholitt** V>e<t|»nir.
Alexander Humboldt says in hi* j
tlmniou* memoirc : “ I was not lniri
order to lie the father of a family,
regard marriage as a sin, the propngat
of children a crime. It is my com
lion that he is a fool, and still in
sinner, who takes upon himself the
of marriage a fix 1 lieeausc he the
throws away his freedom, without
ing a eorresp Hiding recompense ; i
ner lieeann- he gives life to chi
without In ing able to give them th
tnintv of happiness. I despise hum
in all its strata. I foresee that oui
ferity will lie far more unhappy than we
are; and -hould 1 not he a siiinerKL.iB
spite of this insight, I should take 42t.ro
to leave a posterity of unhappy beings
lHliind me? The whole of life £ tfc,
greatest insanity, and if for eight
one strives and inquires, one ni’iatiH
obliged finally to confess that he,..has
striven for nothing and found outrfiMh-
ing. Did we at least only know w\iy
are in this world! Ilutto the ild’nlfrr
every thing i* and rcinnins a riddle, am
and the greatest I luck is that of lie
ing Ixirn a blockhead.”
This conviction is the natural ennse*
qucncc, even for the largest intellect, of
having lived eighty years in tlie >vorld
without any ljelief in the being
Hod, mid without any nobler purpose
thun that «*f self-aggrandizement. With
out any hkher pur)>oHe than to gratify -
curiosity, to know why we live iit’ihis
world, though it lie dignified l#y the
sounding mime of ndvancci
knowleilge, life would Ik* dB*
either dignity, grace or import
Au, the axe* and bucksaws foui
the ruins of 1‘ompeil uie of light 11
as if constructed for woman's use. Those
old ancients knew th^r business.
lought above
! yet so grace-
*«•
In the Specwiof Tor Ni.n*t r mher 10,
1712, is printed a prose translation whieh
was contributed tiy Pojie: “Alas, my
soul! thou pleasing companion of thii
body, thou fleeting thing that art now
deserting it, whiflier art thou" flyingf
“ Thbu nit "
To what unknown region?
(rambling, fearful, and pensive. Now
lmt is to become of thy former wit and
umor? Thou abalt jest and he gay no
.re.” Tho translation is still’enough,
d it Wars but !it»tle of tlvo flavor of
the original; but it marks ono step in
the mental procfs* by which Pope at
last arrived at a very beautiful result.
In his letter accquipauying this transla
tion he says’: ‘ * oMidr day in
company with five or six men of some
learning, when chancing to mention the
funioris vkrididdkkiltW Ifimvrrqr^^U
ri:uii fipoko ajaJijs.^^th-bea, they \vcr<5
all agreed that it was gai etv
unworthy that iprinco. tn tqpsfi Circfim 1
stances. I could not but differ frojn
their opinion. Methiuks it was by no
means guv, but a very acrioua aoloquy
to his soul at the point of his departure—
in which sense 1 natttfally^ttjpk^e
verses at my first reading tliym, when I
was very young, and bgfore I knew what
iutorj-retation tlio world generally put
upon Uiem.” . ‘
It was this serious asjiect 61 paflrian’g
AnbmJh—in which lie apgkq., pt, his
“ Ihtlo soul’’
dear.
tlie most _. TTT . , ,
took possession of Pope’s mind! Pteelk[
in acknowledging the letter saVs: “ Tho
otherfl’ope) me lose d for iny perusal :*A
admirable poeni, \thlch I hope will
shortly see the light.” This wus the
first draft of the ode commencing:
“ Vital ’*iiark of ll'eavfculy
which was Intended as a para phrase on
the Ai'hmla. Pope did nut include^ in
the first correct edition of his works, pub
lished in 1717, and Steele’s benevolent
hope that it might “shortly see tlie light”
was not gratified for more tlutU twenty
years afkr (Pwas firffT^iltUii. How
iwanjX n Vupn.UMjenjf and"rcwrtttifixs it un
derwent cannot now C^ToId TOfftho
A iii nuda kcf»t rdfriiitig in PopeVhesd is
shown hy the (act that iu 1< JiJ> he pub
lished a metrical translation of it as fol-
lotfs: •, . . y \ Iff 1 ^
Ah, fli-cllng ijrtritf wandcfiilg finf
•BUM warmed uiy lender breast,
Must tnoa flo nh.ro thisfwmio isspilo’
No more a jilcaaing. choorf«l uu-.-l?
