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tke {ae Wy he" = 3h and wea wuy oh SHE CHICAGO TRIBUNE! SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1881—SIXTREN PAGES. | generally in the Southern States,’ both east -and wastof the AMtsstaalppt. ‘The last almul- taneous appearance of these two broods was 7HOSE LOCUSTS. mS a Jn 1600, and they will not recur during the M1 3102, by which time the timber Iot the Deadly Grasshopper, but tonaltions of the vountry will have mato- ho the paeie Harvest. rially changed. nnd there are very apt (0, bo Fly, elties In imany loculitles now thronged with these sylvan inusielans, i THY PERIODICAL CICADA 5 on its Periodical Visit, Which It Makes Once in Thirteen and Seventeen Years,’ Js n large, blackish, hotopterots Insect, with red yes, and four transparent wings, the front patr with red borders, ‘The apyelintion of “locust” was bestowed upon tt by the carly settlers of this country from an erro. neous notion that It was Identical with tho | “plagues of Exypt” recorded in Blbtecal lore, ‘This Iden tovk such forcible faseeuslony of the Puritan mind tht tho shrilling of those inseets was thought to be a prolonged and threatening ers of Pha-nerach ?? Its habits being entirely inknown in those early tines, Its sudden appearances jn prodigious muibers at sich long intervals naturally eatised itto be regarded as nsupernatural visituntsent for the twofold purpose of a piagte and a warning, Henes the popular superstition construtig the Welike markings ou ths tins of te upper Nein tite a prophiee: 7 of “ war. nid people inay rest assured pleefal Accuracy of Entomologital - Science | tint, hey portend atin, tnless {tho waria 5 weather, ‘The peculinr nusieat apparatus a! Chronology of the Harvest ly Durlng tho males may be Hkened ton pale-of kettle. the Christian Bra, druns,- ‘These drum ure formed of convex pintes of n parchinent-like sutistance, folded nto fine platts and located in cavities behind tha thorax, Muscles are attached internally to these pintes, by the contraction and relaxn- ton of which the drum-hends are alternately tightened and loosened, the effect belng a rapt succession of shrili, rattling sounds, ‘The males only possess these musical organs, the females being wbsolutely mute fet which was embodied in the ancient rhymes . “Happy tho Cleada lives, For thoy all baye voiceless wives." Tho body of the female Is provided with a compitentetl plereer andl ovipositor, consist- ing of a pllir of Ling, doudble-cdged saws, and aspenr-polnted borer, which plays between them. When not it use this instriment is folded into a tongitudinal groove on. the wn der surface of the abdomen. Both sexes have a sharp benk, or nustellum, with witch. thoy: plerce the bark of sliribs und trees and extract the sniull quanty of sap which constitutes thuir sole nourisiment. During the advent of these Insects, sturles of tholr STINGING HUMAN BEINGS, sometimes fatally, ure onlways ‘current, ‘That the beak muy sometimes be ttsed ag wenpon of defense, Is. qulte probable; but there is no proof that the sting thi cattsed fs polgonous, and severe eases of stlughig fre more Ukely caused by 4 Jnrng diker wasp (Stlzus grandis), the feinale of which has a powerful sting, and buries the Cleu- dans food for her youn hile errryinge her'yietim her flight 1s rapid, and, should she then knock against the ininnn free, she woultbbe apt to let go her proy and: retalinte by stingIng. Witir her ovipositor the female Cicada pen- etrates the twigs of trees, and inserts therelt two rows of eggs ablig nely plieed, ‘The URES are one-twelfth of an ineh tn fenuthe of a penrl-white color, nnd taper ut cheh end to an obtuse point, ‘They hatelt In about six weeks, usuntly before the braneh containing them breaks off, ‘The newly-hatched Cleada ig very nelive, its motions resembling those ofan ant. It suon casts itself fearlesly from the Iiighest tree-tops, Its Insignificant welght admittlng of its being watted gently down ward by ts bree; Impetled by tnsthniet, it at once burrows er ground tn search of rootlets, upon whose extilations it must sub sist, penetrating deeper and deeper Into the earth In following thelr course. It hag many thoes been found ata depth of from ten to of, Hitoy, Clilef of tho Entomological Commiaslayty Says Thero Is No Catise for Alarut. » Places Which Will Bo Visited This Yoar by Thid Harmless Poriodical &trangor. 4 Aptelat Dispatch fo The Chteaoo Tribune. Wasiixaton. D.C. June 17%;—Tho reports, | ofthe reappenrance of “locusts” in difter- qntportions of the West have naturally ex ¢teda great deal of alarm, ‘his apprehun- gon {3 fully Justified when the damage done pyihe ravages of tho gonulno locust ts re- “membered. It will bon rellof to farmers, to consumers, nnd to all whose interests depen pon successful crops, to know that tho joeusts whlch are now appearing are not the destructive lucusts, butare tha comparatively: tarmlegs “harvest-tly,? which appears purl- ollcally at Intervals of thirteen and soventecn ars respectively, according tu the tribe to which the Insects may belong, It will also dereassutring to Know that the statement Is pade upon the authority of the mokt culnent eitomologist of this cunntry,— +I PROF, WILY; Chief of the United States Entomological Counlssion, who {8 soon to bo restored tu ‘ds postion ns Chief of tho Bureau of En- tomolugy, Agricultural: Department, from sshich he was removed when tlio great Lo ‘Duc attempted to ellininate all selentiiic Nnowledge from that Department. + Prof, Riley, speaking of the sppearance of Hhese locusts, and of the apprehensions that spre excited on necount of them, says: The people are being misled by tho popular applicatfon of the term “locust to the Ine sts which nre now appearing in Tinols and Arkansas, ‘These Insects are not the de. aructlys lucusts which haye heretofore done formic damage, but are the comparatively ‘hanualess ; .