1
m-fw^fw *m . ^3S5SSSS35*Ti 11'V <s. •> ^-fT?-*"*ggl*. MM H ^ aaHijaHlj y«iii-iiii,iii *sammaimm •MM •MSM acatt VJ^itf -tewis County "independent.. \:'jSip^^i^s'SlBEli9B' signed thb bill : ferbiddlhgi My- h a t Arefeerans fiom: w^^t>lf,lhei; ; «ai4 army badge of the '•'., . 3EBEEHE' ; W*»S4fire-JnvWbosfer street, ilfeWSbrk^ last' Thursday mpxaing WWehE-desiroy^d.^eOft^ao: worth of :< Tfi£ Xew Ifpjk : S'&aes having pub- lished a? "statoPieni;. that.. £arniim% ighpwTras to-he_ divided the comihg: »e^^,ihe^e^ter^shGwmanprompts ly deraes theitafemenk and; declares. ; that h^show »k#, wat* 'is,[ not,, apM' •tim&^i$be0vide&. .=•/- '.',;•. , Hi ©Jay Baft WSB ..elected d e p p t * menlfecpmmatiafei?aLthebinetSenth annual ehrampmLehfc «f the deparfc- jnenfcof '^^l^o^^*^^^^^ &a ^hvtM^;; JE3VejfeMoM gives "jr^t ^ttsftSsttob. tomemheisbt army posts in; ; Gentral. and^brtbernlJeW ONE thing, about the cabinet is settled and only one, The position of secretary of state has been tendered toMr.Iteyard but he has not signaled Ms aceeptance.3Phis statpmeiit is made bydtr. Cleveland himself j and is the onijp positive utterance that has es- caped him upon the subject of his po- litical family. .. The Baltimore ManufzotuveeS Re- cord publishes a long list of the lead- ing industries which have, resumed datingthpiastfoutweeks,the numr- her of hands employed bythose con- cerns being about 90 r 0p0r 'IWhilP it iff estimated.that the number .employed by the smaller works lately started up, and now given in this list, is fully %bWi making a total of lOdjOW men thilhave gone to Work in manufac^- turing enterptisessirice January J,"- .'-• TheawJ'al'effects of drink are' seeh' ia such an itemasth^whieh we clip jCroiwadMlypapeij >'^AYmahifiamed Barton, living at lame Lake* Ohfc* White drunk last night, struck his sick- daughter with * chair, kfilfafe her. The^M's moth- erilecl^xn"the house, and died from .ej^paar^^;:.^ '"_"'" •_ ^e^jilsuch^man ; .a Spufe. ile is '". ^orSet;; Brink;- has made him &Jieft&. 'JQm."wfi aee -Sash tragedies '• enacted ^fceftwre our very wes, and not set our .';• laflea.like.itjnuif against the a'cfiuised ':.BtltifiCiliat'every'man^and woman * irhod^sathewMfeiof*herac8.clo. ; *liI»6;or ahe-can.-tohelpfor^ar^prpr MbltaohVo ".; -~: ; ::\Uv ••;. ;.-••• '••'.." ••'THE policy of toejireaentGanadiafi government appears .to- 5 have rather ratirhaiated than., to hive:,depressed trade; with the' XTnited States,, a9,cppa- paHngthtfimpoEte of American goods daring : i879, r the year ^#hen the fiscal policy Pf the present ajdministration : was carriedCinto effect With tho3e of : 1884 ah increase'Pf $6,f50,000 orover; ^percent of aetofeldhty of^2() J 000,- OpOj. is shown. Seven million four hundred thousand ddllara was paid Ph imports from the United States and §8,000,0000 on those-from Gteat Brit- Ian. aamm MMMMta - •^ .^^. ^iad^ne"Mn^ haa had t0an the confi^nce of tbeEoglish "people*; The faU" pf Khartotimv the \ ;'ma3Sa^e:pf Gdi»Sto\s^ '• Irompap-yandicftS pxphabl^ ^Mth of -#Bfrr!S0rapn s a5 : feanspH '•••. .^brtsjpaeeM.jame-havea.tefflaye5;th& j^V«^na8nt ;.ahd; a^aAfeped the gravest; abbrehensiQifeiasip thf,.final .putcdhie of thfe SoudaB 1 campaignv; England Will not Shbmit fe defeat?;, ; *B#d ^hafes;6r;ife:- th^cosfin tr^iasu^e :. and bi^^*:th^P^^ec of her, arms, ' "• : a^-theJ9Jdil .andf bravery of her sqfc - diera ^p&l;ba niaintaitted, 7 9?he deln^ vsS^feiiowe»pJtoefS3p^ . ^bi^1n<the^»eceht' : Victories;, hut i^mf&id^^oir flte^keoi'clvf-. I-H|ittlpn,ja|4he;sake of^jtshriatianity, : Jai. the sakeHitfie.b£trb^pu3 ; tr&ies.Qf ' Soudan themselves weippe> | h ^ end.; inay be a^mplished gpph^ ^ The^^ artnual meejting^^pfcih-e ;X6nn# ,.'] i^^'^n^^]Bff ; ^QcIaliofi$°!C>t J^ew %x£ s t a l l s to be held a t ^gyraciisav ; TSeimia0 ptio'%%' : 'Jfiepwfcr wiB. bf '•.; ^KBentpcT oolite iwPEfc^mopg;cpiI.e*e: sl^dtote^jraiirvoad and gfetman men,-. a]^; practical addresses and-dasctua> ; .Jiionsr; uppit toe^different phasest. of Christian woifc atnpngtall classes' of ':- young mjtow: aj^Sph^ the BBA.VE men deserve credit for deeoV of true heroism. Laborious: scholars are to be commended for thieirsuccessfttl efforts to enrieh Pur literathre. B athe deaeryes the high- est cbmmendatioii who has achieved ffie'greatest results in the face of the most insurmountable obstacles. The literary annate of IDnglahd furnish no brighter example: of "an invincible ;man thanthe : bIind>MillQn;' nor our own country than th.e^iietPrian, t*res^ -.'jott..':. AlVkhoW how ^iltonsacrifieed hft.ey^afor his epuntry's' good, and Hnen, with-keeD.er mental vision, saw fartbet into the mysteries.of Gtod,and wrought oatiOR^radise iiosV^ But cpnipaiatiYelyifew of as recall under ^iatta:ylng/:circumstaai588 JPrescott labbred on, until in;18?r,. the master, ly history of. .fFerdinandr and, Isar-, bella^* was glvento the world. , He had barely. prbeured" the - materials ^om'tedrid,;Which must be -oarer •fully,stad,ied_.-before v writrag^^^...his. history, when he Ipatthense '..pi his, : . eyes sQ:'far aa ; riea4ing. or. wyrtlnf jf?&&- 4onCerp.ed ; ,\and-thisl^tM;fps seyerfft. j?parsi ; IfeW: men'; WpHlet! h a v^ ; . M*& the courage to attack, a foreignt©ngne under such•circumstanc6s;,"and listen- iag to ahbther% vbice/makevther ear- >d6the workof" the ,.eyp,[ Dr. John- son had said that this coteld . not, be dphei.'-- Preseott undauhted^-he came of heroic, stock^deterMned to go ; fpiward. BE&w ; well. he saceeeded Ma classic:\h|S torief *ear:=: w.itnpsa.: 'Years.Iat6r;hi8 eyesight was'resfpredy atid;#4 victories, wph int. light--w^re 'mbie : priz;?(3^^fortbebb^tacieimetahd yan^ufen^ddurihgth^t. Iphgf.period'. of daEknes^i. >.',.'•' .=,.'" AS'*|JPEK : '* , OIJfcEtJS3EA:,. A HBAVI SfOKBI. It Causes Almost a Complete . Blockade In tne West and «TortliWest~-Tlie Storm Commences TFltn thunder and * lightning, CHICAGO 1 Feb. 9.-—Eeports from all, Western and northwestern points show that the heaviest snow storm of the season prevailed. Trains were delayed fromeverydirection. Very few freight trains were moving. The storoi con- tinues. Business here is nearly sus-* pended. The snow lies to. a great depih on the streets. Street .traffic audloeos motion is almost impossible to-night. Freight trains on the Etoek Island and. Ijake Shore roads have been abandoned until the snow stop3 drifting. Jfteports from, all directions in the great storm area indicate that business is praetieal- ly Suspended, and the country roads !m|>assabhv ISto trains,, passenger or freight have gone out to-day or to-night on the Grand Trunk, Kankakee lines', Ghiea- gp arid Eastern Illinois, Baltimore and (Jhicage, Louisville ISFew Albany and Chicago, Panhandle, Michigan Central, Chicago and Atlantic, Wabash and the Jowa division of the Illinois Central. The'-roadshave been hiring every avail- able man to go out On the lines to shov- el snow. Under favorable circumstan- ces the managers say that they ean not expect to get back to schedule cime be- fore two or three days, and possibly a. .week. The loss to the road* is enor- mous. KAJSKAKEE, III., Feb. &,—A passen- ger train from Gincinnati to Chicago, on the Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis and Chicago road is snowed in near St. Ann k All trains on the Indi- ana, Illinois and Iowa railroad, Have been abandoned. The highways here are impassable owing to the snow. \ ZiSTEsviiLE, Wis., Feb.. &.-^The storm continues witu a heavy fall of snow and a fariou^gale, the severest for years. All freight trains have been abandoned.- MCGREGOR, Iowa, Feb. 9.—Kailroad traffic is suspended and travel greatly, impeded.. •' WiNONA, III., Feb. 9,—An east bound passenger train on theOhicigo and Als- ton road is blocbarted at Blackstone, With no prospect of moving in.twenty-, four hours. .' • KBOJETTJE, Ia.,,Feb. 9.—The heaviest snow-storm of theseason'prevailed last night and to-day. The Wabash east and west bound passenger trains are. in adriftJiear Granger. . The Missouri, .Bock Island, Chicago, Burlington .and; .Quincy, and Kansas City and Northern passenger trains are either in drifts' or Bidetfackedl It is growing cold to- night. ' .•'-" . LACROSSE, Wis., Feb. 9.—The weathr er iacold and bl^steri;hg• The snow is drifting badly.. Trains are behind time. A blizzard is ragiij|g on the southern ffiannelpta division "of the St. Paul road. -/..'. 'GAiiENAj:IIl., Feb. 9.—The most' se^ •vere snowstorm of,the season set in. Sunday evening. It hasbeensnowing steadily since,, accompanied with. a strong, northeast wind. The regular itornlng trains from- the east and west havte not arrived. GEN, GORifOaps CAMICAIGX H i s t r i p A<5.*0S!?,tnii V a l l e y o f t h e Nile undXifeii, Khartoum, Homer and Greelt, . AN ASSWER, MESSRS.. EMBOSS;—The John .Gen. Gordon has been shut up in .w^^.f^w^^rne Bev. Khartoum -since May, and the last.. S **^ Wi . w ^ Wmgexceptiontosome -\ . . .,.,,... , :i!h<&Scientific ^WKKiec»vcontainsa ^ a ^ ^ ^ e j ^ i s c ^ w ^ m Bevi .Wi:B» B^toSfordiiectbi jpf; Bt -; Geoi^^Pic^fet^iseeHai ehhreh, ' - JSSKXB: €..'Wetiabje, Haw Turk city 4 - ^efecy" 1f>af%ijr.>) Br-ookSn f W . & ; "jgkafaelck* Boffalp;^ /an# Shspapre "x Vorhees,^sapje^fphidenlfityf the ppi£ H^b^ad>/^Ehe. low; rat^:of pnej cent. "pet mile pa the ^njk;'IMe|t;of iaiP ^coads to andfiom ; Syracuse and; to central Ic^ifcn of :tibls meeting WiB ..t&d<&^ ifrbto joist-: sections of. ••the. 'Mete jpt^eBntj ,thiK year 4Q0'ax&-ex- pectedto attendv Th^e StateGommit tee;cntp2Sily: inyitealielejgymeaand -^ung men in tPWn| in wfitch there . ;arei*nb.AsHP!Biatipnstj. to attenjjnthis .-': oonyentipnsV Prbgrammef ; will ; be •'J. sanplIeS-uppn : appiicatipn-;to Rev. ;:; €feorj^A>;MaliState l Hedretary,j:ifli. -. aye.*'«t : 23tSfieet^aW^^k. ei-ty. r am. ctol&Jtn'* ieilit,.: .:-,-;.•-. ...~ Th«bpajR*©f.sapeBVi3oia-at.ith%ir;la8t -':::• r . ;'#sMpn T ^^passed;a ; rfesol:afio.tt-.ms&hctirig -..';. ;• .'=': thememoerofassemblyfrom-this-cc^nn--- -.'- -'.;}• ;ty, t&.seenrerif possible,;-the 'repeal -of .-.;::. '/.'• : 'il .theaetpjarmrtiingSne df-theSapeirh~ .-•:;. , ^tendehtso^thePoor of Lewfef- County, ',: ',..;...';.;. - ' •" : tctbe;?b« ; keeper of- ;the;eoumiy BCbttse. '-f : :: : ^l: ••..^:The5iidemei|fc.:of;thesa,^<irvis&rs;-^ase;a|;- ; ^ .'-. '...;,• .presnmablyph-fe Wat':tae.,.ppo.r ;-.="•"v.-.-1''..';'."/.'exgehsesottheeotfenty load-|ncreassd • ."•"';.;; "'. -. largelydaMngfha;last±wo years,, was .;."-' 'j•'}• .:?;:-•• - ;thatit'wtMd'be.beft:ei?-foitheBupWinr ::'';', •-.':.'"• - tendSntsfbemploy a;•ke'eperr" 2 as. was. : .' t '; '.;.'. fottiiefiy thfr c&totn, w®o' sheuld'/bBj .v . •;..;; ; ' 'directly reiponsible^them;; : (the ; 8u^- X "-.•• T* ~-j.V'^^ v^?ferikteh : dejateV for- nis admifiisttatipn' •>'--"" ;'.:': j -l[ Tnisju^toeat:niay/;ha ; ve : Vbee'n. wisey \ •'. j .'' . j?c jbufe-there .arespme^who^ thlnkr 4;t ; :^as- '";: -/™- i "> ';tob hastfiy fo-rimedA'-' There is- no-reason ".; '"---'••.''.'. -•-•.-:-. .Wh^the'r^or.^ipen.ses; of ^he^eo.uoty.: •:•; ; -i -' v;;'.ahouldbeah^iarg^^ ot- j i : -> ' i ' ; /: th^r3np^er4n^ncteflts for .keeper of t h e ' •':•--; - ;y" ; - ../, -GofitMy •B;bnse ? ^aiid there-ate reasons -." ' = :--K ;.why^;nndef-such 'a proyMpny they' :': "'.,,' '..j . j^ttidJfe:}ej}g~ ,If 'therrBaperihtendent - _"!.".jervJesaakeeperMiherCbMt&^Maiti^ :-•"'} .-; \ instead^ pj^eniptpying a keeper, itjsav^a '.'...' " ou« salary^ at leaafc-kna* that is aaa item ;/; efKSttefntpor^ '••:•••.-;.-.; '.'"<•* ; '-;ThsSnpeiin^endents-.''are.e^^ /.-.;; ; the'pjepple,;.and: like- <»8ber: pablle oM?} >••-.:_ -"eerf ar^'respphstbie. fe •th^.'people':fcr • "_ ' •".-. thJ^r'aeta,;" $h^" 0up6fyisp1^pl. ; ffie : '.'•;/' robttiigfr -whb:;are-"th:eKreprese : %teayes-6f .,'U^e^p^ptea^Ssuppbseitp'exam^ ,.'; g,a4tt the accbiittfs of t|ie r 'Sabe4nfehd- ,r.i «ntl,ap<i haid MemSteictly^sponsible .. •. -for tbebtaets. $hp.'trpuijlejV.wei ; : fear ? ,; /;". haai^b^nwiSh} thevfeWi-Butvwich; ..-.,. thefaUu^#'fpicrutintoe;:a']ad;;e^ .;.:.: a*4«ir«fuliy-a«ahbuW dohev : •".-";'-." .;• the ; sccbn^; : a^ of the- Suv ;".•" • perifitehdents',; and/the methods by; ,:.-. -.;. Whteb^'the.^prfunds haf e 'beea : ; d<sV- ; .biide4.--.:tt;.fe '-'.;. .;"• >«r "or nafeahy-of these .funds' ia ve; been: : :-..-•-;- wasted=&r rh^ppropriaEed,; But- there •-fea^bdybf men.whp>bbuM- know ail - aj&bjut % and'these jtre: the., committee; ..' .;;-*> ,.erf-i^eboard-df:snpervisp^^ .< V., itwafitpearsfidly-examine- and; reieet ":J\ :• allfccpuntK' witlehy:^ere-j3:pt\strictly; . % -cori^tanoi witMh.th&pxpfisions Pf ; t.be : . .: .'Ji^'^Xf^b-^^Qj^^ne^i^r^'^y^r-^ ''-':'-. . v.^ak»iittleJ4Were.n«e v t^ •y ;.V ejBi whether'^ thej ; : S|iperin't^ndehi; .:or. '.".;.'v.isomejsne/efe'fesh^vfaBfkeepfe^^ \. , County^^BCousej.s.ihee- all must then de- ; ; f«pa^npottthe:tbafisty^^and.ability of . . /";. th> Shperihtpadehts. Wh'einW-iheyeaf- "•••'- - : ' : l^e^penses; be" laegevprrsmall* ,V.';.; - ; - ' 'j; .-;•;' : .;'lTttepBfciij3l^_wi^". tfis iresoifftioa, ]•'][.'. lfcr.;0Qn : ltf;baS.in^ ':-'. ,^the:tepeal-of tbe^Iaw Tfh ^uestiohi .'' wa?itbasairead^piisse,3/.fe third '• _;••_ '." reading; in^ ^-a^t^^'/^i^/tspesX /.'•:. ^y : be wise,, bnt, there- ar^-^pnie"'^'© 1 :.:'•• fhink^^^.dff|erehti^.; ; ;itTis.a.matteE;' in '';•_.. : : whicit the-pespie of L4wi:^ ; C'6u^'ty;are. '..;; i»ier^te.aj.andvOu.s: coittmhi*iii be .<;. : . ^©peia to.any^who n^^-.wiah;; i p .'discuss: . -; ilwaabjeefe- ://'.;- - A'/^^ : JC ':••: efgreat Interest to sdenftste and oth era, 53*9 sfeatemssit. Is to.. ih.& effect . that anles?S«»-ha& 4sp§iiiai©-&£S t fe Sttalt-r*weet Qf.j Sl030!afIa^a.-r,-wMGh ; bad..v^apftpted^^^ the; ;neigHbp|hppct of lhe^ei»:delta,ahd 4f ;SP: -must ha^p trav#Sdi oyer the^ Ifprtb Bola The prppf ithatifehad : cpmefeomappintneartb©dei|a was -onthe ice-fioe; itseiC. Ifeha^ carried thisfiong ;distaheeu?f 3^50^ tt^W, T the; body bf c#e of the CB6W. of the. jmri-? •tiette?' : The.^prppfs that.vthie..lcerftoe .bore.the bojjy :and also marked arti- clea beiphgliag;to the -JedHnefte meife. areiaidto be .indubitable. ;ThuS: 11 . appears ...that "nature ha&,.revealed ; w^atseipnty ts h ^ P Jpng been try ing to aseejtain that there is an open po ; Iar sea, never nhW now traversed by ; ; man, and in this case ..by one from whom thevital spark had long since ffecL Thnik^ of thfe lpng. and; dreary r. voyage \oyer: a: frozen ;and ; -"tsa'cklpss sea! .BetterJar that It W undertaken bygone, from whom thought, and feel' lhgi;antt : ahlmat3p|i.b?id^ gone than by any wh.a are'living.' .-• This poor man '.who lost his life in: the frbzQh regipris of the. jforth ?t haS:' accomplished ttipre forselence; in his lohely and.aplitary vbyjgev acros3'th;e,polar sea, than all. his fellow aeamea Who'hsiy&so vamly tried, to. find this northern passage and thlaopeij^sea. IIhy 'this'.unex^ pectbdr.discoyery men shall be deter- red hereafter from -riskiiig. the hard- sbjpg.andprivations. connected with artlc explorations,, then thi^nnforfu nate aaito'i; of the. Jeannette will have perfprmeda service, which must enti- tle him to the^ gratitude ot all.man- kind. But we;.shall -hg,.greatly misr taken if some reckless—not to say insane-i-man does -not undertake to traverse the same waste nf [Waters in 1$eas3u : mp£ipn that what has been ^secomplished by. the dead nqayalso be performed. by : : the living... This .dfcebyeKyi then^lrnstPad ..Qi^tisfyiflg- may p#ve.pnly anihcentivBl^ ^rea^ Jsre^ffQitsytovJispoverand'/'i^^^ sea. .which, t&i. <3reat-infihlte never inlesded should be .visited..or seen by :ni8a:'';.: \v.v ; ° - % : :•'.. : :'-..