whitiior. ah «Ut&iw tiisif flytiu? ’ • t
itdarlr, imhHwsv.t'iI (Hinr<#. ’ ; i | 1
Horn to bo UulllotlBo4*
A ease is shortly U)-pnme before the
Paris Amazes w hich tepds to prove that
he who is born to lie guillotined may ex
pose hia life with impunity OB the moat
aangttinury battle-field. Bagnier en
listed at tho outbreak of the Franco-
German war in the Uotr famous Ninth
Cuirassiers, quickly rose to be a corporal
aud took part in tlie lieroio charge made
hy that regiment at Woertft. ‘T heard
the bullets,” he said to tho judge, “rattle
like hail on my hreaat-plate.” He was
unhorsed by a #tah from a bayonet und
finally picked up from among the dead.
.As soon as ho recovered from hli wound*
lie took aerviee again^ and waa one of the
defenders of fcstrualiuurg. There he waa
founded again hy a sqell splinter, and
after the capitulation of Hie city he waa
sent a prisoner to Oornutuyuud confined
in the citadel of Urealau. On returning
t;» France he settled in Paris and be
came a whitesmith. As he was a very in
telligent and clever workman lie might
have lived happily and comfortable on
his earnings, but lie grew discontented,
his temper soured, ho imagined himpeli
the victim of perpetual pc niecut ions and
ronld not resign . himself to the mis
fortune of not having received the Cross
of the Legion of Honor for his bravery
during, the war. He took to drinking
absinthe, and his brain thereby bociuno
so much affected that he had to be con
fined in a lunatic asylum. He left it
cured and the doctors who have exam
ined him iu conuooueu with .the horri
ble crime to which he has confessed state
that he is quite responsible for his acta.
To come.to that crime, here arc the facta;
On tlm I2t6 of AujJnat. last year, about
9 o’clock in the morning, a young wo
man, Mate. DyLsoliauioe, washad fono
to tho oemetevy of St. puon to nraf at
the tomb of.her sister, who suddenly at 1
tacked byrlman armed with a hammer
as slife was kneeling on her sister’s grave.
Thebrtitd, after knocking her down, trod
her unifier foot, and finally, after hatter-
inerhex Aull with liis hammer, left her
• W ‘" *1km
hum— in w li ion no apuxo , yi, 01s
most solemn clrihhhsthi^s^thkt
T'» what airir. iNimsoiTctHl wmtnr. ,11
ie verses of .tliq Tieautpn emiicro
in the course umf byj'yid ftip
Tho
tized ,^mt9 ov.......v...-. v. v .0-
tianity, aiul tfley navi* ticcome
among'thdbe^rknewii, :iiid pBihahlo the
most highly esfeeihOd, of atl nia writings.
A Judge IttatiUeg BlfTfl
Justice Millcfo^n an acWfes&lw
Iowa Ear Astodalion, mwle -the ft
ing statement: "iTou kill, per hap
surprised when I lell yoatluu,ihu.a
huryer of this or any other her,.when ho
is (or.the first tim'o appoWMo; judge,
lm? to lipam his trade,-ftsjareoh as iho
mechanic’s apnreatioe. (JfJ do
not mean hy this that he hah-tii leiuff the
law, for 1 am sfipposiiip \fcifh to l*o
learned in law. but whkt ti.o appren
ticed mechanic learns 0? Jiia mailer is
not the science of mechanical forces—
at least not mainly tlut. This is pre
cisely what I Atu saying of u new judge.
Let me illustrate this from mv own ex
perience, for it is closely related to train
ing in a lawyer. Jt is, in fact, tTie'Vanie
thing. I am very sure that it does not
take me half the time now that it did at
first to eliminate from a complex case
presented to me for decision want is ir
relevant or immaterial and to ascertain
the point of conflict necessary to be de
cided. And this is equally true, whether
the contest be one of law or fact, or both,
by practice and attention I can listen
to a lawyer, read a document offered in
evidence, pass with him lightly over the
formal parts of the instrument and when
he comes to the vital matter, the few
words, perhaps, whieh alone touch the
issue, I catch their precise meaning, and
if I do not get that clearly 1 slot, him
there until 1 do. It is rare that 1 need
that
; choice to fancy,$5J4N<4<k' l VO. \Vh
. t rod f«U. No. s. do tutf#
ro, higher, S7?6aSStf. Oita: Z5?tfaB(ic.