+ + PERIODICAL CICADA, ; erharvest-fy, otherwise dubbed In this coun- ty “suventeun-year locust,” or moruly lo cost.” ‘There are a seventecn-yeur rice (Cie ada Septemmeclin Lin i) and a thirteen-year race (Clendn'Tredeehin 1 hey) of this interest- Ug ney ench ree requiring respectively dither seventeen or thirteen yeurs for lis un , derground development, mid Teuppenttn yin riven sections of the country at Litervals of Rrenteen and thirteen yeurs, us regularly as tesengons roll around, ‘Lhis periodicity ts ‘an established seientifle fet, confirmed by | twelve fect. - 5 te-records of aver a century, and hy my | ‘Che only injury this false locust can cattsa own observations during: the past thirteen | to our crops Is that resulung from ovipusl- yeas, ins which have from year to , year watched: the development at St: Louls ‘ofa pardettiar brood to within four years of completion, amy observations having censed ifour-years azo. ‘he appearance at the ine fels'there this summer, at the appointed + tnd for full tavelopment, proves that the de- Adopment night inst as readily hive been watched during the intervening four years dad not my relvovil to Washington and other dreumstatices prevented, : Tis PEIODICIeY fin fact, go weil established tuat the nature Ulst'catculates ns euniidantly on its future appearance fin given month inv given year furall fniure thie while the present surface ctharacterlstios of the country obtaln, 1s the wtronomer ‘dovs.an ectipse ars transit; We may mentally revert, to vanes when no civllized vyex hind witnessed tals fale Conti- nent, and feel ature that, iit fs the woots ire how rloging with the house cry of these leatay, so they rang with tho same ery in the month of June, say u20 years before tho bithot Christ, * é tlon, which may be, exceptionally, severe on young orchards. Lt hus no Jnws, and Is harm leas cumpared with ‘THE TRUER LOCUSTS, These belong tonmandibilits order (Orthop- tern) of Insects, their destructive pow- er has been recognized from the inmes- orlal, ‘To tho fenrful ravages /of our own atory spucies,—vlz.: the Rocky Mountain, st (Catoplonus spretus ‘Chowns), oth- erwlse’ known as the Western grasshopper, imay be traced the protracted depression 0! the past tleendes and it is principally with thls species that the United States Entomo- logical Commission ling been dealing sInee its organization, ‘1t were useless, in a Hinit- ed communication, to ‘attempt to give you the substance of the two Inrge volumes al- rendy. publistied by the Commission. Lf will sliply state, therefore, that this locust is on aunual, laying exes In’ the ground inane tun, froin whieh tho foun hatel the en sulng spring, dovelop through tha. summer, and perish with the frst winter-frost. ‘The practical speeles In question $3 a dunizen of In 863 L wave a chronological history of | the sub-boreal portion of the West, attaining (wenty-two distlnet broods of this perloiien! | parfeetion and living permanently In tho I leh the following predictions | high, dry plans of the northwestern por- tyenr were mule: ton of the United Stutes and nd. BOON XVIL—SUPTEMDECIM—ISG4, 1881, Jfeent ies ot eae -pinerten, In 188), vats " At irregular intervals the meteorulog- the rena oy ere af Sropabitioe agpens feat conditions favor excessive multiplication ftaryuette and Groen Like Counties, in Wise | in this native tiabitat, when the winged in- cunsin, und inuy algo nppeur in the Western part St North Curotina, and about Wheeling, Vi; ia Northoast Ohio, wid a few a Liticastue County, Feausyivanin, ‘aud Westohcater County, Now Thore fa abundant evidence that ' thoy ape red In the countios mamed In Wisconsin in and fulruvidency that thoy appeared, that Year In Bummit County, Northenat Obloz: while Briygliig specimens wore found in tho same ear, by Ar. >. 8. lathyon, iu Lineuster County, nisyivanin, and by: Mtr. Sumes Angus in West= theater County, New York, Dr, Jiteh aldo re- funls tholr appearance tt .1847, or sevulteen raids the: weatern purt of Norta milna, und De, Smith in Wheeling, Vins in 40,47, and ‘Ol. The distanee between the lo fatles given iw very grent, and it i doubtful Phether ull those records belong to ono and tho BNOOD XVIIL.—TREDECIM—1843, 183 Inthe yenr 1881, nnd ut intervals of. thirncon sects rae in the wir, and, alded by the pre- valling winds, fall upon the more fertile States to the southeast lke ACMLAGUE AND A BLIGIT, devasting the fichls, wid {ling tho ground with thelr egies. | ‘Tho goneration of young. locusts the ensuing year is often even more injurious, but enceavor to qnit the country aud gut back to.the home of their parents’ as soon as they nequire wings. “ ‘The Western people are. keenly. allve, therefore, to anything relating to tho pros: peels of the appearance of these real locusts, und it fs not surprising that references to tho ‘so-called save tean-year loetsts should cause ‘unniceessary alarm, : L have every renson for belleving that there Js no danger whatever of wide-spread Injury from tha Rocky Mountain locust tho present Cit, ‘The examinations made last summer Ferner gaat ceatee ssa, | Bye, heard i rt tae i By wilh tte xcuption ‘ut the Horthwesiurn cure | Quer Agents Of the Commussion, rant for. predicting uo general in, ‘of Colorado and the Wesl uve Wilr's,] Bern Loulstuna, Arkansas. Indian ‘Territory, fi Grate iat ap. entucky, ‘Tet i parts rvs und Nortieund gut Carol Pia beg prone the permanent habitat the pest Though, v9 wlroady wtuted, £ published the:trat | ly found oes almost uvery yet td Recount ever wiven of the existence of A tale ro or less dainage. A few lhinited swarms Senycur brood, yet, besides tho others mete t striate ‘were also noticed last fall {n restricted parts weed in this chronology, this purtioulur brood | o¢ ‘oxas, and such may be noticed again ears Bi, a ee ae nuvi: ovourred Ww is this year} but, Lrovent, the farmers of Min- th 55, and "ds; aud Mr. ds We | nosota, Lowa, Kunsng, Nebraska, slissouri, Gere the July’ (1869 imocting of the Alton | Noein IW Htortfoulturnt Socfoty, evon mentioned ats | and ‘Texas... Any I NEED FEAR NO WIDK-SPREAD INJULY; Speuranee: ny w A Missouri it ocaura more or Jess throughout e whole Suite, with the oxeoponoftue horene | aud this is the conclusion whieh L made pb: est co; ? Tis Inst winter, giving reasons more Jn deal: Grand Ttiver and yn neo Otome wae “A study Of great foctst-years, bath In thls Meourl “River. “Tho southeust pace | and other’ countries, shows that they reour, % the State, whero Ur, Smitb: bas sre- | onan average, at Intervals of nbont gloven wi OSniedeince MD, te must thlok! wupled. I] yenrs; but there Is seurcely mere certaluty Humes those countiog in wick there isun- } fy connection with, Ly recurrence of locusi- Pea cyitoneg of tholr appourance during | phenomena than in that of meteorological Beaton Chitke. Ghee iant Aadiralay Ben koee phenomena, ‘Che reappearnnes of tho” po- Sle, Franklin, Gnsco Tron Jettorson, § Yodical Cleada can be predicted with cer- tilnty; that of the Rocky Mountain locust eun only be predictedon examluntions. mae over a Yast and