-i. < :'' : x•' •;pie • Efsimftjy* ;'A!inenc0:, ^sn'ggeits; spmetbih?:-bb^ter tih^nlthese 1 *trbtic : : eipl0ia(ap&a: ?whicb- are; ralW'ays at* tended ^jih; great danger and risk 6f I1%V "• The/sagge'stipn .ft that a self- iegiatering apparatus be placed Upon ide-^QSaas -St ^ means Qf extending our khpwledge eiihe.ftozen'ifpicth, TJhe suggestion. Isa .gpbd one and worth trying^'''V .-;''-'.; 1 '?""'". •'.' ' ". •'""' Beceptloii to Mje,JE*ar<s.\ GEIVERAt GOBDOIV DEAD. The Massnere at Khartoniy. . •Hew'S'P^ Feb.. -16.—The .invitar tipasha.veissued; for the recption to be given to. Senatorf-elect Wiliiam* M, Eyagteby the Union Ipagtte clnb on Friday night. The Republican mem- bers pCbajn; jbranehps •bf the; legis slafuifei.- t h e v Bepubiican . sepators ; w| : & c ^tein>.Mr. :Eya*£&'W-ffi;Boon,take ib^a8eatifhfe3ebabjica and abput 20: iepreseh^tlve Sephpli- can editors-of thpstate. have. bJeeri : : ln- ;ylteot tobei ptele'nt,'; Tjtie .reeeptlpn '•^^•ibe'i^$ : 'M;.^o,Jarg^ hali: bf the ctub ^.pdse^iwhfch wiil be decprafed With .ftoweraY Twp-band8 willfurnish" njasic,^udgeHoah Bavis, fhe ; . Smb. v^^•ijre8M&ii"6{••th>•'.cllifr,' will pr.e- sent Shh Quests: "to- Mr., ^varfer At present itis ffitended; to have pnly two speeches;^On& wiilbe thff address of^ welcomeland CPhgialutei'ttpn to Mr. : Evgf?te;aud^ae;^^^other-hisfesponse. : A; ;eoi}ationwillfapieryedafter the' re-^' -cepMonand^eait galleries will be thrown open. Ifcis intended that thp: .eshibitipn »f paintingEf shall be of Ifreat rfcMe#and variety^ v Thp J&aiJif, Ifeips appears this morn- General. G j K d o ^ I t publishes; the followinj* from.0akdol: "^atiyfa who eseabigd fcomKhartoam say that Gordon was killed wh^p leaving his house to..raliy,the faithfut troops. The latter : w.ere cui down to a man, and for hours the town was a scene of -mejeljessalaugbter^npt even the wo^ menand children being spared. All the. potables were, killed except the treacherous pashas and their folio w- ,ers E .'.''"." A.. Gubat dispatch^.to the Daily telegraph, states that it was reported there that-General Gordon was killed January.27. The following details of the killing of General Gordon and the fall of Khartoum are received: "On the day of the capture. Which is variously stated as the'Sftth and '27'Eb of January, Gordon's attention wa& attracted by a tremeudoas tumult in the sireets. He left his so-called palaeP, or" government building. ID _which he had madehia headquarters, to ascertain the cause; Ashereached the street, he was stabbed in the bacis and fell dead. The. tumult was. caused by the mahdi's troops, who had gain- ed access to the Interior of the town thrpug.h treacherj'.artd who were soon, in complete possession of the placp, including the citadel.- A fearful mas^ saere of- the garrison followed The scenes of slaughter are described as. surpassing the Bulgarian atrocities and rivaling the worst horrorsof the Sepoy mutiny. The. panic stricken Egyptians were captured in their flight and put to death with the most fiendish tortureSi Some were trans- fixed with spears, and' left to bleed to jdeath.. The most of thevietlmis were mutilated In a horrible manner. Their eyes : %ere gouged out, their noses were slit and their tongues torn out by the "foots; In many ca*es mutila- ted parts.of ;the. victims'.bodies were thrust into their mouths-While they wer.eatilt living. - The massacre in^ cludM>miny: iion, coMhataBts, Tb.% Egyptian.;. woBuen were, subjected- to. shame'fulIhdighities. .ilprethan 100 w.omen and ypung girls'. were giyeh oyer, to the mahdi's followera to be used as slaves. After the slaughter, inahy Arabs were seen rushing about the . streets with the-headsj id the •Jlg-yntiahs impaled upon their spears. . The.next night was spent ina.'satar- inalia of blood and debauchery. * •:. The mahdl has repaired the fortifi- cations .and made Khartoum well nigh impregnable.; Se : has. made It his permanent headquarters, and is said-to have ah abundance of. guns and ammunition. word hearcl from him was that he could hold his position for 20 years. He was sent out from England just a year ago, and the story of his travels is Ml ofadventure, Iu 1881 Mahom- et Aehmot of Bpngola announced to the world that he was directed by. God,- and under the title of aiadni called to his standard all the tribes around. Islam, Kardofan and : the Western Soudan to battle with hinj in the cause of universal equality-ahd a community of goods. BEicks Pasha the Eigllsh commander and " the Sower of the Ewyptiatt troops, were swept away by the False Prophet,; who next turned his banners; toward Khartoum and Assum and the other. towns along the line of the Bed sea held by English, garrisons. Qol. Goetlogan% 6,000 troops could not. leave Khartoum, for outside the Mahdi's forces stood ready to cut them to pieces. The Eaglish press, after the publication of an interview with Chinese Gordon, in Which the general said evacuation meaut-deafb, .demanded that h.e be sent to the Sou- dan to treat with the Madhi, and on January 18,1884, he left London. The first Word of hope that came to the E lglish soldiers at Khartoum was in tbe spirited tolegranx.they received from Gen. Gbcdon when hs> reached^ Carlo. It ran thus: "You arPmeh; not Women, Be not afraid. I am coming." .. Gordon traveled by rail, boat and dromedary, and at every village through the valley of the Nile he called the petty chiefs to him and in- vited them to Khartoum, there to discuss the independence of the Spu- dan. The .three years of. warfare, which the popple had waged" under the leadership of the Mahdt had been fruitful only in devastated villages, and they seeihed very anxious to break their disagreeable union with the false prophet, But in. order to pacify the Mahdl he prodatmed him Saltan of Kdrdofan, at Which time he cabled to England that his success had eclipsed his hopes. At Khartoum he Was proclaimed the savior of a' people, He took off half the taSes and burnt; the' assessment rolls in the market- place. The doora of prisons were thrown open and political prisoners freed. In March came the first rum- oss from Kofdofan that.the Mahdi. had brganlzad an atmy of St30,0.00mett and come but to rid the country Of both infidel and Tu'tk, Fanatics from all parts answer'ed.his call, ahd'then Gordon discovered that the road from Berber to Suakih?, by which, in case of just such an event as occurred, he; he could; escape with his garrison,was closed and guarded by the lalse prophet. O'a March J5 &6rdon, with. 3,000 men,foujcbt the battle of Sal^ fiyehj and through the., treachery of two pachaSi whpm'ha afterwads shot, was defeated. Qeh.,Graham captured Tokar andwon.a victory'from Qa- man Bigna, but Qordon r seeing the roads closed behind hini,sent word "to England that'uulgsibe ^aS- sppedlly assi3tfi.d;.'G^aham^s» 'victory;, would .go for naught,. and his. n?ach ne'eded helpdid not leavej^ngiaisd until Sep- tember under Wbiseley's coHimand, ,. WUatlt Is—Wliatlt Pqe s , - • Hood's Sarsaparilla is made of sar- 8aparilIa,dandslion r mandrake,cnerry •bark, uvaursi,'dock,, aud-bther valU" able medicinal^^ agents Iohgahd favor* .ably.loiown for their power in eradi- cating) ; dls'ease and piirifyihg the blbbdi It will cure, when., ia th6 ..pbwet. Pf. medicine, Serofula, Salt. Bheuoi, J)y.6pepsia, Headache, Con- stipatibn*,1SiIiaasnp8s,QeneraiB.ebility Paihs in theBack.^idney pomptaint, Catarrh,Female Weaknes»,OanGei;ons '.BCumPrs, Humor«.of. the Face, filng- worm, ^impleSjIJlcersvSoreSjTumors,, geal'd. Bead, and. all diseases .Rising. from.ah Impurestate pr tow epndition' :.0f- the blood. Hbbd'a Sarsaparilla is. made by ,0. I, Hood & Go.* .Lowell, Mass. , Sold by all druggists ; $1, six for $5; , • Caatorin. W.Uett Baby * a s siofe; wo ga-ye her Castorta, When she was * GUM, she erisa for OaBtoria, ^ien Bhsymn a Miss, she Qtangta Csstorja, •^sffSh«'had-pafldrett,. «he gftfe t&eta Oas- -;;tprlfc;,;;_.-'. .-.-•\ .'••'• . _ 'isyi-,- ed anxiously at i|hartbam - mttipitm-nniwpii>iuruin* 1" •: '^lEiiE^A^teaf.-eirr^ " ^li«*twam, thftCapltaioftjie Eaypttan iSotMliiH—Its Strat«ffl««t.Xlttu»orli»iice, j of my Ideas concerning Homer's influ jnce in the world, styles-me "learned." I donot claim the honor of the title, thpugh I hope to earn it, e'er I. leave the world, tarn only a learner, a sto^- dent, a seeker after truth, and conse- quently I arn not laboring to "be con- gratulated by moatof theLewis Coun- ty- divine's," npr by a few.fif them. My- parpose in-writing these- articles, is to rest myself "of evenings,, and. partially tp draw my mind .from a domestic bur- den known to most of my friends, - My purpose in publishing them, as express- ed in the opening-paragraphs of the ; first,;|s t'p aid "many boys and girls of Lewis Oountyi'.'.not to draw congratu- lations from "divines," Frora'thelalter I wish to lear%henee I.thank'Rev.Mr. Beiner for his kindness in calling in' qaestion any statements of mine which he deerhs erroneous. ' The gentleman first objects to the statement that students of Home| Ac- quire' Someric styli. My last 'article- does not claim that this is the-case wife-. "allJ' But I do. hold that it is. true of many.. I watched carefully the progress of m'y school fellows, and observed the. fact that their essays and" orations took on a hew and vivid coloring which savored much of ''Homer, while they wer& studying that author. Without knowing it they used the simile, "Ho- .mei's own. figure," with-new andstrik-. ihgpower; ITheirraind^ w«Jnt iato th^ realm of the sublime as they had never before gone within my knowledge of them. . ; . Some of them, no doubt, lost the Ho- weric impulse as time rolied on. But with few of theim I Jintm, Homer holds the place he won in student days and that with growing power. I see it in their productions, sent me through •the mails, . . I bring to-bear-on this point, the tes- timony of a. great educator, a man of soubdeep eloquence, :a profunnd schol- ar, one who can' speak no more, save through his written tforks, and by his an written lectures to students, for this very winter he suddenly passed away. I refer to ProfessorJohn. J»ies Lewis, LL.D. of the.Matfisph Uhiyeraity. One morning our rhetorie class was disciis 1 - sing the figures of the Bible a? com- pared with those pf Homer and Ossiab, Our belayed teacher became flushed in face, and eloquent to speeoh, as' he talked of the subUWtyof Seripture Bg- ares, .saying, ; \ff read'aright; they would sti-Mie' ti-3 like a 8a?h of sualight at midnight;! 7 ' ..';'. Then a member gf .the 'Class asked, "Why not dispense with the'dradgery pfsfiudyiQg the t 'Greek then; and draw' . our models wholly; from the .scriptures rather than from Horner'?" The pro* feasor used the" remainder of the hour in showing that the greatest statesmen of England and America,' were men who were "fdll pfHamer." H& quot- ed passage after passage to" prove his point. .He'then named many iawyers and clergymen whose career he had watched. .He said that those of great- est depth, of rhost power, were the men oh whom -fipmer bad left., the deepest impress. He ' believed, that without •Homer 'we eould^attain'-cerlain heights, but higher We could not cilaih.without the clasaie p'Qwefr.to'be derived'rfirbm' the study pf .;0-reek*.- parWc.hlarJy-the Greek of Booaer. "He backed every statement wilj tlxua. morttged ty, that Hom^ of thousands; elements 01 Though I can eo.m and tell of an My friend asks.if I will "kindly point out which of" the preaehlng of Chrfst and His apostles was. done in Greek f: I will try. Paul, the apostle of-the Gentiles, furnishes abundant illustra- tions. See him at Athens on the" Sill of Mars, surrounded by'the shrines of heathen divinities, and In the presence . of a multitude who were wont to drive from the platform, a.speaker who dared to insult them With inferior eloquence, in what other tongue than Greek, think you, did he exclaim, "Ye. men of Athens, all things which I beheld bear witness tp your' carefulness in religion. For as I passed through your city and beheld ' the objects of your worship, I found among them att al- tar with this inscription, To *HE tTsi-, KSOWN Gop. ' Whom,-therefore, ye worship, though ye know -Him not, Him declare I unto you." The detailed life pf St. Paul shows tb'at he and his-companions expended a large part of their time and labor among people of Greek extraction. It follows then, that they must have, ad- dressed those people in their own lan- guage, Greek. Paul's many letters to- the churches were sermons in Greek.; TheTeachin/sc of the Twelve Apostles,';. re'cently brought ip light, is a Greek manuscript illustrative of.-the point under.consideration..' As evidence that Christ and his more immediate followers had occasion often to use Greek, note the following from Conybeare and Howson, where they speak of Palestineat the time of Christ; "Greek arid Roman names were; borne' iff multitudes ofthose Jews who'caqae up to worship at the festivals. Greek and Latin words Were current in the popular 'Hebrew* of the dayJ' They' then add, "Greek had long been well- kuown atidpng the upper classes in the large towns". ^ Christ preached wher- ever he coald drop a word or good "deed, , whether the persons addressed were of the uppefor lower class. Is it reasons able to suppose that He and His follow- : Cra would pass. by the upper .classes, proud of their Greek, rather than ad- dress them in that tongue? Bather, have we not many instances of such being converted to Christ ? The other languages in which Christ's followers preached; are numerous and. World-wide. Largely nurse! in the Greek tohguei Christianity was soon expounded in •nearly .eyery language;, as circumstan- ces or Convenience required. Yours very respect-fully, LEONARD T. COM:. Educational C0I1111111 HEKRY C. SPRXHAM, BEfiCQR. Teachers arid school officers are in- vited to furnish matter'for this c*plu'mn- Address . BE, G. HORTSAic. ' A SI>JBJ|R, recently observed in the Me of Wight,dragged twolpr three leavesip the shores fastened tihem to- gethPr with Its web f iaunched the craft and sailed away oyer the pond, leaving it to dart and dive after flies andother game,returning with them to the raft to be devoured. A BOY twelve yearsold Was theim- portant. Witness, in a law suit. One ; of the lawyers, after .erossr-questipnlng him severely, said • ' [ Yp^ father has been talking to yovi and telling, you how to testify, basnet.he?" "Yes," said the boy,' "JP6.W," said'the. law- yer ,^jhst tell us how your father told you to testify." "-Well," said the boy, modestly,"father told me thelawyers Would try and tangle, me in my testis mony; but If I would just-be careful and tell the truth, I could tell the Same thing every tlme?'