TO in 8 VI LI iK-—Flo ur: Family |6.#0&60/H
A No. 1, $6,0060.25; fancy. $0.50GM.75.
Wheat: lied, amber and White $1.22.
Voro:,“White, 4'kx uiiAc'l* 40c. Data: White,
30? »c; mixed 35?^<j,
i i SCINNAT1—Floor: Faiallv,$&$*$!.8b
Wlu-at: $|.24(^l.kli. Worn: 40c, Oats: 24
@S$e. 4T..irn)(«
NKW Yt)IU6r-¥Jo#r: (.'uunmm to.fair
U« $5.7oa(i.50: g«»0)l to choice extra, tO.fitmiftiO.
Wlient: Ungraded winter red, $l.:UuM2&
No. 2 dd, $L.C?^$1.44. Co^u: llufradul, 00%
mile: No. 2, OS^aCSe. Oat*: No. 2, 4tl?*tc;
No. " lljte 41 ?au42[ie. ’ • • I ; •
coimttT raoBircr. .if
ATLANTA—Rjfifr 14«l5e. Hotter: Choice
Tennesaee, 22? a at!6c. Poultry;. 1 Mu,
a25c; simUl size*, Ual, e, ffweel
potatoes: OOadaC pti bushel. Irish jiotatooar
$1.7r>n;<.<IAiM>r'barrel. ,r jJ I.
liAi.TlMOHt'^-bulterPrime ,t<> choice
western packed, SoaL’^ei Eggs: 21rf22fl.’'
LlVK STOCK. »ll.|-*|
-Ohofae TennoNseo efdtfa 3c;
coinmoft 1|,n2^4,'e; Georgia raiu^d, l%u2a.
.Sheep 3c for enolee,
riNrlNNATI—HBgS'itfoimimn $i>75a.'1.40
light. $.1.1)i*1.75; packing, $3.|$a-hiK);, buteh-
f rs, 3.80*3.90.
1M •'** paoviaions.
ATLANTA—bulk meaft Glo*r rib ^idcs.
7c; pork strips, ti’^e. Ilacop: Sugar cured
hams, I0f
have acquired, I hardly know how,
ccpt by practice—hy training—the fac
ulty of taking an i in memo record of five
hundred or one thousand pages, and
turning at once to the material parts,
whether of pleading, of evidence, or
whatever it may be, and in one-third
the time it took me when 1 first went on
the bench I gathered the materials for
my judgment without digesting a mass
of useless chafl.”
weltering iii her blood, hut uot before
having.qoubed her 6f a oross she v
and also of her whtch qnd chain. Two
other ladies had been ns$aultcd and rol>
bed iu tiro same cemetery. The poliet
at last sncccedod iu arresting Sagnief
and chargad him with *11 three crimes;
for the 1 two lust mentioned he was sen
tenced' to three months' imprisonment.
Asfer'^he capital charge,.Jragnier ex*
plains 1 it by alleging a fit of madness
brought on hy drink. lie said:
“ rwWt to the comotery of St. Ouen
with my mechanic’s hammcctft fasten
Hie ftill the of mv IiLLlc.daugU-
terwha. died, recently. I had prayed
ferveilWftf l»er.' 1 Altnt fiaco L aiw tho
cboss aud,watch drain of the kneeling
ladv bAldo me Iglistert it'the suiujluno.
A bad • tiftJftght,tyok possession of my
brain, * Ana P struck without .knowing
what I did,”
The Skulls of Murderers.