mostly uninhabited territory, Lowis, Surion, Bacon, 31 Fite, Ptiotpay “Tutuvi ia ae prgan, Monitenu, }» Polk, Pottls, Sobuyler, . ould, Bt Franvola, St. Clair, watt gud Washington, though the churicter of the previous aunsons i Hy hot Viaprobably overlupssome of the tere { may also be sed to guide, Tye eeuwied by tho soptomdecim brood | 4 peRMANENT SYSTEM OF OUSERVATION fa brood which appoured tant tn 1870); but I Rot think it oxtonds ito Kansas, AND WANNING. qltilinols it oveurs more or less throughout tho Tho public interest In this matter warrants ayesauthorn hulf of tho Stuto, but moro.cspe- | Government: action: lookling to # permanent of, tras Conte aE ie aA bart syatemt of observations aud Narhturs, ua {hs Shiu, Up the Ohivand Wabuen livers to aur. | euEUAg of Me Entomulugioal Commutysion Cuclyyand thon across to contro or thostat, | Hits second reports ng some of the ventral counties . In. Ju order to carry out tho plan Juat conaiderod, ary 1 oP axe { and, in fuct, to viable tho Government to luke ots qiocauplod. 1o ho more ce. | any’ sntolligont ction lookiug to the direat due Ait Louumerate all tha counties in whieh das ghtedly Pernhhs neste ge antec * Aduma (vou rt, buck of Quino: Bond, Clinton (iorihweat corner, adjauunt t struction and ducransy of the Meust in the region ‘under: ounsidoraliun, systematis obsorvations, mudo and reported froin your to year, are Absu leon), ¥ by Jutely essentinl, wad wo cutnot tuo strongly urge: ana, cle cepa, Cols hy oruuctont, Camo fn. ) Upon Congross thut provision ba mado far Buch Hegaater a, t), Franklin, Gatiatise Hardin, { continued avyervations. Thoro ta no roason Woy aaliten, Johnsdu, Jaspor, Jersey, Jofforsun, } it whould not bo mude part of the duty of tho i JeLonn tenet cud). Macdh, Bladison. | Signal urea) to obtuin the desired (Information, Vika, Parry, Platt, | aud t 1d to FEport tho wituation to the country from time to time,’ The source of thoso destructive Inaeota lv no longer an utter mystery, und ovory: your is adding to the fucilitics for making the desired obsurvations, eae eat completion of vrojucted ro: i ‘Torsitories; with the Feotaptution ation, Ataswuv, Moura, hia Richland,’ Mandolph, Sunkamon,’ Saline, Walt! Union (orthoust. corner), Washington, walne, Wabash, Wiltamson, and While, ‘Chord fa yong tha presont year, olther at Docutu tyr Aeon County, or at Sunt, in Christian Couns mayo Woro thuty any at Woomington or Nore In McLouns nor in Doe Witt County, which Yet" suuth ‘or ht of the Canadian and Northorn Pavitica now use Teguats ce af, polenne nor tn Epslag freck sured, the weans of establishing n systom of Min, { County, whiod tw northeast of Chame | fociae ‘signals and warnings, und of tak i more complete and: accurate “observation, will a Ke red, peokys ucoonding to Dr, mith, tt oo | Pore yrontor tun thoy havo Lou. baformne Ph . ih the northwest corner of the Stato, Pout Paduonh aud A " adjacent coyntios south, i 1" und “36, und ieuccurrod ero fu 1863, 1 4 ucustés thélr movements both on fuot dud un coutes anata (AE Ceguplod all the nortan. | Wwitgtoun and suonld Uo ue rapltiy ebtaluod und eat Alabaina, it ocouptod ttussell, and fajncont! Glevainiuated, Hs powaiblo. Thy focus press will cs NB ii ana loa, Duvitean, Monte | Sed SaRiESE Ap ine ou Weal ene feunn (ol an a fener He Nee Fa sor Monts | wenerally posted ‘at ‘avuilablu points, us v Cteniateuantid in 808, GS Mi Oh urn’ | Reak gasatiue want enablo the drach to out Cae hr amsanean | Harta eget Rist baad ey 3 or : Lexa Curolina, tho Cheater district ang all | Hits te 1 bier aud ina Cow, houpa dostroy ny iaalne country tu the Georgia line wast, waa .: of a your, ‘Tracts whlch It woutd pay to Dd wien it ta 1h Carolina 11g0, ngreth was ooour: fue puuliat, train aut, tnd thes (dure ex 7 tho onsulng spr yi be eis itn eres cea, | BRE a ea eo eet Cay 2Ulilana, tt ippeared in Morohouse, Caddo, | Habel onal avtlon; while an nnnual roport on CE se rome Msn tne te | BRCSE CRC nee ate hy j «+ | burt of the 4 Seaerntiny, thot een tet aoa tay” | bine Fall No urenily Intervet aid -behieit tho poo itlos, 4 plo tout coucerned, an them the whole country, THK CONFUKION OF TENS . resulting fromthe application, or mlsspplicay a jndirvetly through the insects aro now present in the sections. Pfiued, ie iuirwontsear rood ofthis year 7 ir tho inout extended, occurring very THE JEWELRY TRADE. Efforts of the Retail Jewelers’ Associations to ‘Monopo- lize It. tion rather, of the term [octsts to the period! cal Clendn ts not only very grent, as we have feen, Dut often evils to wnnecessary alarm and misapprehension, ‘The introduction of the word Cleada Into the vernacular Is, there- fore, vory desirable, it belug brief and eu phontous, antl Just as ensily retainer as seve enteen-year focust. ‘The popular names inn eountry—those which enannte from ple—should be respected ay far ns possi especially For al outs pecntlnrto the conn and itis offen futile to attoinpe to clinnge them. Fu the case of this torin Jocust, it has been ised for centurles inthe older countries, and Is ngs familiar ns houschold words, thonglt the widely-sseminted Scriptures, as applied to the devastating locust, and tt Is applied to tho Cienda In no other country than America. and danced and plowed its fields, the Town of Corning, only two miles away, had grown up. Marlo and Julle and Lisetto and Fifing had ve- fn to suapect thut thore were Miner dry goods a the fuullah, plavieh world outalde of the Com- inunity, and thoy wore ready to turn petrolousos If they didn't wot thom. ‘To make the mattor worse, thera wera In the Community certain combustible young men who weru roady to take: ean davote the whole community to Baal ol Here waa agrave situation! According to tho rules of the Community every: person was to bo served oxactly wllke.. If: Lisette was given A now hat or Julle a new ribbon orn dreas of nnothor kind than that heratoture furnished by the Superintendent of Clothing, then overy other womun In tho Community must’ hayo it new bat und a new ribbon and a new dress of equal cost, and ff not this then something ciso. OF equal value, but not money.—for tho pay- inent of money to individuals of tho Community ds forbidden, . The Community had in tho course of thicty years wrown to nn tegregats of about 200 per- sons, of who one-half wore presumubly of tho female persuasion. Now let any one considec tho appalling probiem of providing some alifer- entarticle of wearing upparel, but of exactly tho sama value, ta please a hunitred. woment Cnn anybody wontler that thera was trouble in that enamnp?’ Tho venerably Superintendent of Clothing ventured tu expostulate, and directed their attention to tho greater casein which those young women lived and the greater respect with which thoy were regarded thin in tho out- Biie wortd. ‘To which the young women re: torted that the yenerable Superintendent of Cothing wasn tnole, and tho President and Dis rectors, in short all the clders, wore no butter. Tho young woinen clalmed that each of thon knew how to “runa Community" as well ns anybody, and that henceforth they intendad to do so,—they were determined to vote In, the elections for Directors, and to elect thomecives, and run the whole businoss, and in all this tho iz women were hacked up by the combuatl- ng men aforesiid, 0 Eiders were in dismay at this, and grently grieved, the moro espeelully beciuse of Inte years things had been coming to that point When they could sit in the danco-hall all dayand amoke thelr pipes and drink the mood wing raised by the Community aod thus “enjoy tho frult of thelr labora,” while the younger people kept the establ| nent going by tho work in tha Neds. It waa © ungratoful,* boy ulaiined. for In AN ICARIAN EPISODE. A Thirty-Years’ Socialistic Experi- ment in:lowa. The Community Finally Wrecked on the Woman Question. bl trys Injurious Results of Their Methe ods—Competition the Life of Businass, > ———_ Why Human Nature Won't Fit Into Com- munistic Clothes. There appeared fn a recent number of the Jewelers’ Circular, a publication patronized by the watchmaking and Jewelry trades, o letter from W. IL Thorp, of Beaver Dam, Wis,, who signed {In his capnelly of Secre- To the Fditar of The Chteago Trihune, Cnicago, June 1%—A large part of Sonth- western Lowa, beyond Creston, Is n suc- cession of treeless, tipland ridges that slope up and down with suelt reguinrity and sincothuess as to continuntly suggest the waves of the ocean, only that they are five or lx thes as high as the highest ocean waves. In tho creck and river bottoms there are fringes of thnber, but everywhere else Js only tho billowy sweep of the hills, un- robe by a tree or nu outcropping ledge of rock, Ilizh on the windy erest of onc of these ridges, a couple of iniles to the east from Corning, I saw, ns L drove down Into. that place, a cluster of fittle, new, unpainted wooden houses, shining In-the slant west- ern suniight like weather-cocks ona barn. ‘There were too many of them fora group of farm buildings, and the site was too absurdly elevated and remote from the rallway for the nucleus of a new town, “What are those 2” Lasked of tho driver, “Well, that’s the old partof the Icarian Society." : “The ‘old? part—how do you menn— A FEARFUL HALF-HOUR. Lives of Cincinnatl Mstionaircs in Ime milnent Peril, Cinetnnatt Commerelat, In tho early days of the Cincinnati South ern, before It had attained Its present system, and immediately after the road lad been oponed for. truttic to Somerset, occurred an event the recullection of which even to thisday serves'to bring out goose flesh on thoge who at that tle wero cogrizant of the impending disaster, Within a few days after passenger travel begati, the officers of the Southern sent invi- tations fora trip over the rond toatl of Cin- clunutl's wealthiest mien nnd heaviest tax- payers, and on the morning of the excursion dozens of curriages loft the Burnet house, thie place of meeting, and conveyed them acrogs the riyer ta Ludlow, where the “spe celal,” handed by No. 1, thecrack engine, with Mat Coombs at the lever, way ii waiting. Miles N. Beatty, now Superintendent of the Southern Division, was. conductor, When all the excursiunists were ou board, the en- glneer and conductor went into ‘Train-Dis- decliva Association, ‘The burden of Mr. Thorp’s complaint was that fora long time past wholesale jewelry houses, nearly all vented in Chicago, had been supplying gools to outsiders at wholesate prices, It ‘was stated that Jobbers hnd sold nt regular rates to’ dry-goods men, grocery-keepers, druggists, dealers in notions and gentle men’s furnishing goods, and the like, The clalin nade was that this trade should have come through the regular nuthorized, simun- pure, trade-mark-on-the-bottlo Jewelur of the town, elty, or village in which the purehaser might reside, ‘Che trade paper in question Indorsed the sentiinents of the letter, blan- ing jobbers for selling goods to anybody outside the trade proper. Inuuiries made on the subject bya re- porter of Tae Thmunr developed +A CUINOUS STATE OF AFFAIRS, It seems that in Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, patcher Couludge's oftice, where thoy rend and these young people to want anything moro than | Ad some other States the retail jewelers nigel the follawing order, and placed copies | these Hetty houses all look to be ‘brand? thelr fathars and thothors had enjoyed at thuie | liuve formed associations, pledging the mem- 1 their pockets: new? Tho young people retorted that if tho elders | Lets thereof not to buy nuy goods from dld not have anything better in thelr eo it “ Meet and pass No. 2 north-bound pas- sengerctrnin, xt Willltinstown.” Well, you see, there was a split in the , \. =" WHIl # livery . | concerns the old fellors and the youn follers was becauae * they could not, get It, but that | goods, nutions, or other outside dealers, In Bound TSCM ae dierent couldn't agree, so the old uns went off in | they Ttbe youn women—could’now, aud they | sort, it was suuglt to force the the following order: hnif a year-ago nnd bullt the new place on ‘The upshot of {t all was that tho Iadicals ap- | Jutteroutof the fleld, and for this purpose , Conductor: Meet and pass south- bound spectal'n Willinmstown? 