- Khartoum. may-be.called the gate of central Africa. Bar.QP.ean.. civiliz- atjon centers at one side, of the city and African barbarism comes in at the other'. Baypnd ithartoum from the north few tourists have ever made their way, and beyond Khartoum from the south few- sayageshave ever ventured. As the entrepot of the pror dttcts of central- Africa, Khartoum is a place of some eommercial import- ance. Among the 35,000 people who make up its populatloh there are many Greeks and Italians, while two or three Americans here find prpat able investments in fttrnishing beads and other triumpery, to the, savages from Kirdofan, E( Obeid and D-ir- foun The town now. contains about 3,000 houses,, mostly of mud and millet stalks, and. in only .a few in- stances arranged in streets or squares The goveraor'tf house is the principal, building in the city, it stands bn the river bank, and Gen. Gordon says it is as large as the Marlboroughlhouse London, .-.•.-•. There have also -been constructed some of her buildings of importance Kb artoum Ilea oh the sbuth bank of tbe Bahr-ei-Azrak, or Blue Nile, a mile above (south of) the junction of that river with the Bahr-e^Ablad-, of White Nilp^and the city walls reach to within less than half a mile of the latter, so that the garrison of Khar- toum commands both stream*. On the other side of the . White Nile ia the terminus of the great caravan route to Dohgola and the fortified camp from .whieh "Gan. Hicks's 111^ fated expedition set out. Opposite Khartoum is the Island of Tail, di- viding the.Btue Nile into two branch- es.; Thecityls. thus• the.most im- portant po3i,;strateg-icalIy considered, on-'the uppe'r, : ^"iie,;a'ttd : is the natural centre 'Pf 'miUta^y/;pawer-'".'ih- the. eqnatorM proyinceSr Jhpne other rispect it is eVetl mpxe' impprtant'. tp E>ypt. It is at; Khartoum iiiatthe. Mlometer records the rising' : of the waters and indicates to the farthers of theDelta the influencp the melting snow will exercise.upon the volume .of thestream upon wnich. their- pros- perity and very e^istenijedepend;;. '- Bible Worlt: At-The 3V«wOrleans . ExjSoaltion; The American - Bible Society, has secured the privilege of placing the 'Scriptures in. various .-languages on sale a.nd for gratuitous distribution . in the main building of the Cotton Centennial Exposition at New .Or- leans.. It has been thought very de- sirable to reach- not only the English- speakinaf population, ' but •' especially thPsewbo.tPadthe Spa'nish,Boiftgttese Ger'mfeU) ^hd French' languages. v.It is believed that-niahjr persons-, fiom; .Mexico* Oentsal Americaj and -.Sbflth America maythus be supplied : with the wordof life who could not- easily beireaehed afany other tithe or place. This woj?k will pall fee-very, consider- able extra' expense, which; It-is believed n^any will be willing to 'aid theSbeiety' in "meeting, '• b y special ..and prompt contributions.-to its. treasr iiry. Such ePntylbhtiohs are earnest- ly solicited. Bay's Horse and-Cattle Ppwdei? cleanses the liver,' regulates the- bow- els of all kinds of live Btock, and as an alterative is without an equal in the Market.. Price 25 cents per pack* ;. a !^-.-.. ! -.-^.':"- : -'"/.;-' • '.; :y .:\; : THE forms of greeting atb almost as varied as are the races of mankind.. In the ancient, days the Gr.eek9j.in- stead of saying, "the top of the morn- ing to you !" would wish ope to be Pf "good cheer," while the Bomans Would say,"Health and safety to yout" But in China the form ,ef salutation seems to be quite funny. The Chinese expression for. "good .'morning" means, "Have you eaten your rieef and is your, stomach working Weli?'?. That would sound very, strangely to- ns, but people become accustomed to all sorts of salutations^ . JPocs Alcol»<»l Warm Us? shin-bon<h wnile the hand is ih, a straight line with the:fprev-artoi : <T:he foot,; too, is, built longer .and heavier thah the band, for it bears the Whole- Weigb-tofthebbdyi . \; Tnis ia-jft. plain stoi-y of the frame" Work; of our bodies,, inside of which arp the organs* and fastened to which are the muscles which make the body ahactjye thrngjobeylnl; :theipeS8ftge6 carried bV the nerves frphi the piihd, whichgoyernsitali.. -.'V _ j - . '•; Ever yours trulyi. '. ''-" : V. ''•'" H^B.'"; Threie Recuiiarttte$; fiO.0d*s Sicsap'aiiUa,-thjB greatMoodjaitifier and legulatiiig. inedtciiie,is phawctenzed t>y . -.t)lreepeciUHatitieSi-Ba&ielyi ; - . . . - "Xfie-com1)iuatioii 6i'tlie;VaTlon3 lemedisiagehtsused.-"• . 51ieproporM6B:in-wluelith63coot3y herte^Tjarks, etc., are raised. ... - - ' .. - - -.. - ^ ' Tlie-jirocess^by "wlileli t i e aetiT'e jnediohmlprojeitiesaresecure'd. Xlie restat is amedleine- oniniisiral strength andcnfatlve power, -which effects'cures iere- tofore uriegualled. ShesepecUliarffies Ijefeiig exclusively to Howl's SfesaBarSlla/aM aie • •* . Unknowii to Others fe : .Hood's Sarsaparilia ispreparea ; .w% the ^•eatest«kul-a,nd care, t-y ^harraaBists of educatibiianaiongexBerience., fieaeeltjs.a . medieine worthy qf.entire cbnflaence. "p^oii .suffer ftwa sorMiOa, salt rheum, or .any.diS; «as'e of tliettoodidyspepsla, Wlionsaess^ sicE ieadache, OT; iddhey.'asd.'iiyer.' complaints, catarrh or rh.euraaysm,; 40 i o t Tail to tig ''j recommend-Hood's Sarsapariiia jo.ali; aiy'tiaehds as the. Jjest tilood pirMer on earffi." WM. fe^J^j a^uggi4,;Himilton,-0'. ''Sood'sSarsapargla^cure^meiOt-S^^ -ntoiis humor, a i d abne; me ^paeis':<)f; : gopa otherwise." ^;.A.3^om i : Arn0ld i Me...- . A hook containirig inany addteonall.state- liients of cures-wihhesenttb'aU-wJip'deslre. -.- Sold hy all druggists,' SI; sixfbri55...itada' . «&yl3ye.I.iOob..&'-eo'^^Qwai,:M^ss.' &. :. -.IpO^jpose^- ^rt&/-"^ll;aiv-'•- ..-. • •:- "^wiroreot^'i; •. •',' '.. •'Mik. for ; < Bongta:. : 0tt fjonghkj for <}6iiituif. •ColdB.^bife OJhroftt, Hoatsenegpi Trochia»JI5c.; : 3jiq.iild;,25c,-.. :• ;; '"r 1 "-;'^..; . , - W - .ii'•=• ••.."- .:''.'.'•.'•••• : ." ""• "'Bo#<sa oSiStA&ti" ; " v ':;-- ;: ."=•. ; •_^fearS o&t : fsts, ,iaice,, ri&phes^ ftiea, *»U, bed-bugs, ituiiksjclilpmnjiltSjSOphecft, JSe. , PrngglSts/-.. ' V - •- - •-""-- -' . '" r -•' '.•'- -•'• ••-. • ' ;. :-.'.:'.;3ffie43xE*iNS.' . ... .. -. . .>-.,' ... Eftlpltation, I)ropsic«I«*ellrngsV3Dl^zzliegiiv ".- XJadlgestlori'.; SeadaBlie, SteepleBBneHs,-cured. . *y"*'Wells' He'aitfr^&eweii?',, -: ,_ -: •.=-• •".•"••'• ''SotrctBfONjCpB-WSi'^4 •;-..,'; ; : A s k for: W e h s ' r*>»bngb^^ On. C b r n i i * , J 5 f c * Qtilbk, complete cure. Hard, olrtto"ltiDO»ri«,- .•wartisvBniilons. ; ;,-. - ":• - ;,'. .••..-.•••';-,. ' ^BOKGH-^N^AW'^^OBOIJfllBP' ^JffiMT^OL^. Bkensthenhig,iiap|6.Te<i : t4&e : *estfor ! bM^ itbliB, pains iu cti»Bt and ilcle, iheumatlMai Tieuralglfi,. - ..". . ' " . • , " . • • - . .... -•..;..: ••.--..:'--..'; J : .THiBrEBOKCB,:.; :..;; ;'.' -• "WSIIK'.health Kehe*^" restores health -' and "vigor, cures Dyspej^la," Headache, Ner- vpTiSness.Debintyi.*!.' ; -.-;.; •-'. . : ; •<-. "• - •'; '. WHpoEisP0<itr&B:. . ' . ' .- ; 'and SiBraaTiy-ThrOai^Affectionsof chtldren; promptly,'pleasantly anasifelyarellev'ect by >;Rbngn on.JCongliti.'J as-ochen, 15c.; BahBiin, 25c ' ' - - ' ... ' -"- ; .- - : --.-'-•-- ."-"-•' --".'.;•-'>' "MoiScEBS...;. .- ';"••-'-.;:•-" If- you are laillng, broken, *brn ; out aid •neryba»v 4so"WeHB' Health. 'Seneflrer.?*. f i : D'rugglst.- - -..' : :•••.•. ."-.- ..•-'••"'."": rV .--: ' iin^PBBsiEsaB.-; -.:';-.. ' .' -•• It y;6u arff losing, ybur-grip- «&' hfe.' : iry" "Wells''Healta. B'enesr.er." . Soes dlfeot to. weat.spbfe.".-..' -•;'' .... '.-^. _ : >; •;•';-• ;..: '•. ;•; ,->*B<)t/e^^fTb^tiBttpBQei'.••J' : -'-'.;:."":: Instant relief f6z ileilralglfti Toothache. Faeeachei-'AsK for-^Bbiigrl on Toothache.'' 15and25cerlt8, -•;*• .••"-:•' .. ,.'•,"'. .;*".. ;..-\-.'lE'Bicahr'WoKBir;. •/ ! -.,.-';""' Indies. * h b =-STOula-re'taltt ireshnesg ind -irl*acity.- ©otftlall'tb.try "Wells^ H«»Ith Benswerj" •;•..;'- > ;. ' ' ., . r .; -'• ; . " •OAT^i^X"^^6^A^BCTiOKSt ~.-y '..-'. iHaCktn'g, irritating.;.Cb.dghfc• 'GoWs,\8br* Thioat, cured by : ".KQugh.'o»"Couglw,f - 5ro-•- Bhes, I5e;. I,lq.ujd,25(!. ,;: : . ; •-." - '- -".; ." . 'Ha^TOBDoirjio^f-'-. : ; "'.. :- "- ;,. "llouglr On Itch." cores hiSiribrH> erHpaonii ilngwb'ims,; ^tSerVsalt rheum, ftbetad feat; ettlliblalrlSi- *, • •: W;.:-. -.V '-•'-""-.'"•.-.•' ^ "-'„.'. TH^.HO?io*TH3EJKAXXOX. : ;'-.' V '-."'. .: Ghiidreaji sloi? "la. de Wlbpment, J>ttnj WiibE AvrAKi- ,1? '&^?.'< m£h wer.. .0 'earned like Dr. Le'ftfis, 'wi'thJJr,' Reiner's Wish, JEhglish author with Homer's style and Swell pf thought. That writer is John Milton, the .poet, author of "Baradis'e Iiost.' r Compare this great poem with Somer's Iliad. Their similarity in places is striking. : Blil'ton passed about" five'years in studying the classics after h"e had ffa-, ished Ms studies at the XJniversLty of Oambridga. When he became blind, his daughters read Greek to him. Very inuch of this classic study was devoted to Homers So some one has well- said of Milton, ,l tle loved to listen to the chime'of Homer's oceanic harmony." Without this wealth of Homeric learn^ ing, Milton would.never have written "Paradise Ijost!." . Prime Minister Gladstone is auotber Englishman who haa derived from Homer mauy elements of style, as lie himself admits. Read his speeches, and bp satisfied whether niueh 0 ^ u '^ power;.is not IIom nin' in origin. Oue offB. Daniel Webster'la indebted to pomer for. many of the p'onderphs. .utterances that, electrified .the Senate, and shoofe t'he.'Natimi. Not that Web- ster transferred HaoiHr iu quotatbhs often, but he. Arnericaaizel rTomer. To obtain Webster's direct views, op this subject, read his- speech iu behalf of . Greece, delivered on the fi jor' of Cons gross. The gentleman quotes me thui, in regard to Homer's influence on Rome : "The orators of Rome have learned •their eloquence from' him-" So- he makes me say that the Rooaans learn- ed all their eloquence from Homer, "The orators of Rome learned elo* quence from him," is the statement undistorted, and IreUerateit with em- phasis X Read Cicero's I>e Seneetute. and jDe Orators for his own testimony on .the q uestton. His oration {for Arch-, las, the. paei. Is another prod.ubtkm which speaks for itself, his indebted-' hess.to the poetic world. When Oieei'Q. #6a'died. 'in: ''Athens,' Bomer '.was his prihc'|pal : theme..' ""• - •.-'''"•" As fox Virgil,; the very eharaetera of: .his great poem,; the JEkiaidy were har- rowed from Homer, " When I read the JEJaeid under Professor palnier, he oft- :en called the attention of* my class to the lipmeric passages.therein. . I guofce the following from the: writ-* lags of Professor B, i.iwreaee; "He [Virgil! wa^ .the most- Unscrupulous of pilferers, fransiates long passages from- riomer, and a;l : piost appropriates the' .Odyssey^'!... (The Odyssey-is one'pf Ho» iher's poems,) ; ' Again the reverend .gentleman tnis- quotesme. ITtaW-notclaimed.-t.hat-the w^ofeofthe preaching of Christ and; Etisapostl.es w^s done in Greek,'but much of it. To that I also hold, and op authority which I never heard ques- tioned save by the-gentiemaa himself. The Bev.'J. W.iiliaftis', A. M.', "Life and'Actions of Aljp;a0dfr the Great," is a portion of tlie^jithority which I am palled to give. Also Geikie*s'"I4.fe Of Christ;"aiud < "jphe Life and Epistles of St. Paul, w byGouybeare and How- gbn.; "Origin and history of the Books of the Bible," by P.rqfeasoj; S'owej Tbe General History of theCh ristiau church by Whomsoever written; '^Grote's-His- |ory offif-raece.j." mA uumerous other standard works-, among-them Professor 'Cischeaslorf'?- .Wr-itmgs,. concerning Greek If ew Testament manuscripts, Sinqe my reverend friend q.dmite three-feuiths of-the arguipents about the langttageof the gospels of Matthew, aiai'k, iiuke and John, l a m quite wil- ling to let him dpubt the remaining fonrfchi. ., ••'-.•..-.';' - . PtrUSGISG'. tU JEtO^ A BRIDGE; An... SS.ii-g-iiae. sind... S o a r , ,S3ars. Wrecked, aajd Six J?er» sons Stilled. ; 0»ESTQK., Iowa, Eeh. 9.r-r As train No, S, wesfr bound, on the Chicago,. Burlington & Q'iiney Bailrpad, ap- proached a bridge across a.small stream fen miles west of-this-city yesterday afternoon, it struck a bro- ken rait arid tilted along on the ties until it ran upon the-bridge. The bridge went dowhj carrying with it thb engine, tender, and baggage ear, and two coaches and a sleeper, con-, tajning from twenty to twenty-five passengers* ^ The following is a list of the killed and wounded.; . 'KIEkED, ' "'^ apbert Brown, Civil Engineer, of Mount Pleasant. Iowa; bis soa,-Q. A, Bfbwn; Mrs^ W.O. Oarroii of gan Siche; Col. ? ifra. William'Butfcry'; Mrs. M. Farrell.'wlfo nf Section Fore* ' "aterman, Oprnlhg, I'oWa. . -wbBsrbED. H. S. Stbrrs, Train Blaster of thp Western Division, arm broken; A. B. Cole, Grahd Bipicls, Mich., slightly j C. H, IJarle, conductor of the sleeper, arm broken; J, E. Hawkins, conduc- tor, hip and back iijjqred'; Mrs. H Bay, Buriingtorj,. Iowa, seriously hurt; W. J. Bivenporfc, Division Freight; and Passenger Agent of the Cliic ig'o, Burlington and Quihcy road, bruised severely but not dangerously,. One or two of the wo«hded are not likely to recover. The engineer was killed at his post. The accident was probably the result of a br-oken rail, caused by the cold weather. A patient Was arguing, .with bis doctor the necessity of his taking a stimulant.He urged that he Was Weak and heeded it. [ Said .he; . "But, doctor, I must have kind of a stimulant, j am chid, and ItWarms'me# ,, "',.-" "Precisely," came the doctor's ansr. wer, "Sep here,'this stick is cold,-'' faking, up a stick of Wood frpmthe bos beside the hearth and tossing ii into the fire, "now it is; warm; but is ths : stick benefited?'?' ; ,;..';' The sick man watched Vie WOod first send out little.puffs of smpkp,aha, therji-; burst into, flame, and replied': <l 0f course.not'5 it is burhing.itseif t" "And sb areybu when .'yon warm ypUrself with alcohol;. yon are literal- ly, burning, up the delicate .tissues^ of'• your.stomachatidbrain,". . j . ,6l yes, aicohbl ."will warm ypa up K but who finds the JuelS- Wheniyouv take food, that is fueljand asit barns, out ypu keep warm. Bttt when yon take alcohol to Warmyou, ybu. are.; like a man Who sets his house on fire and warms his . fingers by it as it burns. A .^•'ISPXTr'F Quanted 'for'-.TheviiWes or ._aL\3fjDiIN XDalltbePresidents of the TJ.S: The iarcest,.liai3dsbraest,l)est book: ©yer soiaforless ffian*pftc&ojir_grlcje. The'Iastest Rnrrie selling bodkin America.- iSnraense profits to- - * agents-, Mfinitelligentpe6plfeTyatit.it,. Jia»y one caabeeorae.a. saceessfulagent." Terms free.- HAJa^Er.BooK Go.,Pbrtlaiid;iKlalne.'- Hpocl's Sarsaparilia, Sbldtjy Morrlsbii'iB' - Moore, liOSTVille, Jkesflsepuht?,Sf,3C, THS'.MSRKETSi; GHEBS-EPACTOBT BLAJSTKSJ.O? reports ;Of s a l e s to.patrons, of mbstapprbyedE. formk, Banted.CffiiliPLT and ^ p ^ e j c n Y .at the office of tbe^Qyvtlleyjfes... ;; " •_.. l , o w v i l l e •2Btacl£.e.t.'"' .