' One.of tlie most curious collections in
the great Affliropological Museum in
the Paris Exhibition of last year was a
collection of thirty-six skulls of murder
ers who Imd been guillotined in Fra
This''collection has been care fully studied
by Mr. Bonder, who has published tho
results of his studies in the last number
of .Broca’s Jicvve d Anthrofxilogir. The
most striking result of his observa
tions is jkke very large cubic capacity of
those, crania. In fact, the average
Volume of the thirty-six skulls, measured
with uhothy Broca’s method, is*s much as
154911 cubic centimeters. Eliminating..
howCVer, one of the skulls which isof usual
size (2070 cubic cefitiinotorsj) and is ob
viously abnormal, the average is reduced
to 1531 Cubic centimeters. But even
this figure is considerably higher than
the average of an ordinary series of
modem crania. In ofder to find skulls
of equal capacity it is necessary to go
hack to iiidiistoric time's; thus the
capacity Or AnutM hflcalW is 1615, and
that of the type from tlie cave of
L’jlomme Mort is 1000*5 cubic centr-
nietcrs. The development of the murder
ers’ skulls is not in the frontal, hut in
the paricto-occipital region; and it api
pears to indicate a low intellectual
standard, with a strong tendency to
powerful action. Most of the cerebral
characteristics presented by the skulls of
these criminals are comparable with
thosi <n prehistoric races. A murderer
may bo regarded as an anachronism, and
lus character may he explained on the
principle of atavism, or reversion to an
early type. If n prehistoric savage
could he introduced into modern society
lie would probably become a notorious
criminal; on the other hand, if one of
tho brutal mimic rifts of modern times
had lived in prehistoric ages, ho might
have been a chief of liis tribe, highly
respected.
The Moment of Fear.
Bonaparte lost four aids-dc-campe dur
ing the short time he was in Egypt. One
,01 tljom, Crolsicr, appearing to Napo-
£o I Icon to lack the proper degree of bold-'
ness at the proper moment, he burst out
against him in one of his violent and
humiliating attacks of abuse and con
tempt. TluFword coward escaped him;
Croft^ar,.determined not to survive it;
UST OUT,
bells ;corneville:
. A litudwmia *nd rum plot* *4111011 of th* "H«*ll* of
lUnutvfti# • t.| rUu<iu*tt«, U m.w roNdr: and m
k* nuslr.’th* ketiuir, *«-*N*nr *Nd n.Umlil I
WMITK BORKS. th* now Sunday School Sod*
Rook, hr AbVayAid Munjar. kl*a fair to ho o||* of
110 moat auccoMtiil b»uka ol lla < !*•«. hi It ii undo*
WOBBSUI - . IL. O. KMKBSOR).
' (mu' rrSPLH, IW. O.’ gKUKIKS). »<• pa»
mfrniih ren nsenie clamr*
w i.«v:5 m ,c„,
Ulor«wl of Nft ntyt laauri. , AUUed foy 6 oept#.
A HI. OK A? ‘iN^fn^loX ROUK. A. R.
Johufuu. , . |r ,
0LIV8H HIXSON * UU., joiton.
uiRruiHmP!
r*|>s, UHo. Bacon:
fo^e;iildN,'8>^c?sli6uldtf*, l&iir,
bruakiast, 8s# jie,,.
BALTlVlCBE—Mess pork. llallK^. Bnllc
meats: packed shonldcrs,4?^c; vlear ribuiiles,
llaeun: Shoulders,6c; clear rib sides,
8Jiauis, lOalle. Lura, ref aid !n tierecs,
7 W. ' >
CINCINNATI—Fork, 11. I-nril, li 20*0 23e.
Bulk mgats: Wwulder*, 3He; short rillfc, 6.90i
mki; short ctu*r,Cka(V Baeon: $>uiuldcr*, 4?'je
clear ribs. 8Kc; cJeAr side*, &%e.
Tfm YORK—Moos pork, $11 00*11 10;
clear, li,%; short de tif'oC,. Lar i, $7 30u
7 40. ( •
t!(U'I8VILMv—‘Pefk, —lAri,* 7^*fk*,
bulk Meata-.j iiliouldeA's, clear ribs.
f- 1 »>'*>«•; clear sides Oaii'^c. BatonSlund-
ilers sugar cured lunus, IOiUO^
Am & threA medical celebrities had
gouo from the bedside of the French'
GencrarX.i the General rang for Iris
man servant: “Well, Jacques, ypn
showed these geutlemeft out; what did
they say?” “Ah! General, they pcemed
to uifret with each other? the big, fat
one said that they must have a littlo
tience, and sit tha anti) ipay^wliate
Unit pray be—they would find out whai
thd BraMtoF^fai’*' II' i ; / j 11 [
ioaalsi np.n u uad or Aios;
Tortured in every joint with inflammatory
rheumatism, is aprospeotwhifh may beoouie
a melancholy fact if the twingee of thB dread
disorder are not checked at the outset. F
sons of a rheumatic tendency find Hostetti.