5 jo that the situation stuod thus—elther train ruaching the place indicated frst was to vo.on the siding snd walt there inti! the ong condny fron the opposit, direetlon: hind are rived and gone nhent on the clear track, Of the wealthy passenger-lond some were sent ed olintting, others were standlug on the plate forms, and still others om the summer car, when, glancliy up and down his train, the eon- ductor, finding oyerything in good order and readit waved his hand te the watching enue eh and the special puiled out, slowly attirst, butas Lt moved on the speed bie vealed to the courts and asked for na division of tup of the hil; the young ones are In the old. the property hetween the two rae the issuo nest down on t/other slde of the hill,” “And what was the split about 2" ‘The driver couldn't tell, but there was Mr. Davis, the lawyer, whe was engaged ini the sult, could tell all about ft. and his office was near the hotel In Corning, where I was golne. Some cynic has sald that if you dix deep enough into any quarrel, any disruption of social relations, breach of trust, or failure of enterprise, you will did a woman at the bottom of tt. the Protective Associations before referred to published “ black lists’? upon which the nanesof offending Jobbers and dealers were recorded, with a more or less extended statement of their sins and offenses. men were to be " Boycotted,” and, with a view to discovering what they thought of the pla and its possible consequences, tho re- porter sought ont some of thon. One of the most prominent said that he had seen tho trade puper referred toand some of the cireulars issued by the Wisconsin Asso- butween them belng woman nugrage, After u your or two of Iltigauion tho Court de- elded upon a division of the property, and asthe Radiculs were numerically tho strongest thoy recelved the Inrgest shire of the land und im~ peavements, The elders, however, filled a bell In chanecry, setting forth that they bad been “dutna, In thofe atfections.” which the Court finally decided could be mended for fifteen hun- dred dolturs. With this sum the tearful olders went up on to tho hill and about a year ayo built tho new diving-room and the surrounding Mirtle dornl- tories, the glenn of whose unpainted boards in ay "1 the afternoon sunlight bad Orst attracted my at- | elation, ‘To his mind th estlon W creased until It went out of sight around tho ‘There are some people who ean never get | te : elation, ‘To his mind the question was one curve iefllylug, and alittle Inter a rambling | over that “faux pas’? of Mrs. Adnn’s when pyres menntime, bowever, tho younger por- oF prinelpte only. an palnt was whether sound told of its crossing the trestle, aud that ) she and her husband first embarked in the | tlonof thoComurunity had airendy beguntoex. | Ores te mit a dozen jew- it was well and falrty started on the way | enterprise of replenishing the — earth, | Perlment with now idenss they had started a | clers in a village, town, or clty south. Lt was understoud that extra fast tH + | scheme of prupaxandisin, by which*new imom- | Werd” to | enjoy oan Unfortunntely this case of the Icarlan Cam- munity near Corning Is not calculated to overcome thateynical prejudice, and although tho connection between thls case and that of Mr. and Mrs, Adum may at first seem rather remote, it is nevertheless very distinet. ‘Tha result of Mrs, Adnin’s indiseretion was jly leaves, Which in these days nieans the srine thing ws clothes. twas fig lenves that wrecked tho learlan Community near Corn ing, consedttontly It.ig lemunstraule by ao shinple rile of three calculation that Mrs. Adam was the womnn at te bottom of it in this ense, ‘The Community had existed in its present location near thirty years, and was originally an offshoot from the Jearlan Community which vceupled Nauvoo, in HHnols, soon After the Mormoms were driven out of that place hy the enrazed inhabitants of Hancock Jounty about 17-'8, When they came to this location near Corning they were quite poor, but had gradually fucreased. thelr pos- segslons until at the the of the quurrel they owned about 1,400 acres of land, withjmany valunble improvements, ‘The fundamental prinelple upon which the “ Community”? ts based Is the abrogation of dndividual rightsof property. ‘Tho labor of the entira community is directed to the sup- port of the entire community, aud the acci- auutlation of property for the ‘entire commu- uity. ‘There ts one commion purse for all, one common table where all eat atthe same tine, mud there would be'a. common, wardrobe only that these Communists are not wll amade on exnetly the same; phystenl patton and thoy therefore encountered “difliculties in making long slim men and short fat men fit into exnetly the sume ~pattern of clothes, Thero was ‘ut least ono unfortunate over- sight—It might almost be ealled reprehensi- bie cnrelesness—in tha construction uf these wen and wouen ‘The men should all have been of exactly the same puttern, and the women all of exactly the sane pattern and antsume minds, It was this irregularity that caused the quarrel, ‘The tern “clothes” eovers a great deal; Thomas Carlyle in Ils brains through his entlre volume of “Surtor. Resartus” try- ing to find out whatit did cover, But these Communists made short work of the whole business and invented a “regulation cut” for all man—and woman-—-kind, ‘They elaim that their Invention is perfect, and that the imporfeetions {n the fit are the fault of tho pugele and not of theclothes, Usiiug the term * clothes” tn Its. hos comprehensive sense, bers were tube drawn from France and the Community enlarged; more land was to be bought, and more {provements made, so that by some wort of magic lifa was to be mude custer for everybody and the women were to have a good time. Just what were the minutia of thesa new idens J did not lourn, itis suill- ecient to eny that thoy proved delusive. Ina short time ‘the lands and improvements of tho younger Community were heavily inctimbered und tho membership begun to dwindle uway. From thelr eyrie on tho hill-top tho pensive elders survey the wreek, and, while they smuko their pipes and drink their scanticr allowances of wine, muse upon: the cantrarincess of: tho humnn race. in which the individunls are never gatigtied with being dust: equal with thoir fel- luws, and eleb: “Alas for ‘Liberté, egal , fraternité!” WoL. F. IRON TRADE DEPRESSION. Furnaces Lately Out of Bt Pushed ‘Too Migh Let in Ki Notwilthatanding High Protection. Pamavurria, Juno 15,—There has been so much talk recently of depression in tho iron trade nnd of furnaces going out of blast for want of: paylng prices for pig-lron that tho trade papers have taken up the subject and are making a searching Inquiry Into the facts, They find 2 condition of things bad enough, ft Is true, but Ittle, if any, worse than it has been for the past year, and by no means cause for alarm. There were in the United States on the ist of January 475 furnnce-staeka In binst and 250. silent. On the Ist of April the numbers were repect- ively 453 and 270, Recently about twenty wore furnaces in. Enstern Pennsylvania, with ono or two In New Jersey, have been ‘plow out; most but not all of them on ac ,count of the low price of