- GorreejSed aaid Itevlsed' W4eily.' ; •-•'•" , ' • . -. lioWVII.ii8;l , eb. ; 12>, 1885^ '•;"' --".' - ' • - . . E T J T i E n . •-• : . • •-;;.; -. -.:>-. Kenewer,^ three or four hours eYery iiignt cbnfWng. Qetlrnmediate-rellel^^arias'orfnd real* By Using ". WeQls' "Bough bri- X3pu£hs." Tfbchis: '.15b.; . - B'alsarai'Soc;--;-." r.'. ', ' .V-'. - .. ; ' r . ; •"'-'- ; •; ^SotrGKOK-feiaaf^ i PoibTi^^..te^TiBJj - - Streh£tnenhig.3mprbv$a,&ebestrforbwSfe ; ache", pain In ch»st or side,iheusaaUraa, iieu--; raigla,,.;: ... :;>_:_/.;• _^s;lj:.:yr:S : .% .^J^_ WEI/IS'"REMEDIESfor:Sale b$- : .'•':?' "-'.-"'' . Morrison: &MoptB.-JjQW'sanej SF, X . "• : WM BlSf•* 0HM131E: S5.40lyps 38 o&^j.OTAacre-.OKaaiTnBPi;, Any-.bne sehdlngm&tiie adflres&Df 10-iaar-- rled perBons, aiidJ!8^ent8 -whl- rebelyeaayxer turiirnall a pacfesi'ge <jf-jgooaslih&t jietf|3;«>, Including, an extra heayy epld-plated ring -worth SI. IJiavea flfte variety of gop^,-fl.-p.d_ rnai:e'th,lB sacrifice toig'ecuremtjrre orders.pn wMchJDe^ectrbyjpTOfitfl.,-Ariyflne*M%tt*v ahuBhel-brnxtoney toy-acting.sow. AddreMf - ;J..b,Heriry,:Boi;l^,BttfIaIo,Jf:.'S. \^2SrX:. Qrearn?ry_ ,<Chplce^ .^0® A.a Err3n!r WSX« Si»tt! aw.ij witJi SXer .iNDlAssrA.POXjiSj.Ind,,. Feb^ 3.^.A somewhat' new thing, in the elope? ment, line is reported from. J)Arling- ton, Montgomery Opuuty, Wedae-3- day. last a fellow from Virginia^ known as M.^j. Tomliason, left-With the. wife of llirvey Shauver, a pros^ perous.youag farmer Mviug^five miles north of tha+ plaea' Mr. Shiuver and Wife wore'thou^ht to be. living hap-r pilyj' with three beautlfii litte chil-. drea, • Mr. Sbauver's suspicious, were -aroused by ohn of fhe little fellows telling him that the' m4j >r who -was a farm hand, "kissed ma and ma kissed m?j"or." Mr; Shahver took his wife to task for such action. She did not deny it,and also stated that she would kiss him just when she pleased. Sir. Shiuver chastised her for her conduct and paid the maj^r off, telling Mm that he wouldgivc him until Wednes* day tb leave. This' seemed to raise the ire of Mrs. Sh-rayer and she quickly gave her husband, to under- stand that she would go with the dis- charged min. Mr. 8'nauver kneltin •pr xyer and prayed long and fervently that mat thoughts should not be en- tertained by his Wife,- bat his.prayers WPUld hot soften or change her heart. Ji-in Shaa-ver .gave-her'alll-her belphg- tngs-'and the baby, "a beantjfui 'boy & years old; he helped her. into the Sleightucljed the wraps closely around her.atJd, with tears almost streaming from his eyes, kissed her and the child goodbye, tellling her he hopod and prayed she wopld bs satisfled' with heriihjudged undeEtaking.. The couple slatedthby were'golng to Orer «ob>;; •'..--.,-i : ,:-..?. '.-:.'"•' ;• - ' " ' : ' An importantRfJllnk. Oahlscharge to the jury, in the case of Ferguson against the Mutual Aid ' and .Accident Association of Bochester, on Wednesday, Judge Yaun made arulin'g of importaneeto the hentficiariespf eo-operatiye in- : surahce eompahies. He charged the jury that if a person, in his applica- tiph for insurance, answer^the ques- tions coneermBg.hla health, and phys» ical eonditionaecerding to the best of. his kBowledge and. belief; the compa- ny,lf it accepts th.o applicant, is hold- on for the insurance in'case of dea'h, even if it enouid be discovered that the answers to the questions were hot correct. In ^pther words,' the co tnpa- ny must, pay the. insurance or proye that the insured told deliberato falsehoods about his health, and phy- sical condition when be took out .the.; polhyr. The defense took an except tion to tbe justices charge.. The jury immediately agreed upon a verdict for tha pianteff, awarding to ajrs. ffexguspn the amount pf her husband's InsarahcejlajSQO.D'O,.'. . FHlfSIOliOG^ AND H¥GIGNE. TUe Doctor's /(-fetters Oft TSte Bones Of T i e l.iii|l»s. so. x. Bear Pupifsj ..'.'" J Bort,cigar, boU ThPfcrunfeof yuu.- hodies coHtains PotSit Tefa11 - vvfest are called the, vital or^«o-,^s&«# jtylM i% the organs that keep you alive'-S.o, the frama-Wprk of it Is ma.de;hbilbw and also very solid ahd.sb$hg to prb- teet.Its precious contents. ..,'•'" But thelimbSithebranchesfromthe trunk, are built oh a differeqt platu They are made for motion. . Two sets of limbs which are very much alike, branch out frona.^the, trunk-^the arms and the legs .... . '.."' Tjie upper iimbs are attached to the trunk by the : cllJar bone, Which Is shaped 1 ike an / , It Is fastened to'the breast bone and the first rib atone, end, and the shoulder blade at the other. It holds tbeshoulder joint out from the breast, and gives the arm plenty of room. The shnlder bladeis a thin, fl rt bone, shaped lisea trian-r glo, wiih a shdHow socket that the upper arm hope fits into. At the oth- er end this connects with the long slender honeVof fore-arm.mafciQgtbe e'ifto w j oint.'- The wrist is where the fore-ar in and the hand eome-togetheri Hare thpre are two rows'of very ir- regular bmes One row formsthe jpinihg. with fhe arm, the other with the hands, ;".-•'" These little bones ire so fitted .tor gether that the hands|ca& be moved easily from side to si(^ ( and back and forth, for while it is very ^important that the arm should move free and the elbow easily,it is still more so that tbe hand, should be very supple, at the wrist; for just think of the things the hands do with those two motlonsbaek and forth, and from side to side;!_ The hand is made up of five sets of bones, like five long fingers starting at the wrist, all but one having five bones to a'set. The one has four. The longest bones,are covered together, to the first joints, making the palm of the band ; the. others make the thumb and the fingers; Mo two Of the fingers are exactly the samel length, nor the same siae, but they are regulated so. skillfully that they alj'.fit elp'setyih- side the hapdWhen,i| is Shut, and'" are able also, to dp manj|.deftahdcfever thitigs.--.- •'••/."•'". ;-.. •-•••' f - ' ; . " - -•-•-•.•••- The' upper limbs arfe foulit firmly, to bs light and move freply; but it is iar to deep socfeetsof the hip %onea that the lower limbs fit, for there is-iiot so much need of piay! here as in the shoulder; but strongthigh bones must have good fastenings, for they bear the weight of all abpve'them. -ThM; .is. the largest and sttphgest of^all the bones; At the lower jend it formB the] L knee-joint with1 thblstrge,' inside bone of the. leg (called the'. Min-bbnk) A- small cbestniit-shaped bpne : ealled the knee^pan is fastened over the jbintfor prPfectton. Theleg has also a. slender ontside bone which is firmly fastened; to. the shin-bohejust below the kkee, and again at the ankle. - This bone is to giye more snrfacafbr the muscles, as there would not be enough -on the- shin-bpne alone. • -' ' .".".' The legs- are not,.called upon, to make, so many\ different : motions as.' the arms; but it is all heavier work, and.with some people very constant work, too. So it is necessary to nave pltity oimusGle room. Think how it is With yourselyeg. Why, except when you have to sit still ypu are us- ing -those leg .museles all the' time, Walking, running ahd'jumplhg. The shin-bone is Jointed with the foot very muehas th9f6re.arm is with the hand. The bo.iies of the foot are. sxrauged on about the same plan as those of the hand, with enough- sjfcff-* erenceto.fit them for their separate kinds of work. j . The ifpot •!$. at rfgM angles with tfce ffafr'td Q.6ba-. ..„ 18'®2Q: 25 3Vresb„iiew, l a jars.-i;—^_. i lUiul_U.-^- i . "; '••': EGGS;- '• - ' -'• •'•' Eresh, (cash price}^^-.——_-~-.•—— ~ - TtTSTATT. EKIOE OtTBiiENT, ' ..... fcottEl. Patbrtt, ilew process; .per sack—^—~i-- r f e 80' Pastry, extra-wMte whsat, -40^-,.' ,,. , _-. i 60 firingarjari^liBr,p.er8ac£,„»..^i-^*,.'- .2 00 No: 1 Spring.-.^ '-'.-'. '.'..... J i23*nd 130 ".. ftraAB.,;. CorTee, "A" .Btaridia'Ci-;,-^..-_r-i-^ul. White. extra- v&^^,~^—-^-^-i ''Grairoiatea.--^-^--^^-r-- •;' /- -^-^— Maple sugar_ i.„± "7 ';m. .8 told BUTTER. Btttter_ ^Wrr- •.-CSEEgB,. CheeSK..^..., .15 VEGETABEES. Potatoes. 60 "PPSK; Hogs., :i @ *»^sr»PQ.t^.. 8 @19. @12 ' '. KEBOSESIJ. feerbsene' o i U .... -l.^J.—.„.iv^.- '~«,*'.. 12^- -.;*-;.• ' .wooj3t: ; ',-• ;' %iA-l&%—~~~^-~*~^-~,r--~ U35® Stoye...^..J.. ; _^^ i ,^^.^„, .... i . ; , 2 00@ B S D f e A ^ i i i i j . '_ '. ' . "; .Ox and oow: Hides 63^c, tjlmTried 6J^c, Bull hldesSb.. trlrnmedS^c" S o w TTarKiOai'i'y Marteet. .-.;••;. .Sw.iosK, FEB; 7, BfigprES. . . -• .. .Beeeipts for the Week,. 28,637 pack-r ages: exports,; 929 packagesi Bast Week^s grain-fed efeamery: made, is iquick taken, and to-day 3& cenfe was bid for it on change, while as the same time and place firsts of 'western- creamery June make were offered at i5|e., and 13c.bid. SrewYprk state daries, firsts : ent-lie,-. were .offered at 203.. without' getting a bid, and. &i& market for. early butter.-uniess of .ex- ceptionally fine quality, seemed at; a Standstill. Fresh butter.beglh3ii.bw to Increase, more especially from. Pennsylvania, and supplies pf It are rather more liberal. thaa.iaSi;. week. We quote.:. ..-.-. ]';...' ..... ... . Eancj;, Fine. Eaulty. Winter make creame'i-y.^ 35@36 30@35 '^@r^ Fresh fall fflake.^^.Ui. -2i@25'[email protected] ii@19 Bnttie daries..^.^ ^ 22®23- 1S@20 13@I7- Sumjaer arkir,s--^.__^.-^a2 :18@20 aT@l7, Western, ladle pacted—^ 22@5i3 15@i8 ,i0@l| CHBBSE^-Beeeipts for tbeweeK,2S/- 363 boxes; exports,;iiS,S08 boxes. . -f .Fancy Sepigmbef. ;ahd^. October cheese are.not : la overstock:, but they are.in sympathy with.the general current of the markets, and have a. drooping tendency. Theex,ports of PenriSylVania fresh, made skims'ls slbw.and reluctant, ; and prices are at about half -of what, they .Were going: at a year ago, which; makes' them a cheaper; substitute, for long "carried stock. At the close bujers have the advantage. Wequotei. - - . ' . ; :' Kancyi Hne. Eaultyi Factory,tallcraam i2@!2}£-l<>J#a>liK&. @9 ' - (antUe}ttabre)-(raosty Factory sMnUnei— ' S 3 ' @\5 ijk© 2 /'.'•:.', David W. Bewfe.S, do.. .*..', jaofis. • '. TH^ W^TjJBVil,trB'3IAS.B:E!ri -While there is little dbing the market .remains firm .on. the best goods. We leara of thr«e'different dealers paying respectively 18,1^1 and 193 for three lote, the Miebeingfor 41 bales tp-day.v Qtiher.lots.have been spld ; :at I7@lr&3.-.:,But few'• sales;.of mediupi .'have taken place and the •market ps:hibi^'litfle'-'callfpr;them,: John Coi/sold his -growthlast;.week for 16c,; ,.^?b : day thgre.are qhiie.a:'lpt. :pf.satopies.:in the'market and ."bids' made are not top.: quotathras, .. As it has bepn fof'seyeral weerts.ali dealers will not pay the top ,piiees,.aud they are only., paid on Imperative orders. Oneiuyer who paidiBfei is;put of the. market npW) having ids order. Med. We quote. ' •'-."'.';'. '..''•'' Chpice-.:^; .......... M ..;. ,,.^435®!?}' Prime,,, .......... ,-.' ......... ~l'5'@16. ••. Lbw grades..,...,.,..,,.:.. .J%@M •yeavihi^:.... ,;.,,-"..-;•.;.•.-:•,.,.>-... <$;s .:.. .^-•>, . . . . IBKl.U'a.St.BiKlP',- -.- .'•-•"•"'.• SH35 I> ABb--In MartVnWiish, Feb. 5,18Sf>, Ambsg.,Sh,epara, aged77years . H&WLBY—In Martlusourgh, Feb. 6, lifSo, John E-, JiaKley, *ged SB years, . BA.Via~In.Marilnsb»jrgh;Fer), B, lSS5.Gatl>- ..rlne Ml Davis, siged 51 yeats, S months and? aays.' ' . . . ' ''• "• •"- ".'• '• KENYOSf—Iu GopenhaeeB r ^ebi 2, ISK^JuS- tns H. Eenypn. aged 79 years. ItEKJSrAN^In Cppenhageii; Jan. 29, 1885, Mrs. ,Ma,ry Kerttan,.slB.>«r ot Edvcaxd Wheeler,- aged79.years, 2 monthSatid-SScUvyS.: . Never :give up? you -cab.. find, a remedy, for Heart' Disease, everyone who has tried Br, Graves': Beart atbr gay it" is a sure' cure. WILL 3iEM?iflrjaaa^ SUGCESSQBSTO DOTSMOQBi '" - JE» J ak- _ 5K"-^aL.3»r;. a ""•• Keepalltdndsiifpliplbe , Fresli&; Salt Meats, iowE§f Wffiti IMES: i The oe%;ln- tbwiij" '-'•'•'..'••* \ :' •••G^H^&jPQB;^;-.; :• 'IS OMKOMP, ; ; "-_'-; ' toB^SBRp^;.^^ne,K.Ti': BBipBcrasa;, itbsx '"SEWS* - Jkarii Accr/RAT* '.• ; : ^^&^ r <^^ms,:\'/^^^^ AndTotmerous other ieaturesTiaveibeefeaad-i ' ed. ilsoaeomp1bte,;exhansti*eBrirarnarybr ,theiiew».&alt/dspartments. .It :ut.reiot bf -. oip^ards.ofialia ! mimbnp^pleandi»*gooa . jadvertlsingme'diriat, re8ichlng,Xaeitorleg,fltrm* '• - vand. homes ot ah descriptions art ^yery part -.' r olthebbirntr^r. -. .-.~.. •' ' =•; . r .t, •:-'- .... '•- jL. PEaFEC%? KEW^pAPKB..'; >-.." ;.- -" . rlt:oontai$8,allthesgeher&lrie5^s of the' daily ' editlbnoftheOBperatd;tWiich hastHe largest ctrculaitibh IntheTJnlted States. " ; : . ... ' Ibdependen^irtpolitlcSi itlB thbiabst valu-. ableM3hTonicle.6f pbHticaliiBwsintheirorld,- tm^artfallygt-wngthebcedrrencesraridbplii- ions olall parti.es,-sfr that -'ail: jShieS : -raay r>«? inoTRi. in the4Brtartirieutof '--- . --.' '•-.: . ' •• : ;.;; -";F€>R#&it"NEWs'.;;;..•.' ; .'•'". '•_'•. The Herald ids ifiyays'beeii dlsttoguitebd DT '' •the fullness feflts cableaispalcheSi xhe'-rie\r -• transatlantic telegraph, cabled ivlll Increase, -. facilities:' ••-:...-"" ••: '-/, ...':•-"•••"'•••.•: '••.- -./• -< J :. - The Fanrt bepartrbentof.tile; WeelcjyHer- , - alfflsprastleai, I-t;gpestotiie i>olni»ndotoe«.. not give wild theories. Tfiefarinbr tjiU save . . r n a u y i n o r e t h a a i . • •:-"'.->-.--'.•—-",••. ; " -'.- ' ; .G^P'6>^iB"i.^^.-:."\.V,.i".V:-.'-'. feora the« sdsfgelBaons' of Itiie "E«rra : ^fepart-' :• •merit alone, cbncernrnEr sbHiJcattlej erbpSi,'' trees, ^bnltdlngs^garderilogi pbultryV and- ag-j .nealturatecbaorny. ..fiThe EComa'? instruct* •• thehbuse-WJleiriflthe'cMiaren:.in legara-.tb eeonbral(»lauaT£asterdlrieVdishes,the*iasn-.' : lbns,,iin.d-th.eanaltlng-=bf heme cbimbtts. lit', atldlttonare^lyen'-latest.reports bi trade and ..; -SBobHCE; MASIE^TS,..- : -' : : -" ; :' Thecoridltlbnof money,cbtnmris of rniscel- laneous reading..poetry, speoittl ribvetettts; --:- wit andhctrjjQr,; hothiScfbial. «nd pblltlcalY sportlrigne^s.popular seiencb; thettoingS^ well-feft.Owrtperf'oos ; bf the world; a aepart^ - : ment deyot^d tbthe/dtaTOatlcand^ySib/gtagb.- -• .WuLlethe Weeldy Heraidgt*es-thelatestari'dT ;beatn.ewsof.tHiff'worId%ltIs'alsba'jbmaialfor - the'fanlrly.''"- ' ' --"•'•'** " ' . ' ' . . " ' - : '•' Snbscrlbeorle dollar atany -ttrde for a.-falV- year. . Postageiree tbauypartor thfe'CTiilted States oi Canada. %• ."" • .. - -••;- ;*-••'•-.:-. THE-lfBW TORE H S E t t B 1^"*. WEEKT-* DTFpa%OJSE DOIiIiABAXEAa,•.-'. Adtoess-SE'SV'-XOBS; ^ESAKD;| Broadway •"^ andaiiiri-iStrBeCii;'-''; ... .-'.' r : *• KMEFGOOIil Most peoijle are as-^iiixbTia tdl>tiygoods : cheap as ffi'ey'.arato keep ooolaowadsiys, and. it is cpilte .seasonable to fcentl6n.:theSBCt that-fffrSeep.arfuuane of v.-- ' ,-•: - : EampHj iLwatoipintig,'-': '.-;•.; ;. ; ; vcitandfiliiersj; .'•JQilfearywfta'. ...-.-..":-'•. -;T--.' ..;,;': Bracket tamps; tamp Fixtures, -ike." Dfeqorated aha ftaio ChM& IHnier. a u t Tea Sets. DeCoratea Chamber Sets, ^. ars. j, ; ',Ii^PB*RAaTEV3BS^i: : .-'-• Phut door north ofEeUoggHott**