Stomach Bitteri a useful remedy, nor do they
encounter the risk in using it they do from
resorting to that active poison Colohionm,
which is often Employed to arrest ,tbe mal
ady. The use of the Bitters is equally as effect
ive in its results, and is attended with no risk
tonic and general alterative. It stimulates the
action of the kidneys and promotes the re
moval from the system of impurities which
develop diseas* and are franght with serious
danger. Fever and ague, dyspepsia, debility,
nervousness, constipation, etc., are remedied
by it.
Carefully avoid the use of rasping cathar
tics. They weaken the bowels and leave them
worse oft than before. Use instead, that salu-
tory, nom-irritating aperient aad antbbilious
medicine, Dr. Holt's Vegetable Liver Fills,
which will not only achieve the desired pb-
jeot, relaxation of the bowels, without caus
ing pain or weakening them, but promote
digestion and assimilation and depurate the
blood. The pills are sold by all druggists.
Brown’s Broiichial Troches for Palmonary
and Asthmatic Disorders, have proved their
efficacy by a test of many years, and have re
ceived testimonials from eminent men who
have used them. 25 cerits a box.
Certainly one is not wise if be purchases
any organ before obtaining the latest catas
logue and circulars of the Mason <fc Hamlin
Organ Co. Pee advertisement, and send 1 pos
tal card asking for them, and they will come
free.
Young men. go West, learn telegraphy
situation guaranteed. Address B. Valentine,
Manager, Janesville, Win,
For one cent purchase a poetal card and
semi your address to Dr. Sanford, 162 Broad
way, New York, and receive pamphlets by
return mail, from which you can learn
whether your liver is out o*f order, and if
out of order or is any way diseased, what ia
the beat thing in the world to take for it.
WSBtlNl!
Sherman & Co., Marshall, Mich., want
agent in this county at once at a salary of
tUiuilto:. AyerOU. I». Kuilr llluitraiua,
• L — uli
Jit death on several occasions,
but did not succeed till the sie.ee of
Acre, lie waa in attendance on Napo
leon in the trenches there, when such a
sharp lookout wan kept hy the garrison,
that if an elbow or feather showed itself.
« . n » , above or beside them, it was immediately
Cause and Cure for Snoring. grazed by a bullet. Croisier watched
riter in the Scientific Monthly tells his opportunity aud jumped upon tho
bow the habit of snoring is acquired, j platform. “ Coipc down, I command
and, better, howi$may he jflpred. Aud i you!” cried Napoleon, in a voice of
first, the cause: The. air reaches the thunder; hut it was too late; the victim
lungs through two channels, tho nose 1 of his severity fell at bis feet. Murat,
and mouth. The two currents meet In ! tire chivldroua Lmvcr 0f all danger, hail
the throat just below the soft palate, the I also his moment of fear, which lost him
end of which hongs loose and swings j the countenance of his general, until
backward and forward, producing tlie displeasure could no longer resist tho
snoring. If the air reaches the lung^os j briJJiqncy of.liis achievements. It was
it should, through the nose, no noise wul at the siege ft? Mantua, In' tho first
he made. If it reaches the same ! Italian campaign, that Murat was or-
through the month tltc palate will make to^ake clmrgc of a body of troops
more noise, since it is uot the natural i *WitM\ 1 cVo lnAaMg aiHtfc '
from the gar-
«>. JR hesitated, and in his confusion
himsUf wodnicleflj ffc was re
sound sleeper banishes rest from the $1- JAnofed from tltfi presence df'thfc general,
*hHiMiVev#i y iMy- discounter).ui
channel, but when it rushes thnu
both these channels,'then it is that I
companions hy his hiimlfutf
noise. The remedy for snoring is to keep | Egypt ho wi
. sent out on tho most dis
til closed; and for this purpose tanfc aud dahgerous^aervkos; in short,
>* of^tLi; article he more thafi oouquered his character
ed Mfyl rticlc so | before the* battle of Abonkir, on which
l make fit, and no ^ occasion Napoleon himself was obliged
.It OQuaista of a h
I hr ad spuglyV, and’a niece o
•Bttiagitlie chin, There are connected
hrehiiUcIvobhiftg, which it’ flonnected
with a Uotd cap near tho ear*. ’ This con-
trivancp prevents the jaws fmm drop-
snoring
ping down, and thereby rondo
impossible. The grcnt’trouh^ will he to
got ireoplo to adopt this irvven ion, singe
the most u|wight and honest men and
women will rarely, if ovpfc f50|ifes.s that
they snore, mid will l»o very indignant if
accused of it. As a further inducement
to*the introduction of this cento ivanec of
ipr. Wyetlw it may be added-that breath
ing through tho mouth is very detri
mental to the JicaUh, gild Uiat many
diseases of *lic (liyont ami lunjs are con
tracted or Aggravated thereby.