fron, which pre vented thelr making Itat-a profit. The fol- lowing Iist, Just prepared by the Philadelphia correspondent of the Pittsburg simerican Manufacturer, and corrected trom informa- tlon obtained at the oftice of the American Tron & Steel Association, I3 believed to in- clude all the furnaces that dave recently stopped, Perhaps an equal number Is likely to blow out soon, but those best Informed in the trade do not belleve that the number will be exceeded. In tho Lohigh region threo stacks of the Allentown Lron Compisny have monopoly of the ‘business ‘therein, They asked the jobbers to reftise to sell goods te the druggist or general storekeeper, while the was te be niade, and tu offer no obstacle the traci had buen cleared of everything save the passenger-train referred to, Onehalf hour after the start from Lud- low, No. (teen imilnnets behind thie, reached Williamstown, at which place the standing ruly was dmperatlve that conductors should at all es stop and inquire. for ure ders, Stopping only long enough to unload a, passenger iit he nud, the conductor, thinking: only of making wp fost time, slguated the engineer, and the train went on, A Bie hubritied operntor from his window saw No. 2 flush northward to what seemed inevitable destruction, as the telegeaph ine between hfs roomranl Ludlow was unbroken by naingle Instrument, and at that moment two trathy at high rates of speed were rapt ly lessentny the distances between each ou on the single tr He telegraphed at once to Ludlow that “No, Shas passed without stopping for orders," i ‘Alt color left the faca ‘of Train-Dispatchar Couledgens he received the message, and as he communiented the dire intelligence to Jack Redmond, Master of Transportation, viduals coutenanee assumed a sting ilar hue. With hin to think wits to tet, Step- ping to the statlm-door he quietly beckoned seyernl men to hin and composudly gave in- structions to encl., One-lmlf .dozen of them wenton the double-quick In different dtreations for physicians. The station-keep- er went inty the warehouse and gathered tos gether sponges, buskets, materials for splints and soft mus}iy for bandages.’ Meanwhile other eimployés had rin up-to. the. engine: house, and starthig a fire under on Idle locos made aliving tn it;—and had worked them selves up to the enjoyment of a good husi- hess and good credit.” As to the alleged jews elers who constituted the nembership of the State Protective Associations, the truth was that 75 per cent of them were of the class to whom neither jobbers nor dealers would ex- tend any credit whatever. . They had formed what hoe Jouked upon as nn association to squceze the dealers and the public, the latter being, of course, the ultimate sufferers, He considered their demands unbusiness-like and Improper, and he, for one, would not listen to them. ‘The representative of a very large Jobbing- house sald that his firm was cognizant of the movement nud paid no attention whatever to it, 1¢ was shmply an attempt of n set of men, many of whom were frresponstble and un- trustwortly, to BLOCK THE WIEELS:OF BUSINESS* and to “hog” everything for themselves. ITo dentedthat his firm or any other reputable jobbing-house in the city made n practice of selling to outsiders at wholesale rates, But he held that the zeneral-store man, the drite- plat, or the dry-xoors denter in. the smaller owns should ba accorded the right, which was Unnuestionably theirs, to buy and sell any artiele of merchandise that afforded them prot, So faras he knew, the jobbers would pay no attention to the State Associations, which were composed chiefly of men whose custom was not desired and whose credit was very poor, ° another jobbur sald that the claim of the retailers to regulate the wholesale and Jol bing trade was slinply a development of the worst features of tradus-untonism, Ialf the alleged jewelers, If they got any repalr- ing to do, liad to send it into Chicago, and were no more practical mechanics than the general storekeepers whom they sought to freeze ont, Tie considered the clreulars and “biack lists” issued by the State Protectiva Associations as simply schemes for extortion, rind was severe In his strictures upon the managers of some of these orgaulzutions, Heo declared that the jobbers did protect the "retail trade, and refused to sell at wholesale figures to purchasers not In the trade, but ho held that dealers had A PERPECT NIGHT.TO SET, motive had hitehéd on to a eaboose and backed down in front of the station where the ear was transformed at once Into a hospital coach, -'To allsuve Redmond. and Coolutge those preparations were mysterious, | ‘The re- Nef-train ‘yaa svon In readiness, ‘but did not start. Redmon, seated nt his desk and estl- inating tho rate of apeed at which tie trains were thoving, ealeulated about where the collision would take place. Some of the pas: sengera would escape unhurt, and one ot them would Lasten at once on horseback to Williamstown, tho nearest point, for medical ald, Here tho operator weuld learn” theex- net lovality of the sechd and send n dig- pateh to Ludlow, Possessed of this Infor- aiaton Redmond could send lis walting en- 8! ne and car, With its corps of pliysiclans and Diirses, to the spot at the rate of nearly 2 milo niminute. The other and slower plan woul be to haye let the “relief” start out and-cautlously find its way around the many Goops these aren“ full sult,” and cheap; cost only: y AE t v1 the Crane Iron Com- | to responsible retail tradesmen, even though curves, Iu chore. tha vies Ceapetiied he | $25 for a Hfe-thne, with an everlasting night- teen aa Se Mee the Panes thoy did not happen to be practical watelte seono In the tenliattapatelier oftles a8 | gown thrown in at the end of it. Smncon fron Company, Coplay Jron | makers, ‘The elleet of the agitation, If re- painful, Cooledge, feant be evar ce lent By the pavmynt of $25, any Fronchman | Company, ‘eagentt tron Company, | tallers listened to the counsels of tho State instrament watubel it wit Ht Rover talk evche {for Frouch 4a te only Tangnige spoken in | Glendon’ Tron Company (rebuilding Associations, would be to drive the, trade to On another chuir was. Redmond, with big i equal fout 3 arith every other member, dlacunele Tr Company (ronalring). inte fst arate onus finn Urremoraiole travel: Schuylkill region the following one stack each? Leesport Furnace Company (eliilled); J. B, Moorehead & Co, (reliniur); J. & a. Wistar, Garretson & Co, (fulled); Reading Iron