3iEM?iflrjaaa^ - nyshistoricnewspapers.orgnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031519/1885-02-12/ed-1/seq-2.pdf- diera ^p&l;ba niaintaitted,7 9?he deln^ vsS^feiiowe»pJtoefS3p^ . ^bi^1n

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m-fw^fw *m . ^3S5SSSS35*Ti 11'V <s. •> -fT?-* "*gg l*.

M M H ^ a a H i j a H l j y«i i i - i i i i , i i i *sammaimm •MM • M S M acatt

VJ itf -tewis County "independent ..

\:'jSip^^i^s'SlBEli9B' signed thb bill : ferbiddlhgi My- h a t Arefeerans fiom:

w^^t>lf,lhei; ;«ai4 army badge of the

'•'., . 3EBEEHE';W*»S4fire-JnvWbosfer street, ilfeWSbrk^ last' Thursday mpxaing WWehE-desiroy^d.^eOft^ao: worth of

:< Tf i£ Xew Ifpjk: S'&aes having pub-lished a? "statoPieni;. that.. £arniim% ighpwTras to-he_ divided the comihg: »e^^,ihe^e^ter^shGwmanprompts ly deraes thei tafemenk and; declares.

; tha t h ^ s h o w » k # , wat* 'is,[ not,, apM' •tim&^i$be0vide&. .=•/- ' . ' , ; • . ,

H i ©Jay Baft WSB ..elected d e p p t * menlfecpmmatiafei?aLthebinetSenth annual ehrampmLehfc «f the deparfc-jnenfcof ' ^ ^ l ^ o ^ ^ * ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ &a ^hvtM^;; JE3VejfeMoM gives " j r ^ t ^ttsftSsttob. tomemheisbt army posts in;;Gentral. a n d ^ b r t b e r n l J e W

O N E thing, about the cabinet is settled and only one, The position of secretary of state has been tendered toMr.Iteyard but he has not signaled Ms aceeptance.3Phis statpmeiit is made bydt r . Cleveland himself j and is the onijp positive utterance that has es­caped him upon the subject of his po­litical family. ..

The Baltimore ManufzotuveeS Re­cord publishes a long list of the lead­ing industries which have, resumed dat ingthpiastfoutweeks, the numr-her of hands employed bythose con­cerns being about 90r0p0r 'IWhilP i t iff estimated.that the number .employed by the smaller works lately started up , and now given in th is list, is fully %bWi making a total of lOdjOW men th i lhave gone to Work in manufac^-turing enterptisessirice January J,"-

.'-• TheawJ'al'effects of drink are' seeh' ia such a n i t e m a s t h ^ w h i e h we clip jCroiwadMlypapeij >'^AYmahifiamed Barton, living at

l a m e Lake* Ohfc* White drunk last night, struck his sick- daughter with * chair, kfilfafe her. The^M's moth-erilecl^xn"the house, and died from

.ej^paar^^;:.^ '"_"'" •_ ^e^ j i l such^man ; . a Spufe. ile is

'". ^orSet;; Brink;- has made him &Jieft&. 'JQm."wfi aee -Sash tragedies '• enacted

fceftwre our very w e s , and not set our .';• laflea.like.itjnuif against the a'cfiuised ':.BtltifiCiliat'every'man^and woman * i rhod^sathewMfeiof*herac8.c lo . ; *liI»6;or ahe-can.-tohelpfor^ar^prpr

MbltaohVo ".; -~:;::\Uv ••;. ;.-••• '••'.."

••'THE policy of toejireaentGanadiafi government appears .to-5have rather ratirhaiated than., to hive:,depressed trade; with the' XTnited States,, a9,cppa-paHngthtfimpoEte of American goods daring:i879,r the year ^#hen the fiscal policy Pf the present ajdministration : was carriedCinto effect With tho3e of : 1884 ah increase'Pf $6,f 50,000 orover ; ^ p e r c e n t of ae tofe ldhty of^2()J000,-OpOj. is shown. Seven million four hundred thousand ddllara was paid Ph imports from the United States and §8,000,0000 on those-from Gteat Brit-Ian.

aamm MMMMta

- • . ^ ^ . ^ i a d ^ n e " M n ^ haa had

t0an the confi^nce of tbeEoglish "people*; The faU" pf Khartotimv the

\ ;'ma3Sa^e:pf Gdi»Sto\s^ '• Irompap-yandicftS pxphabl^ ^Mth of -#Bfrr!S0rapnsa5:feanspH '•••. .^brtsjpaeeM.jame-havea.tefflaye5;th&

j^V«^na8nt ;.ahd; a^aAfeped the gravest; abbrehensiQifeiasip thf,.final .putcdhie of thfe SoudaB1 campaignv; England Will not Shbmit fe defeat?;,

; *B#d hafes;6r;ife:- th^cosfin tr^iasu^e :. and bi^^*:th^P^^ec of her, arms, •'"• :a^-theJ9Jdil .andf bravery of her sqfc - diera ^p&l;ba niaintaitted,7 9?he deln^ v sS^ fe i i owe»pJ toe fS3p^ . b i ^ 1 n < t h e ^ » e c e h t ' : Victories;, hut

i^mf&id^^oir flte^keoi'clvf-. I-H|ittlpn,ja|4he;sake of^jtshriatianity, : Jai. the sakeHitfie.b£trb^pu3;tr&ies.Qf ' Soudan themselves weippe> | h ^ end.;

inay be a ^ m p l i s h e d gpph^ ^

The ^ artnual meejting^^pfcih-e ;X6nn# ,.'] i^^'^n^^]Bff ;^QcIaliofi$°!C>t J^ew

%x£ s t a l l s to be held a t ^gyraciisav ; TSeimia0 p t i o '%%':' Jfiepwfcr wiB. bf

'•.; ^KBentpcT oolite iwPEfc^mopg;cpiI.e*e: sl^dtote^jraiirvoad and gfetman men,-. a ] ^ ; practical addresses and-dasctua>

; .Jiionsr; uppit toe^different phasest. of • Christian woifc atnpngtall classes' of

':- young mjtow: aj^Sph^ the

BBA.VE men deserve credit for deeoV of true heroism. Laborious: scholars are to be commended for thieirsuccessfttl efforts to enrieh Pur literathre. B a t h e deaeryes the high­est cbmmendatioii who has achieved ffie'greatest results in the face of • the most insurmountable obstacles. The literary annate of IDnglahd furnish no brighter example: of "an invincible

;man thanthe:bIind>MillQn;' nor our own country than th.e^iietPrian, t*res^ -.'jott..':. AlVkhoW how ^iltonsacrifieed hft.ey^afor his epuntry's' good, and

Hnen, with-keeD.er mental vision, saw fartbet into the mysteries.of Gtod,and wrought oatiOR^radise i iosV^ But cpnipaiatiYelyifew of as recall under ^iatta:ylng/:circumstaai588 JPrescott labbred on, until in;18?r,. the master, ly history of. .fFerdinandr and, Isar-, bella^* was glvento the world. , H e had barely. prbeured" the - materials ^om'tedrid,;Which must b e -oarer •fully,stad,ied_.-before vwritrag^^^...his. • history, when he Ipatthense '..pi his, :. eyes sQ:'far aa;riea4ing. or. wyrtlnf jf?&&-4onCerp.ed;,\and-thisl^tM;fps seyerfft. j?parsi ; IfeW: men'; WpHlet! hav^;. M*& the courage to attack, a foreignt©ngne under such•circumstanc6s;,"and listen-iag to ahbther% vbice/makevther ear-

>d6the workof" the ,.eyp,[ Dr. John­son had said that this coteld . n o t , be dphei.'-- Preseott undauhted^-he came of heroic, stock^deterMned to go ;

fpiward. BE&w ; well. he saceeeded Ma classic:\h|S torief *ear:=: w.itnpsa.: 'Years.Iat6r;hi8 eyesight was'resfpredy at id;#4 victories, wph int. light--w^re 'mbie:priz;?(3^^fortbebb^tacieimetahd yan^ufen^ddurihgth^t. Iphgf.period'. of daEknes^i. > .',. '•' .=,.'"

AS'*|JPEK:'*,OIJfcEtJS3EA:,.

A H B A V I SfOKBI.

I t C a u s e s A lmos t a C o m p l e t e . B l o c k a d e I n t n e W e s t a n d

«Tortl iWest~-Tlie S t o r m C o m m e n c e s TFl tn

t h u n d e r a n d * l i g h t n i n g ,

CHICAGO1 Feb. 9.-—Eeports from all, Western and northwestern points show that the heaviest snow storm of the season prevailed. Trains were delayed fromeverydirection. Very few freight trains were moving. The storoi con­tinues. Business here is nearly sus-* pended. The snow lies to. a great depih on the streets. Street .traffic audloeos motion is almost impossible to-night. Freight trains on the Etoek Island and. Ijake Shore roads have been abandoned until the snow stop3 drifting. Jfteports from, all directions in the great storm area indicate that business is praetieal-ly Suspended, and the country roads !m|>assabhv

ISto trains,, passenger or freight have gone out to-day or to-night on the Grand Trunk, Kankakee lines', Ghiea-gp arid Eastern Illinois, Baltimore and (Jhicage, Louisville ISFew Albany and Chicago, Panhandle, Michigan Central, Chicago and Atlantic, Wabash and the Jowa division of the Illinois Central. The'-roadshave been hiring every avail­able man to go out On the lines to shov­el snow. Under favorable circumstan­ces the managers say that they ean not expect to get back to schedule cime be­fore two or three days, and possibly a.

.week. The loss to the road* is enor­mous.

KAJSKAKEE, III., Feb. &,—A passen­ger train from Gincinnati to Chicago, on the Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis and Chicago road is snowed in near St. Annk All trains on the Indi­ana, Illinois and Iowa railroad, Have been abandoned. The highways here are impassable owing to the snow. \ ZiSTEsviiLE, Wis., Feb.. &.-^The storm continues witu a heavy fall of snow and a fariou^gale, the severest for years. All freight trains have been abandoned.-

MCGREGOR, Iowa, Feb. 9.—Kailroad traffic is suspended and travel greatly, impeded.. •' WiNONA, III., Feb. 9,—An east bound passenger train on theOhicigo and Als­ton road is blocbarted at Blackstone, With no prospect of moving in.twenty-, four hours. .' •

KBOJETTJE, Ia.,,Feb. 9.—The heaviest snow-storm of theseason'prevailed last night and to-day. The Wabash east and west bound passenger trains are. in adriftJiear Granger. . The Missouri, .Bock Island, Chicago, Burlington .and; .Quincy, and Kansas City and Northern passenger trains are either in drifts' or Bidetfackedl I t is growing cold to­night. ' . • ' - " .

LACROSSE, Wis., Feb. 9.—The weathr er iacold and bl^steri;hg• The snow is drifting badly.. Trains are behind time. A blizzard is ragiij|g on • the southern ffiannelpta division "of the St. Paul road. -/..'.

'GAiiENAj:IIl., Feb. 9.—The most' se^ •vere snowstorm of,the season set in. Sunday evening. I t hasbeensnowing steadily since,, accompanied with. a strong, northeast wind. The regular itornlng trains from- the east and west havte not arrived.

GEN, GORifOaps CAMICAIGX

H i s t r i p A<5.*0S!?,tnii V a l l e y o f t h e N i l e u n d X i f e i i , K h a r t o u m ,

H o m e r a n d Greel t ,

. A N ASSWER,

MESSRS.. EMBOSS;—The John .Gen. Gordon has been shut up in . w ^ ^ . f ^ w ^ ^ r n e Bev. Khartoum -since May, and the l a s t . . S * * ^ W i . w ^ Wmgexceptiontosome

-\ . . . , . , , . . . , :i!h<&Scientific ^WKKiec»vcontainsa ^ a ^ ^ ^ e j ^ i s c ^ w ^

m

Bevi .Wi:B» B^toSfordiiectbi jpf; Bt -; G e o i ^ ^ P i c ^ f e t ^ i s e e H a i ehhreh, ' - JSSKXB: €..'Wetiabje, Haw Turk city 4 - efecy" 1f>af%ijr.>) Br-ookSn f W . & ; "jgkafaelck* Boffalp; / a n # Shspapre

"x Vorhees, sapje^fphidenlfityf the ppi£

H^b^ad>/^Ehe. low; rat^:of pnej cent. "pet mile pa the ^njk;'IMe|t;of i a i P ^coads to andfiom ; Syracuse and; to central Ic^i fcn of :tibls meeting WiB

..t&d<&^ ifrbto joist-: sections of. ••the.

'Mete jpt^eBntj ,thiK year 4Q0'ax&-ex-pectedto attendv Th^e StateGommit tee;cntp2Sily: inyitealielejgymeaand

- ^ u n g men in tPWn| i n wfitch there . ;arei*nb.AsHP!Biatipnstj. to attenjjnthis .-': oonyentipnsV Prbgrammef; will ; be •'J. sanplIeS-uppn :appiicatipn-;to Rev. ;:; €feorj^A>;MaliStatel Hedretary,j:ifli.

-. aye.*'«t :23tSfieet^aW^^k. ei-ty.r •

am. ctol&Jtn'* ieilit,.:

. :- ,-; .•-. ...~ Th«bpajR*©f.sapeBVi3oia-at.ith%ir;la8t -':::• r . ;'#sMpnT^^passed;a;rfesol:afio.tt-.ms&hctirig

-.. ';. ;• .'=': thememoerofassemblyfrom-this-cc^nn----.'- - ' . ; } • ;ty, t&.seenrerif possible,;-the 'repeal -of

.-.;::.'/.'• : 'il .theaetpjarmrtiingSne df-theSapeirh~ .-•:;. , ^tendehtso^thePoor of Lewfef- County,

',: ',..;...';.;. -'•" :tctbe;?b«; keeper of - ;the;eoumiy BCbttse. '-f ::::^l: ••..^:The5iidemei|fc.:of;thesa,^<irvis&rs;-^ase;a|;-; ^ .'-. '...;,• .presnmablyph-fe Wat':tae.,.ppo.r ;-.="•"v.-.-1''..';'."/.'exgehsesottheeotfenty load-|ncreassd

• ."•"';.;;"'.-. largelydaMngfha;last±wo years,, was .;."-''j•'}• .:?;:-•• - ;thatit'wtMd'be.beft:ei?-foitheBupWinr

: : ' ' ; ' , •-.':.'"• - tendSntsfbemploy a;•ke'eperr"2as. was. •:.' t '; '.;.'. fottiiefiy thfr c&totn, w®o' sheuld'/bBj .v . •;..;; ; ' 'directly reiponsible^them;; :(the ; 8u -

X "-.•• T* ~-j.V'^^ v^?ferikteh:dejateV for- nis admifiisttatipn' •>'--"" ;'.:': j -l[ • Tnisju^toeat:niay/;ha;ve:Vbee'n. wisey \ •'. j .'' . j?c jbufe-there .arespme^who^ thlnkr 4;t;:^as-• '";: -/™-i"> ';tob hastfiy fo-rimedA'-' There is- no-reason ".; '"---'••.''.'. -•-•.-:-. .Wh^the'r^or.^ipen.ses; of ^he^eo.uoty.: •:•; ; -i -' v;;'.ahouldbeah^iarg^^ ot-j i :-> 'i'; /: th^r3np^er4n^ncteflts for .keeper of the '

•':•--; - ;y"; - ../, -GofitMy •B;bnse?^aiid there-ate reasons -."'= :--K ;.why^;nndef-such ' a proyMpny they'

:': "'.,,' '..j . j^ttidJfe:}ej}g~ ,If 'therrBaperihtendent - _"!.".jervJesaakeeperMiherCbMt&^Maiti^

:-•"'} .-; \ instead^ pj^eniptpying a keeper, itjsav^a '.'...' " ou« salary^ at leaafc-kna* that is aaa item ; / ; e f K S t t e f n t p o r ^ '••:•••.-;.-.;

' . ' " < • * ; '-;ThsSnpeiin^endents-.''are.e^^ /.-.;; ; the'pjepple,;.and: like- <»8ber: pablle oM?} >••-.:_ -"eerf ar^'respphstbie. fe •th^.'people':fcr

• "_'•"..-. thJ^r'aeta,;" $h^" 0up6fyisp1^pl.;ffie:

'.'•;/' robttiigfr -whb:;are-"th:eKreprese:%teayes-6f .,'U^e^p^ptea^Ssuppbseitp'exam^ , . ' ; g,a4tt the accbiittfs of t|ier'Sabe4nfehd-

• ,r.i «ntl,ap<i haid MemSteictly^sponsible .. •. -for tbebtaets. $hp.'trpuijlejV.wei;

:fear?,; /;". h a a i ^ b ^ n w i S h } thevfeWi-Butvwich;

..-.,. thefaUu^#'fpicrutintoe;:a']ad;;e^ .;.:.: a*4«ir«fuliy-a«ahbuW dohev

: •".-";'-." .;• the ; sccbn^; : a^ of • the- Suv ;".•" • perifitehdents',; and/ the methods by; ,:.-. -.;. Whteb^'the.^prfunds haf e 'beea :

;d<sV-; .biide4.--.:tt;.fe

'-'.;. .;"• >«r "or nafeahy-of these .funds' i a ve; been: ::-..-•-;- wasted=&r rh^ppropriaEed,; But- there

•-fea^bdybf men.whp>bbuM- know ail - aj&bjut % and'these jtre: the., committee;

..' .;;-*> ,.erf-i^eboard-df:snpervisp^^ ..< V., itwafitpearsfidly-examine- and; • reieet

":J\ :• allfccpuntK' witlehy:^ere-j3:pt\strictly; .% -cori^tanoi witMh.th&pxpfisions Pf;t.be:

. .: . ' J i ^ ' ^Xf^b-^^Qj^^ne^ i^ r^ ' ^y^ r -^ ''-':'-. . v.^ak»iittleJ4Were.n«evt^

•y ;.V ejBi whether'^ thej; :S|iperin't^ndehi; .:or.

'.".;.'v.isomejsne/efe'fesh^vfaBfkeepfe^^ \. , County^^BCousej.s.ihee- all must then de-

;; f«pa^npottthe:tbafisty^^and.ability of . . /";. th> Shperihtpadehts. Wh'einW-iheyeaf-

"•••'- - : ' : l^e^penses; be" laegevprrsmall* ,V.';.; -;- ' 'j; • .-;•;'' : .;'lTttepBfciij3l^_wi^". tfis iresoifftioa, ]•'][.'. lfcr.;0Qn:ltf;baS.in^

':-'. ,^the:tepeal-of tbe^Iaw Tfh ^uestiohi .'' wa?itbasairead^piisse,3/.fe third '•

_;;••_ '." reading; in^ ^-a^t^^'/^i^/tspesX /.'•:. ^ y : be wise,, bnt, there- ar^-^pnie"'^'©1

:.:'•• fhink^^^.dff|erehti^.;;;itTis.a.matteE;' in '';•_..:: whicit the-pespie of L4wi:^;C'6u^'ty;are. '..;; i»ier^te.aj.andvOu.s: coittmhi*iii be

.<;. : . ^©peia to.any^who n^^-.wiah;; i p .'discuss:

. -; ilwaabjeefe- ://'.;- - A'/^^:JC ':••:

ef great Interest to sdenftste and oth e r a , 5 3 * 9 s f e a t e m s s i t . I s to. . ih.& e f f e c t

. that anles?S«»-ha& 4sp§iiiai©-&£Stfe Sttalt-r*weet Qf.j Sl030!afIa a.-r,-wMGh ;bad..v^apftpted^^^ the; ;neigHbp|hppct of lhe^ei»:del ta ,ahd 4f ;SP: -must ha^p trav#Sdi oyer the^ Ifprtb Bola The prppf ithatifehad

:cpmefeomappintneartb©dei |a was -onthe ice-fioe; itseiC. Ifeha^ carried thisfiong ;distaheeu?f 3^50^ tt^W, Tthe; body bf c#e of the CB6W. of the. jmri-? •tiette?': The.^prppfs • that.vthie..lcerftoe .bore.the bojjy :and also marked arti-clea beiphgliag;to the -JedHnefte meife. a re ia id to be .indubitable. ;ThuS: 11

. appears ...that "nature ha&,.revealed ; w^atseipnty ts h ^ P Jpng been try ing to aseejtain that there is an open po

; Iar sea, never nhW now traversed by ;;man, and in this case ..by one from whom thevi ta l spark had long since ffecL Thnik^ of thfe lpng. and; dreary

r. voyage \oyer: a: frozen ;and; -"tsa'cklpss sea! .BetterJar that It W undertaken bygone, from whom thought, and feel' lhgi;antt:ahlmat3p|i.b?id^ gone than by any wh.a are'living.' .-• This poor man '.who lost his life in: the frbzQh regipris of the. jforth?thaS:' accomplished ttipre forselence; in his lohely and.aplitary vbyjgev acros3'th;e,polar sea, than all. his fellow aeamea Who'hsiy&so vamly tried, to. find this northern passage and thlaopeij^sea. • IIhy 'this'.unex^ pectbdr.discoyery men shall be deter­red hereafter from -riskiiig. the hard-sbjpg.andprivations. connected with artlc explorations,, then thi^nnforfu nate aaito'i; of the. Jeannette will have perfprmeda service, which must enti­tle him to the^ gratitude ot all.man-kind. But we;.shall -hg,.greatly misr taken if some reckless—not to say insane-i-man does -not undertake to traverse the same waste nf [Waters in 1$eas3u:mp£ipn that what has been

^secomplished by. the dead nqayalso be performed. by:: the • living... This .dfcebyeKyi then^lrnstPad ..Qi^tisfyiflg-may p#ve.pnly anihcentivBl^ ^rea^ Jsre ffQitsytovJispoverand'/'i ^^ sea. .which, t&i. <3reat-infihlte never inlesded should be .visited..or seen by :ni8a:'';.: \v.v ; ° - %::•'.. ::'-..-i.<:'':x•' •;pie • Efsimftjy* ;'A!inenc0:, sn'ggeits;

spmetbih?:-bb^ter tih^nlthese1 *trbtic:

:eipl0ia(ap&a: ?whicb- are; ralW'ays at* tended ^jih; great danger and risk 6f I1%V "• The/sagge'stipn .ft that a self-iegiatering apparatus be placed Upon ide-^QSaas-St^ means Qf extending our khpwledge eiihe.ftozen'ifpicth, TJhe suggestion. I sa .gpbd one and worth t ry ing^ ' ' 'V .-;''-'.;1'?""'". •'.' ' ". •'""'

B e c e p t l o i i t o Mje,JE*ar<s.\

GEIVERAt GOBDOIV D E A D .