Prof. Su big On Good Times.
Professor tfi'ihg remarkrr that it will
bo a great ni^taki- and a great mi.-fortu»io
if the return ot good times njiail bring
back the oh! fervor for proptaty and ad-
ftfhtures vfliich made mortgages among
’th© most popular thimrs of the day.
M Mortgages,” M'addv' Ardajpo.dik nee,
and debts arc a regular chflltffa. Estates
die uuder them. Chuudu^sicken and
have Ulie Rat Up with Btflit; individ
uals pine away, wives and children lie-
come disheartened in the mortage season,
and the financial grave-digger is busy
day and night. Swamps and dirty house*
were the black death of Europe—debts
are the plague of America.”
lira
reprimanded a colonel, who had punished
a voting officer for a moment of fear.
44 Shat man,” said he, “ is worse than a
poltroon, who pretends ho never knows
tear.”
Thk ure of plain and figured niatcri iIs
for combination suits has become quite
Lsn^raU t'pdn a Im^jue^or polonaire,
Thi:t>.st is of the -flowl ied material. The
sleeves have cutis that display both fab
rics of the toilet. Wide borders arc now
seen oil overskirts, and though the gar
ment itself is made'of plain material,
the figured goods may cover half tho
depth of the front which is left open
about twelve inches at tho centre, hnd
well taken up on both sides.
A lUtr’KNT duel between two women at
”inon, Tcnu., was a sail affair. Both
fired toge ther, and ono hit a boy on the
fence and the other killed a calf ill a
field. Then they pulled hair und jawed
each other until ouo fainted away.
LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS.
M.OI M. VKUX AXD HKU..
ATLANTA—Flour: Superfine, family,
!7.Vi; extra family, $7.7- r -: funey, $«.00 ^blll.
$l.4(K'bl.r^l; Tennessee mv'limu, +lJUHn 1.40.
: ( hole, white, 70f«,72e; yflloxf, 6.5f*tl»7e,
Oats: I7?a'f«<-.:i0c for feed oats, auil tOn76c for
Prevent crooked hoots and blistered heels
by wenriii* Lyon’s neel Stiffeners, Csn be
applied at any time.
I'itkw Jsnksnn’s Bs*t Nw^et Nsw Tobacco
Traill *«d Uwnur.
Query.—What is the best family med
icine in the world to regulate the bowels,
purify the blood, remove costiveuess and
biliousness, aid digestion and tone up the
whole system ? Truth and honor compels
us to answer, Hop Bitten, being pure,
perfeotand barm lew,—Ed. Independent.
Nntare’s Nlalee-llirsy,
If the kidney* (nature’s sluice-way) do
not work properly the trouble is felt
everywhere. Then bo wise, and as soon u
you see shtr-vof disorder take Kidney-
Wort faltETulIy. It will clean the sluice^
way of sand, gravel or slime and purify
the whole system.
*66? r s*:
$3300
A YEAR. Howl.
B * VOM1K, Mt. L.*ul
nArtCo.su Mmmsii
Young menisjvsisisk
j*- “®. llth .- qraduat* s**r*nt**S § |iy^
AGENTS. READ THIS
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lllii in to.
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frcnont 51, opp, Willkn St,, Boston, bn
„ gpEtausnaeft
O.
AMIIIII Hnblt suaSkin
OFlIIMrpi.
W'
'Mmo»
f .'LLZ LuUm
mm
,1WM
L’AHSmiiMOIll.M.'iW.