Works, and Clymer & Co. In additlon to these, the Chickies tron Company, In the Susqualianna region; the Rockhill tron aud Coal Company, and Peacock” & ‘Thomas, i the Juntnta region; and the Port Aran Fur- nace Company, in Northern New Jersey, hava eavh blown ont one stack, the last beenuse an equal fouttni owning an cau share of the 1,400 acres o: land nnd the crops and tmprovements there- on. From that thao forth, In considuration of hig labor, the community feed, clothe, and lode him, After lic becaines too old to work, or ig disabled by slekness, the Community atitl support bhn,—and iis (amtly if he has one, When he dies, they bury him In the Com- munity cemetery, though without much ecer- siiolty tars ad farus To ean learn, the leu. ng peddlers, who eane around once a year orso, and who never could ‘get upon’ the black-list because they Ind no recognized place of business and could operate. any- where. This would reguit disastrously alike for the jeweler and his customers, for this elngsof dealers, haylng nothing to lose, wera by no nreans careful in thelr representations ns to the quality of their goods, A jeweler thus decelvedl inust necessarily dispose of tho atuil he had bought, and If f globes of perspliation coming from the pores of Is face and rolling down unheeded, Nelther man spoke. Five, ten, twenty, thirty aninutes thatseemed lke ages passed, when eumensharp click, lt was Willlumstown call. Ing Ludlow, Couledge’s hair TOEB UD onend he guye the reappnse,. Redmond stood up and placed hand , on au e 4 fecr knobs BY next moment Cooled ed, “NO collision. No. 2 has Just backed Inte Will 7 it were not whit famstown,” ‘The twomen shook houds with | runs “hnve ‘no religous cree, many re: ” ., of New York | it purported we, the public suf. the same Vigor av if they-woro twin brothers | qthelsts, soma delsts, nud sone nothing at ret ete Hualcces. On | fered.“ Hesldes, tho’ movement * must and Inadn’t met fora encisand yearn, all; therefore they have no places of worship. | the other hind, two or three furnices have | Necessarily fall of sttocess, for tho reason It was then nscertalned. that, by the piney ‘The only general gathoring-place bestdes the | recently been’ relighted, among them the] tliat man dry-goodls and notion Jobbers ear. fortunate elreunstances, ‘the trains bad alu | common diuing-room ia the common dane | Monueaey Furnace, in the Seaniylklit region, '} ried full lines of the cheapor st tes ot Jewelry ultancously entered from opposit ends upon Ingehally whieh also serves aso schoul-room. } whiel: was started ip yesterday, and plated-ware, and nothing che retail Jaw the longest plece of straight track between fany one leaves the socluty,—no matter i ¢lers could do would shut these men out of Seeretary Swank, of the Iron & Steel As- sociation, ‘doves not believe there will bea pantie, neither does he believe that the pres- ent depresston in prices [s tus to a mere tem porary: flurry, Ho thinks that, prices have sattled to n lower lovel, forced down by the competition of ‘English fron, and thant they will remats there until ralsed again by the slow renction of natural causes, England, ho says, fs uble to progics iron much more cheaply than this country, because here ore must be hauled over hunireds of miles of expensive railroad transportation te the furs nace, cont Wkawise must gunerll) be brought a the two telegraph stations, andinstantancous tie Tlantions of brakes had brought thom ton stop within twenty feet of each other, No, 3, reengnizing tho. “specinits” right of way, backed to Willlamstown,, where it went oi tho lai and Cincinnati's millionalres and capltallsts proceeded ‘unhurt on their Jour- ney. é ————{———— DREAMS. °, Yor The Chicago Tribune, When tho tasks for tho day aro all onded, And dlowly pond'ring tong, : how Jong he hag been a Member,—he draws -nothing ont, and can take nothing with him but the clothes » his back. Nono of the Communists seem to work very hard. ‘The women, especially, do very much legs drudgery than farmers’ wiyes gen- orally, ‘Cho. cooking’ is dono for the antite Community, by men appointed for that purpose; likewlse 0 Jnrge part of the washing; iudecd, it fy. dificult to define whut Js woman's work” In the Comunity, It includes unly n portion. of whut {8 vonsidored uch fh onlinary: Wee and yet ombricea i doul of work in ‘tho thos and tho market. Ie held that in self-protection the eftizens of country towns and vilinges: shoul post themselves as toe whether their sole and exclusive control of a great business. Havylng ascertatned this favt, they could gov- ern themselves necording!: HIS OWN TO EACH, © Tho world ts very sinallt 8a sinall tt ta,” Brillling sald ono, * thst one need nuver tulss rihineet wieeutes is worn wit tring | ee xaplosimauta usually coneadured muta | INO ae oh huaenoy to “remet tao | Undreutued of, on aoie bap, pelo day" y bal fork. ” ‘mora come wor ino wii, wild fancies Mecoppressod,aid that it only Heide ecame | senbonrd und a market, winteln Great Britain | 4 a,5 world {s vory wide!" another sighod: ‘And droumy, whieh 1 know. 'twere best niunity" that they buconto free, and equal with | ore banks, cond mies, and furnaces are close. ‘igo mensurcioss tho spaces taut dive in the slunib'pous son of unre sreator tol NEG mut i on cheapor there, am io ty vi o 7 say th ad ee 1 Aiieelca than. In Eurupdy that Atorleana will | Gro lower. “Khese poInts enuble the Asritish, | rom Virtb tv deuen, and nevor tnd bis own, learn with surprigu that thugo French -Com- Wwunlata conalder woman's position in Amorion yory gorvile and unhappy. ‘Theoretically’ the Coninuniata’ ebibboluth of * tlburte, cyalite, Sraternito" endoayers to cover uverything ia - PY Aye, dreams that somowhore In tho futuro YGunil olnap to my hunrt once more Amaison who tenderly wnited onine In the fndoless summers of yore, O fond, wile bopos of tho cvontng, furnaces to produce so nich more cheaply than thelr American competitors, that, not- withstanding an immense tari lax on for- eign iron, itis no wonder they ure nbly to sell “ Pho world Is boautiful and brigutt Ald ones “The rod roge opens tu the wooing sn; In boaky depths the wild birds tit and si Ty coolng mates, with neveretiring wing!" For sii Hybt in the: Hocoutius yonrs, When the pain of tha Now shall shino asa star jont on an oceau of sount. Thon 1 douve aut the Past will bo brightened, Demucrate, 106; Kepublican-Grounhuekord, Mualeton, Rica, sud Lurrougha, of tho sixth, Boyonth, and Kleveath Missouri