T h e M a s s n e r e a t K h a r t o n i y .

. •Hew'S'P^ Feb.. -16.—The .invitar tipasha.veissued; for the recption to be given to. Senatorf-elect Wiliiam* M, Eyagteby the Union Ipagtte clnb on

Fr iday night. The Republican mem­bers pCbajn; jbranehps •bf t he ; legis

slafuifei.- the v Bepubiican . sepators ; w|:&c^tein>.Mr. :Eya*£&'W-ffi;Boon,take ib^a8eatifhfe3ebabjica and abput 20: iepreseh^tlve Sephpli-can editors-of thpstate. have. bJeeri ::ln-;ylteot tobei ptele'nt,'; Tjtie .reeeptlpn '•^^•ibe'i^$:'M;.^o,Jarg^ hali: bf the ctub ^.pdse^iwhfch wiil be decprafed With .ftoweraY Twp-band8 willfurnish" njasic,^udgeHoah Bavis, fhe ;.Smb. v^^•ijre8M&ii"6{••th>•'.cllifr,' will pr.e-sentShh Quests: "to- Mr., ^varfer At present i t i s ffitended; to have pnly two speeches;^On& wii lbe thff address of^ welcomeland CPhgialutei'ttpn to Mr.:

Evgf?te;aud^ae;^^^other-hisfesponse. :A; ;eoi}ationwillfapieryedafter the' re- ' -cepMonand^eait galleries will be thrown open. Ifcis intended that thp: .eshibitipn »f paintingEf shall be of Ifreat rfcMe#and variety^ v

T h p J&aiJif, Ifeips a p p e a r s t h i s m o r n -

General. G j K d o ^ I t publishes; the followinj* from.0akdol: "^atiyfa who eseabigd fcomKhartoam say that Gordon was killed wh^p leaving his house to..raliy,the faithfut troops. The latter : w.ere cu i down to a man, and for hours the town was a scene of -mejeljessalaugbter^npt even the wo^ menand children being spared. All the. potables were, killed except the treacherous pashas and their folio w-,ersE . ' . ' ' " . "

A.. Gubat dispatch^.to the Daily telegraph, states that it was reported there that-General Gordon was killed January.27.

The following details of the killing of General Gordon and the fall of Khartoum are received: "On the day of the capture. Which is variously stated as the'Sftth and '27'Eb of January, Gordon's attention wa& attracted by a tremeudoas tumult in the sireets. He left his • so-called palaeP, or" government building. ID

_which he had madehia headquarters, to ascertain the cause; Ashereached the street, he was stabbed in the bacis and fell dead. The. tumult was. caused by the mahdi's troops, who had gain­ed access to the Interior of the town thrpug.h treacherj'.artd who were soon, in complete possession of the placp, including the citadel.- A fearful mas^ saere of- the garrison followed The scenes of slaughter are described as. surpassing the Bulgarian atrocities and rivaling the worst horrorsof the Sepoy mutiny. The. panic stricken Egyptians were captured in their flight and put to death with the most fiendish tortureSi Some were trans­fixed with spears, and' left to bleed to jdeath.. The most of thevietlmis were mutilated In a horrible manner. Their eyes : %ere gouged out, their noses were slit and their tongues torn out by the "foots; In many ca*es mutila­ted parts.of ;the. victims'.bodies were thrust into their mouths-While they wer.eatilt living. - The massacre in^ cludM>miny: iion, coMhataBts, Tb.% Egyptian.;. woBuen were, subjected- to. shame'fulIhdighities. • . i lprethan 100 w.omen and ypung girls'. were • giyeh oyer, to the mahdi's followera to be used as slaves. After the slaughter, inahy Arabs were seen rushing about the . streets with the-headsj id the •Jlg-yntiahs impaled upon their spears. . The.next night was spent ina.'satar-inalia of blood and debauchery. * •:.

The mahdl has repaired the fortifi­cations .and made Khartoum well nigh impregnable.; Se : has. made It his permanent headquarters, and is said-to have ah abundance of. guns and ammunition.

word hearcl from him was that he could hold his position for 20 years. He was sent out from England just a year ago, and the story of his travels is M l of adventure, Iu 1881 Mahom­et Aehmot of Bpngola announced to the world that he was directed by. God,- and under the title of aiadni called to his standard all the tribes around. Islam, Kardofan and : the Western Soudan to battle wi th hinj in the cause of universal equality-ahd a community of goods. BEicks Pasha the Eigllsh commander and " the Sower of the Ewyptiatt troops, were swept away by the False Prophet,; who next turned his banners; toward Khartoum and Assum and the other. towns along the line of the Bed sea held by English, garrisons. Qol. Goetlogan% 6,000 troops could not. leave Khartoum, for outside the Mahdi's forces stood ready to cut them to pieces. The Eaglish press, after the publication of an interview with Chinese Gordon, in Which the general said evacuation meaut-deafb, .demanded that h.e be sent to the Sou­dan to treat with the Madhi, and on January 18,1884, he left London. The first Word of hope that came to the E lglish soldiers at Khartoum was in tbe spirited tolegranx.they received from Gen. Gbcdon when hs> reached^ Carlo. I t ran thus: "You arPmeh; not Women, Be not afraid. I am coming." ..

Gordon traveled by rail, boat and dromedary, and at every village through the valley of the Nile he called the petty chiefs to him and in­vited them to Khartoum, there to discuss the independence of the Spu-dan. The .three years of. warfare, which the popple had waged" under the leadership of the Mahdt had been fruitful only in devastated villages, and they seeihed very anxious to break their disagreeable union with the false prophet, But in. order to pacify the Mahdl he prodatmed him Saltan of Kdrdofan, at Which time he cabled to England that his success had eclipsed his hopes. A t Khartoum he Was proclaimed the savior of a' people, He took off half the taSes and burnt; the ' assessment rolls in the market­place. The doora of prisons were thrown open and political prisoners freed. In March came the first rum-oss from Kofdofan that.the Mahdi. had brganlzad an a tmy of St30,0.00mett and come but to rid the country Of both infidel and Tu'tk, Fanatics from all parts answer'ed.his call, ahd'then Gordon discovered that the road from Berber to Suakih?, by which, in case of just such an event as occurred, he; he could; escape with his garrison,was closed and guarded by the lalse prophet. O'a March J5 &6rdon, with. 3,000 men,foujcbt the battle of Sal^ fiyehj and through the., treachery of two pachaSi whpm'ha afterwads shot, was defeated. Qeh.,Graham captured Tokar andwon .a victory'from Qa-man Bigna, but Qordonr seeing the roads closed behind hini,sent word "to England that'uulgsibe ^aS- sppedlly assi3tfi.d;.'G^aham^s» 'victory;, would .go for naught,. and his. n?ach ne'eded

helpdid not leave j^ngiaisd until Sep­tember under Wbiseley's coHimand,

,. W U a t l t I s — W l i a t l t P q e s , - • Hood's Sarsaparilla is made of sar-8aparilIa,dandslionrmandrake,cnerry •bark, uvaursi,'dock,, aud-bther valU" able medicinal ^ agents Iohgahd favor* .ably.loiown for their power in eradi­cating) ;dls'ease and piirifyihg the blbbdi I t will cure, when., i a th6 ..pbwet. Pf. medicine, Serofula, Salt. Bheuoi, J)y.6pepsia, Headache, Con-stipatibn*,1SiIiaasnp8s,QeneraiB.ebility Paihs in theBack.^idney pomptaint, Catarrh,Female Weaknes»,OanGei;ons '.BCumPrs, Humor«.of. the Face, filng-worm, ^impleSjIJlcersvSoreSjTumors,, geal'd. Bead, and. all diseases .Rising. from.ah Impurestate pr tow epndition' :.0f- the blood. Hbbd'a Sarsaparilla is. made by ,0 . I , Hood & Go.* .Lowell, Mass. , Sold by all druggists; $1, six for $5; , •

C a a t o r i n . W.Uett Baby * a s siofe; wo ga-ye her Castorta, W h e n she was * GUM, she erisa for OaBtoria, ^ i e n Bhsymn a Miss, she Qtangta Csstorja, •^sf fSh«'had-paf ldret t , . «he gftfe t&eta Oas-

-;;tprlfc;,;;_.-'. .-.-•\ .'••'• . _ 'isyi-,-

ed anxiously at i|hartbam - mttipitm-nniwpii>iuruin* 1"

•: '^lEiiE^A^teaf.-eirr^ " ^ l i « * t w a m , t h f t C a p l t a i o f t j i e E a y p t t a n

iSotMliiH—Its Strat«ffl««t.Xlttu»orli»iice, j

of my Ideas concerning Homer's influ jnce in the world, styles-me "learned." I donot claim the honor of the title, thpugh I hope to earn it, e'er I . leave the world, t a rn only a learner, a sto^-dent, a seeker after truth, and conse­quently I arn not laboring to "be con­gratulated by moatof theLewis Coun­ty- divine's," npr by a few.fif them. My-parpose in-writing these- articles, is to rest myself "of evenings,, and. partially tp draw my mind .from a domestic bur­den known to most of my friends, - My purpose in publishing them, as express­ed in the opening-paragraphs of the ;first,;|s t'p aid "many boys and girls of Lewis Oountyi'.'.not to draw congratu­lations from "divines," Frora'thelalter I wish to lear%henee I.thank'Rev.Mr. Beiner for his kindness in calling in' qaestion any statements of mine which he deerhs erroneous. '

The gentleman first objects to the statement that students of Home| Ac­quire' Someric styli. My last 'article-does not claim that this is the-case wife-. "allJ' But I do. hold that it is. true of many.. I watched carefully the progress of m'y school fellows, and observed the. fact that their essays and" orations took on a hew and vivid coloring which savored much of ''Homer, while they wer& studying that author. Without knowing it they used the simile, "Ho-.mei's own. figure," with-new andstrik-. i h g p o w e r ; I T h e i r r a i n d ^ w«Jnt i a t o t h ^

r e a l m o f t h e s u b l i m e a s t h e y h a d n e v e r

before gone within my knowledge of them. . ; . Some of them, no doubt, lost the Ho-

weric impulse as time rolied on. But with few of theim I Jintm, Homer holds the place he won in student days and that with growing power. I see it in their productions, sent me through

•the mails, . . I bring to-bear-on this point, the tes­

timony of a. great educator, a man of soubdeep eloquence, :a profunnd schol­ar, one who can' speak no more, save through his written tforks, and by his an written lectures to students, for this very winter he suddenly passed away. I refer to ProfessorJohn. J » i e s Lewis, LL.D. of the.Matfisph Uhiyeraity. One morning our rhetorie class was disciis1-sing the figures of the Bible a? com­pared with those pf Homer and Ossiab, Our belayed teacher became flushed in face, and eloquent to speeoh, as' he talked of the subUWtyof Seripture Bg-ares, .saying, ;\ff read'aright; they would sti-Mie' ti-3 like a 8a?h of sualight at midnight;!7' . . ' ; ' .

Then a member gf .the 'Class asked, "Why not dispense with the'dradgery pfsfiudyiQg thet'Greek then; and draw' . our models wholly; from the .scriptures rather than from Horner'?" The pro* feasor used the" remainder of the hour in showing that the greatest statesmen

• of England and America,' were men who were "fdll pfHamer." H& quot­ed passage after passage • to" prove his point. .He'then named many iawyers and clergymen whose career he had watched. .He said that those of great­est depth, of rhost power, were the men oh whom -fipmer bad left., the deepest impress. He ' believed, that without •Homer 'we eould^attain'-cerlain heights, but higher We could not cilaih.without the clasaie p'Qwefr.to'be derived'rfirbm' the study pf .;0-reek*.- parWc.hlarJy-the Greek of Booaer. "He backed every statement wilj tlxua. m o r t t g e d ty, that Hom^ of thousands; elements 01

Though I can eo.m and tell of an

My friend asks.if I will "kindly point out which of" the preaehlng of Chrfst and His apostles was. done in Greek f : I will try. Paul, the apostle of-the Gentiles, furnishes abundant illustra­tions. See him at Athens on the" Sill of Mars, surrounded by'the shrines of heathen divinities, and In the presence

. of a multitude who were wont to drive from the platform, a.speaker who dared to insult them With inferior eloquence, in what other tongue than Greek, think you, did he exclaim, "Ye. men of Athens, all things which I beheld bear witness tp your' carefulness in religion. For as I passed through your city and beheld ' the objects of your worship, I found among them att al­tar with this inscription, To * H E tTsi-, KSOWN Gop. ' Whom,-therefore, ye worship, though ye know -Him not, Him declare I unto you."

The detailed life pf St. Paul shows tb'at he and his-companions expended a large part of their time and labor among people of Greek extraction. I t follows then, that they must have, ad­dressed those people in their own lan­guage, Greek. Paul's many letters to-the churches were sermons in Greek.; TheTeachin/sc of the Twelve Apostles,';. re'cently brought ip light, is a Greek manuscript illustrative of.-the point under.consideration..'

As evidence that Christ and his more immediate followers had occasion often to use Greek, note the following from Conybeare and Howson, where they speak of Palestineat the time of Christ; "Greek arid Roman names were; borne' iff multitudes of those Jews who'caqae up to worship at the festivals. Greek and Latin words Were current in the popular 'Hebrew* of the dayJ' They' then add, "Greek had long been well-kuown atidpng the upper classes in the large towns". Christ preached wher­ever he coald drop a word or good "deed,

, whether the persons addressed were of the uppefor lower class. Is it reasons able to suppose that He and His follow-:

Cra would pass. by the upper .classes, proud of their Greek, rather than ad­dress them in that tongue? Bather, have we not many instances of such being converted to Christ ?

The other languages in which Christ's followers preached; are numerous and. World-wide.

Largely nurse! in the Greek tohguei Christianity was soon expounded in •nearly .eyery language;, as circumstan­ces or Convenience required.

Yours very respect-fully, • LEONARD T. COM:.

Educational C0I1111111 H E K R Y C. S P R X H A M , BEfiCQR.

Teachers arid school officers are in­vited to furnish matter'for this c*plu'mn-Address . BE, G. HORTSAic. '

A SI>JBJ|R, recently observed in the M e of Wight,dragged twolpr three leavesip the shores fastened tihem to-gethPr with Its webf iaunched the craft and sailed away oyer the pond, leaving i t to dart and dive after flies andother game,returning with them to the raft to be devoured.

A BOY twelve yearsold Was theim-portant. Witness, in a law suit. One ;of the lawyers, after .erossr-questipnlng him severely, said • ' [ Y p ^ father has been talking to yovi and telling, you how to testify, basnet.he?" "Yes," said the boy,' "JP6.W," said'the. law­yer ,^jhst tell us how your father told you to testify." "-Well," said the boy, modestly,"father told me thelawyers Would try and tangle, me in my testis mony; but If I would just-be careful and tell the truth, I could tell the Same thing every tlme?'-

Khartoum. may-be.called the gate of central Africa. Bar.QP.ean.. civiliz-atjon centers at one side, of the city and African barbarism comes in at the other'. Baypnd ithartoum from the north few tourists have ever made their way, and beyond Khartoum from the south few- sayageshave ever ventured. As the entrepot of the pror dttcts of central- Africa, Khartoum is a place of some eommercial import­ance. Among the 35,000 people who make up its populatloh there are many Greeks and Italians, while two or three Americans here find prpat able investments in fttrnishing beads and other triumpery, to the, savages from Kirdofan, E( Obeid and D-ir-foun The town now. contains about 3,000 houses,, mostly of mud and millet stalks, and. in only .a few in­stances arranged in streets or squares The goveraor'tf house is the principal, building in the city, i t stands bn the river bank, and Gen. Gordon says i t is as large as the Marlboroughlhouse London, . - . • . - • .

There have also -been constructed some of her buildings of importance Kb artoum Ilea oh the sbuth bank of tbe Bahr-ei-Azrak, or Blue Nile, a mile above (south of) the junction of that river with the Bahr-e^Ablad-, of White Nilp^and the city walls reach to within less than half a mile of the latter, so that the garrison of Khar­toum commands both stream*. On the other side of the . White Nile ia the terminus of the great caravan route to Dohgola and the fortified camp from .whieh "Gan. Hicks's 111 fated expedition set out. Opposite Khartoum is the Island of Tail, di­viding the.Btue Nile into two branch­es.; Theci tyls . thus• the .mos t im­portant po3i,;strateg-icalIy considered, on-'the uppe'r,:^"iie,;a'ttd: is the natural centre 'Pf 'miUta^y/;pawer-'".'ih- the. eqnatorM proyinceSr Jhpne other r i s p e c t i t i s e V e t l m p x e ' i m p p r t a n t ' . t p

E>ypt. I t is at; Khartoum i i i a t the . Mlometer records the rising' :of the waters and indicates to the farthers of the Delta the influencp the melting snow will exercise.upon the volume .of thestream upon wnich. their- pros­perity and very e^istenijedepend;;. '-

B i b l e Worlt: A t - T h e 3 V « w O r l e a n s • . E x j S o a l t i o n ;

The American - Bible Society, has secured the privilege of placing the 'Scriptures in. various .-languages on sale a.nd for gratuitous distribution

. in the main building of the Cotton Centennial Exposition at New .Or­leans.. I t has been thought very de­sirable to reach- not only the English-speakinaf population, ' but •' especially thPsewbo.tPadthe Spa'nish,Boiftgttese Ger'mfeU) ^hd French' languages. v.It is believed that-niahjr persons-, fiom; .Mexico* Oentsal Americaj and -.Sbflth America maythus be supplied: with the wordof life who could not- easily beireaehed afany other tithe or place. This woj?k will pall fee-very, consider­able extra' expense, which; I t - i s believed n^any will be willing to 'aid theSbeiety' in "meeting, '• b y special ..and prompt contributions.-to its. treasr iiry. Such ePntylbhtiohs are earnest­ly solicited.