*Wead*f?r our* jm-«?nlt«Hl mdMfcy ^*t»l*SJU( N ' , i
rwn ! .AJswsu..J^{a:
sOT.w.ytistoM.WiSrJSiK
For Two! ■’.<
- Generations,
S • I .n .f, I.,,,; w ,, n ,
The good an.l staunch old
standby, MEXICAN MUS
TANG LINtMENT, lias done
moro to assnAge pain, relieve
suffering:, and save the lives of
men and beasts than all other
liniments nut together. Why?
Because the Mustang pene
trates through skin and flesh
to the vory bone, driving out
all pain and soreness and
morbid secretions, and restor
ing tho afflicted part to sound
and supple healln.
EAR DISEASES.
'os■ »nd their Treatinent-fr«m to all. ilia large
Cook taSO pngesi, prlre fS.OO. Address
tor. C. K. NHWEMAKER.
Anrml SnrteO*. Essdlws, Pi
tstisao SrdttrawSTiwtiis **J > . P !t*ori > tVn'l, Ha
Tho Poml’s Extract Co., 18 Murray
St., N. Y , publish a small book Ire*, telling
what the people u»s Touffs B* tract for, betidss
b log good for ylo.
Poiid’s Extract. Iu Mle txtmda tQ
et*ry portion ot the country. There is only
genuine Pond’s Extract for fains and Itfltnu
f»ond’s ExtracP, the duly true remedy
for'Blfnd and Bleodln^iles, and Hemorrhsgd
of all kinds. Try it once and you will elway
Ismhi dlxtntct, itr. boost as welk^s,
mnn. TrsTelllng show*, menageries, etc,, always
• carry it with' th«b,«uB unanimously toltilyf
1 •' 7 Its sfiticy. , / , ,
Pond’s Kxtrnct. In all bronchial and
pululousry eoitiplalnta It Is (bind te glka las
diet#* relief, followed hy peruisnent cure. E
*■ EtfisctBkoB.rraal < V I ■•. i
Pond’s Uxtrnet lUr PaJw. Xon««J-
dom see much allusion t j It in the public prints,
yctltisfte nss extended to nil yyf^Khe world
FoiMl’jr Extract cure* IVun and iajuv
rlee, however Sv>ere. Uniter nny fempgrature,
In ail clltnaUa, It accomplishes tha tame
WARD'S
Fine Shirts for
E.M. AW. WARD,
381 BROADWAY".
NEW YORK.
T he Weekly.Suh.
A larga, eight-past paper ol M broad columna,
will be sent postpaid to any address, ona year, f*r
ONE DOLLAR.
MiisPEARM femsK, a Z. f.ryi:
*«urie<MyAM.Murr*y 1411 Pub. Co. l ltoK.gsib*l.,N:ir.
ikes feHnaes ararr tiumth.
fRtwo
$hmsn
JffiS&kSgS&tiF#.
:rrr;^;
“1
Kl<fiief!* BliddO^
i of Vjriue/ 1
lltor’M BRRKtoT
-area PMu In th« M»ck.
'nwtMtlon’juai Bright's
XlUiTlUll 1 -i t!,» Kidney..
K5!V.d“d!ftattl^«E2^
uiiuiv. |»v!fis|KgiVm-...i. U. I
. I" W5T 1
REGALIA
Wk ids Bar <0 " ^
GENTS WANTED (OR A lUull
BY GtNFRAt GRANT.
SKHE
JELLY.
ifier Medal
at KxnoilUuu. ' A^nMoa. ■
Tlilf wend«rf*l pulwOiuos Is askaowlsdgcd 0/
physicians throughout the world t<> hU tlio bWt rem-
SffSitt* inVgaiSeiE mmssjk
Obtain It from youl NWlUl^l and y»»u will iiod it
m peeior to any tiling yuu have'eyer used.
tkla UllllM-ftouas A.atulUlsl
Pensions
New Law. Thousand*of MoUllas-a and
^hJ^J^W n a<W r<P ° r
UMIWE K. I.BMON,
P.O. OrAyer.atq. ,W*iMi »t*p, i>. v.
MOlim'S "jg, 1 COD-UVER OH.
wmMEtSM
\ri. rmTToH.’nJii.^rJ?, A Urn,. BlKI taattf.'.S. IM--”
'mHNUSSB&
l 1 ¥ > NO CHARGE
•or traatnsat j until cured. Gall on or addrtsi
OR. J. C. BECK,
11$ John Street. ClXtl.NXATl. 0Tn0.