Bay's Horse and-Cattle Ppwdei? cleanses the liver,' regulates the- bow­els of all kinds of live Btock, and as an alterative is without an equal in the Market.. Price 25 cents per pack*

;.a!^-.-.. !-.-^.':"-:-'"/.;-' • '.; :y.:\;:

T H E forms of greeting atb almost as varied as are the races of mankind.. In the ancient, days the Gr.eek9j.in-stead of saying, "the top of the morn­ing to you !" would wish ope to be Pf "good cheer," while t he Bomans Would say,"Health and safety to yout" But in China the form ,ef salutation seems to be quite funny. The Chinese expression for. "good .'morning" means, "Have you eaten your rieef and is your, stomach working Weli?'?. That would sound very, strangely to­ns, but people become accustomed to all sorts of salutations^ .

JPocs Alcol»<»l W a r m U s ?

shin-bon<h wnile the hand is ih , a straight line with the:fprev-artoi: <T:he foot,; too, is, built longer .and heavier thah the band, for i t bears the Whole-Weigb-tofthebbdyi . \ ;

Tnis ia-jft. plain stoi-y of the frame" Work; of our bodies,, inside of which arp the organs* and fastened to which are the muscles which make the body ahactjye thrngjobeylnl; :theipeS8ftge6 carried bV the nerves frphi the piihd, whichgoyernsitali.. -.'V _j-

. '•; Ever yours trulyi. '. ' ' - " : V. ' '• '" H ^ B . ' " ;

Threie Recuiiarttte$; fiO.0d*s Sicsap'aiiUa,-thjB greatMoodjaitifier

and legulatiiig. inedtciiie,is phawctenzed t>y . -.t)lreepeciUHatitieSi-Ba&ielyi ; - . . .

- "Xfie-com1)iuatioii 6i'tlie;VaTlon3 lemedisiagehtsused.-"• .

51ieproporM6B:in-wluelith63coot3y herte^Tjarks, etc., are raised.

. . . - - ' .. - - -.. - ^ ' Tlie-jirocess^by "wlileli t i e aetiT'e jnediohmlprojeitiesaresecure'd.

Xlie restat i s amedleine- oniniisiral strength andcnfatlve power, -which effects'cures i e r e -tofore uriegualled. ShesepecUliarffies Ijefeiig exclusively to Howl's SfesaBarSlla/aM a i e

• •*. Unknowii to Others fe : . H o o d ' s Sarsaparilia i spreparea ; .w% the ^•eatest«kul-a ,nd care, t-y ^harraaBists of educatibiianaiongexBerience., fieaeeltjs.a

. medieine worthy qf.entire cbnflaence. "p^oii .suffer f t w a sorMiOa, salt rheum, or .any.diS; «as'e o f tl iettoodidyspepsla, Wlionsaess^ sicE ieadache , OT; iddhey.'asd.'iiyer.' complaints, catarrh or rh.euraaysm,; 40 i o t Tail to tig

' ' j recommend-Hood's Sarsapariiia jo.ali; aiy't iaehds as the. Jjest tilood pirMer on earffi." W M . fe^J^j a^uggi4,;Himilton,-0'.

' 'Sood'sSarsapargla^cure^meiOt-S^^ -ntoiis humor, a i d abne; me ^paeis':<)f;:gopa otherwise." ^ ; . A . 3 ^ o m i

: A r n 0 l d i M e . . . - . A hook containirig inany addteonall.state-

liients of cures-wihhesenttb'aU-wJip'deslre. -.-

Sold h y all druggists,' S I ; s ixfbri55. . . i tada' . «&yl3ye.I . iOob. .&'-eo'^^Qwai , :M^ss. ' &.

:. -.IpO^jpose^- rt&/-"^ll;aiv-'•-

..-. • •:- " ^ w i r o r e o t ^ ' i ; •. •',' '.. •'Mik. for ;<Bongta:.:0tt fjonghkj for <}6iiituif.

•ColdB.^bife OJhroftt, Hoatsenegpi Trochia»JI5c.;:

3jiq.iild;,25c,-.. :• ;; '"r1"-;'^..; . , - W - .ii'•=• ••.."-.:''.'.'•.'••••:." ""• "'Bo#<sa oSiStA&ti" ;" v ':;-- ;: ."=•.; •_^fearS o&t: f s t s , ,iaice,, ri&phes^ ftiea, * » U , bed-bugs, ituiiksjcli lpmnjiltSjSOphecft, JSe. , PrngglSts / - . . ' V - •- - •-""-- -' . '"r -•' '.•'- -•'• ••-. • ' ;. :-.'.:'.;3ffie43xE*iNS.'. . . . ..-. . .>- . , ' ... Eftlpltation, I)ropsic«I«*ellrngsV3Dl^zzliegiiv ".-XJadlgestlori'.; SeadaBlie, SteepleBBneHs,-cured. . *y"*'Wells' He'aitfr^&eweii?', , -: ,_ -: •.=-•

•".•"••'• ''SotrctBfONjCpB-WSi'^4 • ; - . . , ' ; ; : • A s k for: W e h s ' r*>»bngb^^ On. Cbrni i* ,J5fc * Qtilbk, complete cure . Hard, olrtto"ltiDO»ri«,-.•wartisvBniilons. ; ;,-. - ":• - ;,'. .••..-.•••';-,.

' ^BOKGH-^N^AW'^^OBOIJfllBP' ^JffiMT^OL^.

Bkensthenhig,iiap|6.Te<i :t4&e :*estfor !bM^ itbliB, pains i u cti»Bt a n d ilcle, i h e u m a t l M a i Tieuralglfi,. - ..". . '".• ,".••- . . . . . - • . . ; . . :

••.--..:'--..'; J : .THiBrEBOKCB,:.; :..;; ;'.' -• " W S I I K ' . h e a l t h K e h e * ^ " restores hea l th -' and "vigor, cures Dyspej^la," Headache, Ner-vpTiSness.Debintyi.*!.' ; -.-;.; •-'. . : ;

•<-. "• - •'; '. WHpoEisP0<itr&B:. . ' . ' .-;

'and SiBraaTiy-ThrOai^Affectionsof chtldren; prompt ly , 'p leasant ly anasifelyarellev'ect b y >;Rbngn on.JCongliti.'J as-ochen, 15c.; BahBiin, 25c ' ' - - ' ... ' -"- ; .- - : - - . - ' - • - -."-"-•' --".'.;•-'>' "MoiScEBS...;. .- ';"••-'-.;:•-"

If- y o u are lai l lng, broken, *brn ; ou t a i d •neryba»v 4so"WeHB' Health. 'Seneflrer.?*. f i : D'rugglst.- - -..' : :•••.•. ."-.- ..•-'••"'."": r V

.--: ' i i n ^ P B B s i E s a B . - ; - . : ' ; - . . ' .' -•• I t y;6u arff los ing , ybur-grip- «&' h fe . ' : i ry"

"Wells ' 'Healta. B'enesr.er." . S o e s dlfeot to. weat.spbfe.".- . . ' -•;''....'.-^. _:>; •;•';-• ;..: '•.

;•; ,->*B<)t/e^^fTb^tiBttpBQei'.••J':-'-'.;:."":: Ins tant rel ief f6z ileilralglfti Toothache.

Faeeachei-'AsK for-^Bbiigrl o n Toothache. ' ' 15and25cerlt8, -•;*• .••"-:•' .. • , . ' • , " ' . .;*"..

;..-\-.'lE'Bicahr'WoKBir;. •/ ! -.,.-';""' I n d i e s . * h b =-STOula-re'taltt ireshnesg i n d

-irl*acity.- © o t f t l a l l ' t b . t r y "Wells^ H«»I th Benswerj" •;•. .;'- > ;. ' ' ., . r .; -'• ;.

" • O A T ^ i ^ X " ^ ^ 6 ^ A ^ B C T i O K S t ~.-y '..-'. iHaCktn'g, irritating.;.Cb.dghfc• 'GoWs, \8br* • Thioat , cured by:".KQugh.'o»"Couglw,f - 5ro-•-Bhes, I5e;. I,lq.ujd,25(!. ,;: : . ; •-." - ' -

-".; ." . 'Ha^TOBDoirjio^f-'-.:; "'.. :- "- ;,. "llouglr On Itch." cores hiSiribrH> erHpaoni i

i lngwb'ims,; ^tSerVsalt rheum, ftbetad f e a t ; ettlliblalrlSi- *, • •: W;.:-. - .V '-•'-""-. '"•.-.•' ^

"-'„.'. TH^.HO?io*TH3EJKAXXOX. :;'-.' V '-."'. . : Ghiidreaji s loi? "la. de Wlbpment, J>ttnj

WiibE AvrAKi-

,1?

'&^?.'<

m£h

wer.. .0 'earned like Dr. Le'ftfis,

'wi'thJJr,' Reiner's Wish, JEhglish author with

Homer's style and Swell pf thought. That writer is John Milton, the .poet,

author of "Baradis'e Iiost.'r Compare this great poem with Somer's Iliad. Their similarity in places is striking. :

Blil'ton passed about" five'years in studying the classics after h"e had ffa-, ished Ms studies at the XJniversLty of Oambridga. When he became blind, his daughters read Greek to him. Very inuch of this classic study was devoted to Homers So some one has well- said of Milton, ,ltle loved to listen to the chime'of Homer's oceanic harmony." Without this wealth of Homeric learn^ ing, Milton would.never have written "Paradise Ijost!." . Prime Minister Gladstone is auotber Englishman who haa derived from Homer mauy elements of style, as lie himself admits. Read his speeches, and bp satisfied whether niueh 0^ u '^ power;.is not IIom nin' in origin.

Oue offB. Daniel Webster'la indebted to pomer for. many of the p'onderphs. .utterances that, electrified .the Senate, and shoofe t'he.'Natimi. Not that Web­ster transferred HaoiHr iu quotatbhs often, but he. Arnericaaizel rTomer. To obtain Webster's direct views, op this subject, read his- speech iu behalf of

. Greece, delivered on the fi jor' of Cons gross.

The gentleman quotes me thui, in regard to Homer's influence on Rome : "The orators of Rome have learned •their eloquence from' him-" So- he makes me say that the Rooaans learn­ed all their eloquence from Homer, "The orators of Rome learned elo* quence from him," is the statement undistorted, and IreUerateit with em­phasis X Read Cicero's I>e Seneetute. and jDe Orators for his own testimony on .the q uestton. His oration {for Arch-, las, the. paei. Is another prod.ubtkm which speaks for itself, his indebted-' hess.to the poetic world. When Oieei'Q. #6a'died. 'in: ''Athens,' Bomer '.was his prihc'|pal: theme..' ""• - •.-'''"•"

As fox Virgil,; the very eharaetera of: .his great poem,; the JEkiaidy were har­rowed from Homer, " When I read the JEJaeid under Professor palnier, he oft-:en called the attention of* my class to the lipmeric passages.therein. . I guofce the following from the: writ-*

lags of Professor B, i.iwreaee; "He [Virgil! wa^ .the most- Unscrupulous of pilferers, fransiates long passages from-riomer, and a;l:piost appropriates the' .Odyssey '!... (The Odyssey-is one'pf Ho» iher's poems,) ; '

Again the reverend .gentleman tnis-quotesme. ITtaW-notclaimed.-t.hat-the w^ofeofthe preaching of Christ and; Etisapostl.es w^s done in Greek,'but much of it. To that I also hold, and op authority which I never heard ques­tioned save by the-gentiemaa himself.

The Bev.'J. W.iiliaftis', A. M.', "Life and'Actions of Aljp;a0dfr the Great," is a portion of tlie^jithority which I am palled to give. Also Geikie*s'"I4.fe Of Christ;"aiud <"jphe Life and Epistles of St. Paul,w byGouybeare and How-gbn.; "Origin and history of the Books of the Bible," by P.rqfeasoj; S'owej Tbe General History of theCh ristiau church by Whomsoever written; '^Grote's-His-|ory offif-raece.j." mA uumerous other standard works-, among-them Professor 'Cischeaslorf'?- .Wr-itmgs,. concerning Greek If ew Testament manuscripts,

Sinqe my reverend friend q.dmite three-feuiths of-the arguipents about the langttageof the gospels of Matthew, aiai'k, iiuke and John, l a m quite wil­ling to let him dpubt the remaining fonrfchi. ., ••'-.•..-.';' - .

PtrUSGISG'. tUJEtO^ A B R I D G E ;

An... SS.ii-g-iiae. sind... S o a r , ,S3ars. W r e c k e d , aajd Six J?er»

s o n s Sti l led. ;

• 0»ESTQK., Iowa, Eeh. 9.r-r As train No, S, wesfr bound, on the Chicago,. Burlington & Q'iiney Bailrpad, ap­proached a bridge across a . smal l stream fen miles west of-this-city yesterday afternoon, it struck a bro­ken rait arid tilted along on the ties until it ran upon the-bridge. The bridge went dowhj carrying with it thb engine, tender, and baggage ear, and two coaches and a sleeper, con-, tajning from twenty to twenty-five passengers* ^ The following is a list of the killed and wounded.;

. ' K I E k E D , • ' " ' ^

apbert Brown, Civil Engineer, of Mount Pleasant. Iowa; bis soa,-Q. A, Bfbwn; Mrs^ W.O. Oarroii of gan Siche; Col. ? ifra. William'Butfcry'; Mrs. M. Farrell.'wlfo nf Section Fore*

' "aterman, Oprnlhg, I'oWa. . -wbBsrbED.

H. S. Stbrrs, Train Blaster of thp Western Division, arm broken; A. B . Cole, Grahd Bipicls, Mich., slightly j C. H, IJarle, conductor of the sleeper, arm broken; J, E. Hawkins, conduc­tor, hip and back iijjqred'; Mrs. H Bay, Buriingtorj,. Iowa, seriously hurt; W. J. Bivenporfc, Division Freight; and Passenger Agent of the Cliic ig'o, Burlington and Quihcy road, bruised severely but not dangerously,.

One or two of the wo«hded are not likely to recover. • The engineer was killed at his post. The accident was probably the result of a br-oken rail, caused by the cold weather.

A patient Was arguing, .with bis doctor the necessity of his taking a stimulant.He urged that he Was Weak and heeded it. [ Said .he; . "But, doctor, I must have

kind of a stimulant, j am chid, and ItWarms'me#,, "',.-"

"Precisely," came the doctor's ansr. wer, "Sep here,'this stick is cold,-'' faking, up a stick of Wood frpmthe bos beside the hearth and tossing i i into the fire, "now it is; warm; but is ths:stick benefited?'?' ; , ; . . ' ; '

The sick man watched Vie WOod first send out little.puffs of smpkp,aha, therji-; burst into, flame, and replied': <l0f course.not'5 it is burhing.itseif t"

"And sb areybu when .'yon warm ypUrself with alcohol;. yon are literal­ly, burning, up the delicate .tissues^ of'• your.stomachatidbrain,". . j . , 6 l yes, aicohbl ."will warm ypa upK

but who finds the JuelS- Wheniyouv take food, that is fueljand a s i t barns, out ypu keep warm. Bttt when yon take alcohol to Warmyou, ybu. are.; like a man Who sets his house on fire and warms his . fingers by i t • as i t burns.

A .^•'ISPXTr'F Q u a n t e d 'for'-.TheviiWes or ._aL\3fjDiIN X D a l l t b e P r e s i d e n t s o f the TJ.S: The iarcest,.liai3dsbraest,l)est book: ©yer s o i a f o r l e s s ffian*pftc&ojir_grlcje. The'Iastest

Rnrrie se l l ing b o d k i n America.- iSnraense profits to-- * agents - , Mfinitell igentpe6plfeTyatit. it , . Jia»y

one c a a b e e o r a e . a . saceessfulagent." Terms free.- HAJa^Er.BooK Go.,Pbrtlaiid;iKlalne.'-

Hpocl's Sarsaparilia, Sbldtjy Morrlsbii'iB' -Moore, liOSTVille, Jkesflsepuht?,Sf,3C,

THS'.MSRKETSi;

GHEBS-EPACTOBT BLAJSTKSJ .O? reports ;Of sa les to.patrons, of mbstapprbyedE. formk, B a n t e d . C f f i i l i P L T and ^ p ^ e j c n Y .at the office of t b e ^ Q y v t l l e y j f e s . . . ;; " •_..

l , o w v i l l e •2Btacl£.e.t.'"' .-

GorreejSed aaid Itevlsed' W4ei ly . ' ; • • - • ' • " , ' • . -. lioWVII.ii8;l ,eb.;12>, 1885^

'•;"' --".' - ' • - . . ETJTiEn. •-•:. • •-;;.; -. -.:>-.

Kenewer,^

three or four hours eYery i i ignt cbnfWng. Qetlrnmediate-rellel^^arias'orfnd real* By Using ". WeQls' "Bough bri- X3pu£hs." Tfbchis: '.15b.; . -B'alsarai'Soc;--;-." r.'. ', ' .V-'. - .. ; ' r . ; •"'-'-; •;

^SotrGKOK-feiaaf^i P o i b T i ^ ^ . . t e ^ T i B J j - -Streh£tnenhig.3mprbv$a,&ebestrforbwSfe ;

ache", pain In ch»st or side, iheusaaUraa, i i e u - - ; raigla,,.;: ... :;>_:_/.;• _^s;lj:.:yr:S:.% . ^ J ^ _ WEI/IS'"REMEDIESfor:Sale b$-: .'•':?' "-'.-"''

. Morrison: &MoptB.-JjQW'sanej SF, X . "•:

WM BlSf•* 0HM131E: S5.40lyps 38 o&^j.OTAacre-.OKaaiTnBPi;,

Any-.bne s e h d l n g m & t i i e adflres&Df 10-iaar--rled perBons, aiidJ!8^ent8 -whl- rebelyeaayxer turi irnal l a pacfesi'ge <jf-jgooaslih&t jietf|3;«>, Including, a n extra heayy epld-plated ring -worth SI. I J i a v e a flfte var i e ty of gop^,-fl.-p.d_ rnai:e'th,lB sacrifice toig'ecuremtjrre orders.pn wMchJDe^ectrbyjpTOfitfl. ,-Ariyflne*M%tt*v ahuBhel-brnxtoney toy-acting.sow. AddreMf -;J. .b,Heriry,:Boi;l^,BttfIaIo,Jf:. 'S. \^2SrX:.