F CURED FREE 1
An Infallible and onepcelled remedy far JTIU.
•"wiK'' •g-’"Sf r rSS i ■
■ i M??as43ffS<K J r,tJ^“A*
UC ns Vis Vest-office and Express addrt
2>H. H. O. HOOr,
' *#» pv *ri to, tstwi Ww-Wj
MASON & HAMLIN CABINE1 ORGANS
tls: at Pauis, It-'.Jj.ViSNNA. t“7»: 8am:aoo. is/sj
PiiSLArKtriiiA. ISTf ; Paris, !S7m; and tiHAtr owi : -
ISM Gold Mcdax., lei?. Only Americas J'P-u - * •» f
awarded highest honors aten; euoh. Hrl - * fo. cost
*r installments. IlMraUd (AifalogNet and Circii ar*
with new styles and prices, sent frit, to a*ok A U » ■
Atoto TIIH TIME
The very belt goods
direct from the lin
Half the
MW*
The
)st. Beet plan over offer* l I« Club Agent.
S i buyers. ALU IXPUKSd CUAKQIS
sw terms TBKB. _
Great kmm
sad as Vessy Slrscl, New lei
Mark Twain’s New Book,
H TRV ABIUIAI)!
GOOD TIMES FOR AGENTS AHEAD.
riosportuses for this nnlrersally looked for Hook
now ready. Speek quick and secure territory. "A
word to the wise Id sufficient."
I Apply ~ “
WHAT A DIME WILL DO
It will get the totoVINVVLI.il fVKRKI.Y
COVBIKR-JOVKN Ato—>thn
Up- South and Wsst-frvm, 1
Jpnual
with it may see aad know (he great merits of t
paper, the publishers offer it as above for tho iri'ig-
ft’est-frpm, the receipt of order to
In order tiiat tlioie uhkcuuainted
nidcs
l of
lO CENTS lO
And this wl 1 fncltido
The Double Holiday Number,
Vhe largest single hV»V» t WMb lie wdrhl, ami of
ftp«l^i^^>^[ wpfth^c prico cba^gc^ fyr^ll.
r °" €OL'Kli:«-JOI UNAI. €•«.,
' to'hhflllf, Hy.
PERMANENTLY CU*ES
1KIDNEY DISEASES,
LIVER COMPLAINTS,!
(Constipation and Piles.
IT HAS
(WONDERFUL
POWER.
WHY?
TUB HUN. N. t. Olty
WARNER MO'S CIRSnt
vceKv.im. NHsIsUS. recsal
PAKI8 KXI'ONITION.
r .HklBU fitFco™'
tlKM>W> I. *uuk)lt ueuehpa
■ .:s»r r
W»»W,» smiL. UJ. .rayr-QT. H. T.
RAPONIFIER
I» th# Old Rellabls Cauoaatrattol Lys
FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING.
Directions aixjomnanVIng each can tor making
Hard. No ft, and TMMfc too«p «Mklya ^
JT IS FULL WEIGHT Ain) STRESGTH.
Tha market la floodwl with (mtunlled) tv»t
traced I .ye, whlch^ls#dniuiaftdwilh Balt and
reeln n>td ti'on’t make tonp,
SAVE M0XKY, A Si) BV? tUTt
BKCAUSK IT ACTH ON Till:
|I.lVER,T1IIS BOWELS AND Kll>.|
|NEVs AT TUB SA.IIE TIME.
Bccaueo It cloonsea the eystrrn of|
■ the poisonous humorethat develonel
Jin Kidney and Urinary diseases, Ell-j
llousnoss, Jaundice, Conetlpatlon,!
■Piles, or In Rheumatism, Neuraiaio'
Jand Female dleerdera.
Kie.XEV.WOKT la adry vecefnMc .
I pew ad end caaheacathj mall pr«palJ.
JOne |>arka|re wlllmakr ai\ «|taof ii>ed|r!nr.|
TRY it now .
WltgKcau«SCS*M., rreprietors,
‘ B.rlln.l.., Vt.
. . . Polleb, Kavinp Lalw» .
®***^VottS^lhI’ r oStlMtot’ai»U»n, Maa- 1