Qrearn?ry_ ,<Chplce^ .^0®

A.a Err3n!r WSX« Si»tt! a w . i j wi tJ i SXer

.iNDlAssrA.POXjiSj.Ind,,. Feb^ 3.^.A somewhat' new thing, in the elope? ment, line is reported from. J)Arling­ton, Montgomery Opuuty, Wedae-3-day. last a fellow from Virginia^ known as M. j. Tomliason, left-With the. wife of llirvey Shauver, a pros^ perous.youag farmer Mviug^five miles north of tha+ plaea' Mr. Shiuver and Wife wore'thou^ht to be. living hap-r pilyj' with three beautlfii litte chil-. drea, • Mr. Sbauver's suspicious, were -aroused by ohn of fhe little fellows telling him that the' m4j >r who -was a farm hand, "kissed ma and ma kissed m?j"or." Mr; Shahver took his wife to task for such action. She did not deny it,and also stated that she would kiss him just when she pleased. Sir. Shiuver chastised her for her conduct and paid the maj^r off, telling Mm that he wouldgivc him until Wednes* day tb leave. This' seemed to raise the ire of Mrs. Sh-rayer and she quickly gave her husband, to under­stand that she would go with the dis­charged min. Mr. 8'nauver kneltin •pr xyer and prayed long and fervently that mat thoughts should not be en­tertained by his Wife,- bat his.prayers WPUld hot soften or change her heart. Ji-in Shaa-ver .gave-her'alll-her belphg-tngs-'and the baby, "a beantjfui 'boy & years old; he helped her. into the S l e i g h t u c l j e d t h e w r a p s c l o s e l y a r o u n d

her.atJd, with tears almost streaming from his eyes, kissed her and the child goodbye, tellling her he hopod and prayed she wopld bs satisfled' with heriihjudged undeEtaking.. The couple slatedthby were'golng to Orer «ob>;; • ' . . - - . , - i : , : - . . ? . '.-:.'"•' ;• - ' " ' : '

An i m p o r t a n t R f J l l n k .

Oahlscharge to the jury, in the case of Ferguson against the Mutual Aid ' and .Accident Association of Bochester, on Wednesday, Judge Yaun made arulin'g of importaneeto the hentficiariespf eo-operatiye in-:

surahce eompahies. He charged the jury that if a person, in his applica-tiph for insurance, answer^the ques­tions coneermBg.hla health, and phys» ical eonditionaecerding to the best of. his kBowledge and. belief; the compa-ny,lf it accepts th.o applicant, is hold-on for the insurance in'case of dea'h, even if it enouid be discovered that the answers to the questions were hot correct. In ^pther words,' the co tnpa-ny must, pay the . insurance or proye that the insured told deliberato falsehoods about his health, and phy­sical condition when be took out .the.; polhyr. The defense took an except tion to tbe justices charge.. The jury immediately agreed upon a verdict for tha pianteff, awarding to ajrs. ffexguspn the amount pf her husband's InsarahcejlajSQO.D'O,.'. .

FHl fS IOl iOG^ AND H ¥ G I G N E .

TUe D o c t o r ' s /(-fetters Oft TSte B o n e s Of T i e l.iii|l»s.

so. x. Bear Pupifsj . . ' . ' " J Bort , c igar , boU

ThP fcrunfe of yuu.- hodies coHtains PotSit Tefa11-vvfest are called the, vital or^«o-,^s&«# jtylM i% the organs that keep you alive'-S.o, the frama-Wprk of it Is ma.de;hbilbw and also very solid ahd.sb$hg to prb-teet.Its precious contents. . . , ' • ' "

But thelimbSithebranchesfromthe trunk, are built oh a differeqt platu They are made for motion. . Two sets of limbs which are very much alike, branch out frona.^the, trunk-^the arms and the legs.... .'.."'

Tjie upper iimbs are attached to the trunk by the : cllJar bone, Which Is shaped 1 ike an / , It Is fastened to'the breast bone and the first rib atone, end, and the shoulder blade at the other. It holds tbeshoulder joint out from the breast, and gives the arm plenty of room. The shnlder bladeis a thin, fl rt bone, shaped l i s ea trian-r glo, wiih a shdHow socket that the upper arm hope fits into. A t the oth­er end this connects with the long slender honeVof fore-arm.mafciQgtbe e'ifto w j oint.'- The wrist is where the fore-ar in and the hand eome-togetheri Hare thpre are two rows'of very ir­regular bmes One row formsthe jpinihg. with fhe arm, the other with the hands, • ; " . - • ' "

These little bones i re so fitted .tor gether that the hands|ca& be moved easily from side to si(^ (and back and forth, for while it is very ^important that the arm should move free and the elbow easily,it is still more so that tbe hand, should be very supple, at the wrist; for just think of the things the hands do with those two motlonsbaek and forth, and from side to side;!_

The hand is made up of five sets of bones, like five long fingers starting at the wrist, all but one having five bones to a'set. The one has four. The longest bones,are covered together, to the first joints, making the palm of the band ; the. others make the thumb and the fingers; Mo two Of the fingers are exactly the samel length, nor the same siae, but they are regulated so. skillfully that they alj'.fit elp'setyih-side the hapdWhen,i| is Shut, and'" are able also, to dp manj|.deftahdcfever t h i t i g s . - - . - •'••/."•'". ;-.. •-•••' f - ' ; . " - -•-•-•.•••-

The' upper limbs arfe foulit firmly, to bs light and move freply; but it is iar to deep socfeetsof the hip %onea that the lower limbs fit, for there is-iiot so much need of piay! here as in the shoulder; but strongthigh bones must have good fastenings, for they bear the weight of all abpve'them. -ThM; .is. the largest and sttphgest of^all the bones; At the lower jend it formB the]

L knee-joint with1 thblstrge,' inside bone of the. leg (called the'.Min-bbnk) A-small cbestniit-shaped bpne:ealled the knee^pan is fastened over the jbintfor prPfectton. Theleg has also a. slender ontside bone which is firmly fastened; to. the shin-bohejust below the kkee, and again at the ankle. - This bone is to giye more snrfacafbr the muscles, as there would not be enough -on the-shin-bpne alone. • -' ' . " . " . '

The legs- are not,.called upon, to make, so many\ different: motions as.' the arms; • but it is all heavier work, and.with some people very constant work, too. So it is necessary to nave p l t i ty oimusGle room. Think how it is With yourselyeg. Why, except when you have to sit still ypu are us­ing -those leg .museles all the' time, Walking, running ahd'jumplhg.

The shin-bone is Jointed with the foot very muehas th9f6re.arm is with the hand. The bo.iies of the foot are. sxrauged on about the same plan as those of the hand, with enough- sjfcff-* erenceto.fit them for their separate kinds of work. j

. The ifpot•!$. at rfgM angles with tfce

ffafr'td Q.6ba-. ..„ 18'®2Q:

25

3Vresb„iiew, l a jars.-i;—^_. ilUiul_U.-^- i. "; '••': EGGS;- '• - ' -'• •'•'

E r e s h , (cash pr ice}^^- .——_-~- .•—— ~ -TtTSTATT. EKIOE OtTBiiENT, ' . . . . . fcottEl.

Patbrtt, i l e w process; .per sack—^—~i - - r f e 80' Pastry, extra-wMte whsat , -40^-,.' ,,. , _-. i 60 firingarjari^liBr,p.er8ac£,„»..^i-^*,.'- .2 00 N o : 1 Spring.-.^ '-'.-'. '.'..... J i23*nd 130

".. ftraAB.,;. CorTee, " A " .Btaridia'Ci-;,-^..-_r-i-^ul. White . extra- v&^^,~^—-^-^-i

''Grairoiatea.--^-^--^^-r-- •;' / - -^-^— Maple sugar_

i.„± "7

—';m. .8 told BUTTER.

Bt t t t er_ ^Wrr-•.-CSEEgB,.

CheeSK..^..., .15 VEGETABEES.

Potatoes . 60 " P P S K ;

Hogs. , :i @

*»^sr»PQ.t^..

8 @19. @ 1 2

' '. KEBOSESIJ. feerbsene' o i U . . . . - l . ^ J . — . „ . i v ^ . - '~ «,*'.. 12^--.;*-;.• ' . w o o j 3 t : ; ',-• ; '

%iA-l&%—~~~^-~*~^-~,r--~ U35® S t o y e . . . ^ . . J . . ; _ ^ ^ i , ^ ^ . ^ „ , . . . . i . ; , 2 00@

B S D f e A ^ i i i i j . ' _ ' . ' . ";

.Ox and oow: Hides 63^c, tjlmTried 6J^c, Bul l hldesSb.. trlrnmedS^c"

S o w TTarKiOai'i'y M a r t e e t .

.- .;••;. . S w . i o s K , F E B ; 7, B f i g p r E S . . . -• ..

.Beeeipts for the Week,. 28,637 pack-r ages: exports,; 929 packagesi Bast Week^s grain-fed efeamery: made, is iquick taken, and to-day 3& cenfe was bid for it on change, while as the same time and place firsts of 'western-creamery June make were offered a t i5|e., and 13c.bid. SrewYprk state daries, firsts: ent-lie,-. were .offered at 203.. without' getting a bid, and. &i& market for. early butter.-uniess of .ex­ceptionally fine quality, seemed at; a Standstill. Fresh butter.beglh3ii.bw to Increase, more especially from. Pennsylvania, and supplies pf It are rather more liberal. thaa.iaSi;. week. We quote.:. . .- .- . ]';...' . . . . . . . . . Eancj; , F i n e . Eaulty. Winter m a k e creame'i-y.^ 35@36 30@35 '^@r^ Fresh fall fflake.^^.Ui. -2i@25'[email protected] ii@19 B n t t i e dar ie s . .^ .^ ^ 22®23- 1S@20 13@I7-Sumjaer a r k i r , s - - ^ . _ _ ^ . - ^ a 2 :18@20 aT@l7, Western, ladle p a c t e d — ^ 22@5i3 15@i8 , i 0@l |

CHBBSE^-Beeeipts for tbeweeK,2S/-363 boxes; exports,;iiS,S08 boxes. . -f

.Fancy Sepigmbef. ;ahd^. October cheese are.not :la overstock:, but they are.in sympathy with.the general current of the markets, and have a. drooping tendency. Theex,ports of PenriSylVania fresh, made skims ' ls slbw.and reluctant, ;and prices are a t about half -of what, they .Were going: at a year ago, which; makes' them a cheaper; substitute, for long "carried stock. At the close bujers have the advantage. Wequotei.

- - . ' . ; :' Kancyi H n e . Eaultyi Fac tory , ta l l craam i2@!2}£-l<>J#a>liK&. @ 9

' - (antUe}ttabre)-(raosty Factory sMnUnei— ' 6® S 3 ' @\5 i jk© 2

/ ' . ' • : . ' , David W. Bewfe.S, do . .

. * . . ' , j a o f i s . •

'. T H ^ W^TjJBVi l , t rB'3IAS.B:E!r i

-While • there is little dbing the market .remains • firm .on. the best goods. We leara of thr«e'different dealers paying respectively 18,1^1 and 193 for three lote, the Miebeingfor 41 bales tp-day.v Qtiher.lots.have been spld ;:at I7@lr&3.-.:,But few'• sales;.of mediupi .'have taken place and the •market ps:hibi^'litfle'-'callfpr;them,: John Coi/sold his -growthlast;.week for 16c,; ,.^?b:day thgre.are qhiie.a:'lpt. :pf.satopies.:in the 'market and ."bids' made are not top.: quotathras, .. As i t has bepn fof'seyeral weerts.ali dealers will not pay the top ,piiees,.aud they are only., paid on Imperative orders. Oneiuyer who paidiBfei is;put of the. market npW) having ids order. Med. We quote. ' • ' - . " ' . ' ; ' . ' . . ' ' • ' ' Chpice-. :^; . . . . . . . . . . M . . ; . ,,.^435®!?}' Pr ime, , , . . . . . . . . . . , - . ' . . . . . . . . . ~l'5'@16. ••. Lbw grades. . , . . . , . , . . , , . : . . .J%@M •yeavihi^:....,;.,,-"..-;•.;.•.-:•,.,.>-... <$;s . : . . . ^ - • > , . . . . IBKl.U'a.St .BiKlP' , - -.- .'•-•"•"'.•

SH35 I >ABb--In MartVnWiish, Feb. 5,18Sf>, Ambsg. ,Sh,epara, aged77years .

H&WLBY—In Martlusourgh, F e b . 6, lifSo, J o h n E-, J iaKley , *ged SB years, .

BA.Via~In.Marilnsb»jrgh;Fer), B, lSS5.Gatl>-..rlne Ml Dav i s , siged 51 y e a t s , S months a n d ? a a y s . ' • ' . . . ' ' '• "• •"- ".'• '•

KENYOSf—Iu GopenhaeeB r^ebi 2, ISK^JuS-t n s H . E e n y p n . aged 79 years.

ItEKJSrAN^In Cppenhageii; Jan . 29, 1885, Mrs. ,Ma,ry Kerttan,.slB.>«r ot Edvcaxd Wheeler,-aged79.years, 2 monthSatid-SScUvyS.: .

• Never :give up? you -cab.. find, a remedy, for Heart' Disease, everyone who has tried Br, Graves': Beart

atbr gay it" is a sure' cure.

WILL

3iEM?iflrjaaa^ SUGCESSQBSTO DOTSMOQBi

'" - J E » Jak-_5K"-^aL.3»r;. a ""•• K e e p a l l t d n d s i i f p l i p l b e ,

Fresli&; Salt Meats,

iowE§fWffiti I M E S : i

The oe%;ln- tbwiij"

'-'•'•'..'••* \ :' • • • G ^ H ^ & j P Q B ; ^ ; - . ;

:• 'IS O M K O M P , ; ; "-_'-;

' toB^SBRp^;.^^ne,K.Ti':

BBipBcrasa;, i tbsx '"SEWS* - Jkarii • Accr/RAT* '.•

; •:^^&^r<^^ms,:\'/^^^^ AndTotmerous other ieaturesTiaveibeefeaad-i ' ed. i lsoaeomp1bte,;exhansti*eBrirarnarybr , the i iew».&alt /dspartments . . I t :ut.reiot bf -. o i p ^ a r d s . o f i a l i a ! m i m b n p ^ p l e a n d i » * g o o a . jadvertlsingme'diriat, re8ichlng,Xaeitorleg,fltrm* '• -

vand. homes ot a h descriptions • art • ^yery part -.' rolthebbirntr^r. -. .-.~.. •' ' =•; .r .t ,•:-'- . . . .

'•- jL. PEaFEC%? KEW^pAPKB.. ' ; >-.." ;.- -" . rlt:oontai$8,allthesgeher&lrie5^s of the' dai ly ' editlbnoftheOBperatd;tWiich h a s t H e larges t ctrculaitibh IntheTJnlted States . " ; : . ...

' Ibdependen^irtpolitlcSi i t l B thbiabst valu-. ableM3hTonicle.6f pbHt ica l i iBwsinthe iror ld , -tm^artfal lygt-wngthebcedrrencesraridbpli i - • i o n s o l a l l parti.es,-sfr that -'ail: jShieS:-raay r>«? inoTRi . i n the4Brtartirieutof'--- . --.' '•-.: . '

• • : ; . ; ; -";F€>R#&it"NEWs'.;;; . .• . ' ; . '• '". '•_'•. The Herald i d s ifiyays'beeii dlsttoguitebd D T ' ' •the fullness feflts cableaispalcheSi xhe'-rie\r -• transatlantic telegraph, cabled ivlll Increase, - . facilities:' ••-:...-"" ••: '-/, ...':•-"•••"'•••.•: '••.- -./• -<J:. -

The Fanrt bepartrbentof .t i le; Weelc jyHer- , -alff lsprastleai , I-t;gpestotiie i>olni»ndotoe«.. not g ive w i ld theories. Tfiefarinbr tjiU s a v e . . rnauyinorethaai . • •:-"'.->-.--'.•—-",••.; " -'.-

• ' ; . G ^ P ' 6 > ^ i B " i . ^ ^ . - : . " \ . V , . i " . V : - . ' - ' . feora the« sdsfgelBaons' o f Itiie "E«rra:^fepart-' :•

•merit a lone , cbncernrnEr sbHiJcattlej erbpSi,'' trees, ^bnltdlngs^garderilogi pbultryV and- ag-j .nealturatecbaorny. ..fiThe EComa'? instruct* •• thehbuse-WJleiriflthe'cMiaren:.in legara-.tb eeonbral(»lauaT£asterdlrieVdishes,the*iasn-.' : lbns,,iin.d-th.eanaltlng-=bf h e m e cbimbtts . l i t ' , atldlttonare^lyen'-latest.reports bi trade a n d

..; -SBobHCE; MASIE^TS,..- : -' ::-";:' Thecoridlt lbnof money ,cbtnmris of rniscel-laneous reading..poetry, speoittl r ibvetet t ts ; --:-w i t andhctrjjQr,; hothiScfbial. « n d pblltlcalY sportlrigne^s.popular seiencb; t h e t t o i n g S ^ well-feft.Owrtperf'oos;bf the wor ld; a aepart^ - :

m e n t deyot^d tbthe/dtaTOatlcand^ySib/gtagb.- -• .WuLlethe Weeldy Heraidgt*es-thelatestari'dT ;beatn.ewsof.tHiff'worId%ltIs'alsba'jbmaialfor -the'fanlrly.''"- ' ' --"•'•'** " ' . ' ' . . " ' - : ' • '

Snbscrlbeorle dollar a t a n y -ttrde for a.-falV-year. . P o s t a g e i r e e t b a u y p a r t o r thfe'CTiilted States o i Canada. %• ."" • .. - -••;- ;*-••'•-.:-.

T H E - l f B W T O R E H S E t t B 1^"*. WEEKT-* D T F p a % O J S E D O I i I i A B A X E A a , • . - ' .

Adtoess-SE'SV'-XOBS; ^ESAKD; | Broadway •" andaiiiri-iStrBeCii;'-''; ... .-'.'r: *•

KMEFGOOIil

Most peoijle are as-^iiixbTia td l> t iygoods : cheap a s ffi'ey'.arato keep ooolaowadsiys, a n d . it is cpilte .seasonable t o fcentl6n.:theSBCt that-fffrSeep.arfuuane of v.-- ' ,-•: -:

E a m p H j iLwatoipintig,'-': '.-;•.;

;.;; vcitandfi l i iersj ;

.'•JQilfearywfta'. ...-.-..":-'•. -;T--.' ..;,;': B r a c k e t t a m p s ;

t a m p F i x t u r e s , -ike."

Dfeqorated aha ftaio ChM& IHnier. a u t Tea Sets. DeCoratea Chamber Sets, .

ars. j , ; ' , I i ^ P B * R A a T E V 3 B S ^ i : : .-'-• Phut door north o f E e U o g g H o t t * *