Vlutrists, ane for nearly thirty yours, But tho greater partat thle period wua pasued in comparativo faviation frons the rost of tha world. Whon tho Coi yantageously situated for thelr business will miu | relleve tho market and enable the others to wholesale houses or Jobbers who supply dry | coughs saneral increase of atcungth throughope. These | disease will diminish, and all unrestricted | adfsens the act wns that theso jatter cand to the Greseine place when was nothing but a handful o: By Cottages,—tong before a jeweler could, have | Het uieca, itavill aprend aad continue to, water Ineal jowolers were or were vot membors of | way’s Ready Relief with th an asseelation which arrogated to Itself the | water wil prevent wickross or pains frow changa RADWAYS REMEDIEG. ae DR. RADWAY’S SARSAPARTLLTAN RESOLVENT, THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER, taryofthe Wisconsin Itetall Jewelers’ Pro- | Changes as Scen and Felt, ag: . they Daily Occur, Aft- er Using a Few . Doses. 1, Good spirite, disnppearance cf weaknes languor, melancholy, increase and hardincss o! fiesh and miusetes, ete, 2. Strongath Incroases, appetite improves, rele ish for food, nu more sour eructations of water brash, good. digestion, calm and undisturbed slcep, awaken resh eng wiiporaus. ise: pianos fuppeacincn of 8 otnhes, the nit looks clout sod heaituy: "tho urine changed from {ts turbfd and cloudy appearance tonclear cherry or amber color; water pnases frecly from tho bladder. through the urethra without pnin or sealding; little or no aediments no pain of wenkness. 4. Marked diminution of quantity and fro- quency of involuntary weakenlng discharges (ft afflicted in that way), with certainty of per- manent cure. Increased strength exhibited in the secroting glania, and function harmony re- stored to the neveral organs, & Yelluw tingoon the white of the eyes, and the swarthy, suffron appearance of the akin changed tog clear, lively, and healthy color. | 8, Those suifering from weak or ulcerated lungs or tubercles will realize great benctit in ‘expectorating frecly the tough phiegm or mucus from the lungs, air cella, bronoh! or windptpe, throat or hund; diminishing. tho frequency of. , ‘ the system; stoppage of night-aweats and patna: and feollngs of weakness around. tho. anit: eum shoulders, etc.: cessation of cold’ a * ebills, sense Of suffocation, bard breathing. fad paroxyam of cough on lying down or arising In the Bonnin, Al (eee, distressing symptome erndunlly acd sure! ene. Poke day after day the BASAPARILDIAN 16 takon new signs of returning health will appenrs astho blood {mproves in Purity and’ strenyia foreign and Inipure deposits, nodes, tumors, canenrs, bird jumps, ete,, be resolved awny, and the unsound made sound and houlthy: ulcers, fover sores, chronio scases, gradually disappear. % Ic cages whers tho system has been sall- ‘vatod, aud Mercury. Quickatlyer, CorrosiveSut- Iimate have accumulate and Lecome depnsited in the bones, Joint, ctc., causing caries of the vones, rickets, spinal curvatures, contortions, white swell BAPARILUIAN varicose velus, ote, tho SAR will Feaulvg AWAY thoso deposits ene exterminate virus of the disease from 6. Ie those who are {aking those medicines for tho cure of Chrontd, Scrofutons, or Sypbilltia en, however sluw mniy bo tho cure, * feel Dotter und find their goncral health improving, thoir Hesh and weight increasing, or even keep- ipx its own, It fa a sure slim that the cure fe pro- rises tha pntlent either the virus of tha disease ts nrrested and driven from ts better or wore, mine the constitution, As soon as the SALSA: PABILLIAN inakes tho patient feet better, every hour you will grow hotter and increaso fa boulth, strength, and tlesh. ‘Tho great power of this remedy is in disoaseg that threaten death, na in CONSUMPTION of tho Lungs and Tuberculous Phthists, Scrofu~ las spaliolt Diseases, Wasting, Degeneration, and Ulcomttion of the Kiineys, Dinbctes, Stop= page of Water (instantaneous relief afforde ‘where cathoters have been used, thus doing away with the painful operation of using thess {netrumenta), dissolving Btone in tho Bladders and in all cases of Inflammation of the Blad= der and Kidneys. In chronie eases of Leucorrhon and Uterior diseasos. One bate contains more of tho activa princte Rice of Medinines than any othor Preparation. Taken in ‘Tenspoonful doses, whilo others require five or six times a5 much. READY RELIBF CURES AND PHEVENTS AR. Byecatery, Diarrhea, Cholera Morbus, Fever. and Arte er ma, Neuralgia, D We i therta, ‘fore Threat, i nit Breathing. Bowe: Complaints, 23, Diarrhe: aint dite 2, Liarrhen, Cholera Morbas or palntat a ri) je Dawolm Are 8 in Sor 20 wine Bor cf infauimations no wenn eeriot Ne pin 2 oF inti alow the ure of hoe ie ieeten, OF NasttUde TY! WAS THE FIKST AND IS THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY Salve glands on organs by ane appl YF giants oF 1 en IN"FHOM ONE TO TWENTY MID No matter how violent or excruciutiog pain the Bhuomatlo, Bed-ridden, Infirm, Crippied, Nerv= ous, Neuraleic, or prostrated with disease may guifor, RADA AY's READY RELIEF will alford LAMMATION OF ‘TIE KIDNEYS, Dra eA ATION Of aE LADDER, : PALIMTATION OF THIS HEART, ee EH CS, CRO OE NAMIE: INELATEN Zoe ACHE, TOOTHACHE." : VOUSNESS, SLEEPLESSNESS, RALGLA, RHEUMATISM, COLD CHILES, AQUE CHILLS, CHILBLAINS, AND FROST BITES. ‘Tho application of tho Ready Relief to the paft or parta wher tho pain or dificulty exists ‘will afford ense and comfort. Thirty to sixty drops in half a tumbler of Cramps, Tends | Nau! water will in « fow minutes cure jpriins, Sour Stomuch,. Heartburn, Bick acho, Diurrhwa, Dysentery, Colic, Wind in the Bowéls, and ail Interoal Lalns. Travelers abould always carry a bottle of Rade om, A few dropa in of wuter. It fe better than Bittors aso etimulant, FEVER and AGUE FEVER AND AGUE cured for fitty cents, ere ls not a reniedial agent in this world that will cure Fever and Aue and all other MMulnrl~ ous, Billous, Scariest, Typhoid, Yollow, and otha: fevors (aided by RADWAY'S PILLS) go qulukly RADWAY'S READY RELIEF. ¥IVTY CENTS PER BOTTLE. ronch Brandy or RADWAY'S Regulating Pills! @RRFECT PURGATIVES, SOOTHING APERD ENTS, ACT WITHOUT PAIN, ALWAYS uu frrowell at tho morn; ihe world, oven tho ditfereuco botweant men und | thelr Iron In this country, espeelully sluice nll ” RELIABLE, AND NATORAL IN ¢ Dip, lida tha slo wo toll of tho dond, Wouot “And yet In practicn thora ian poine | tholr ather marketsare overstocked, aml they | 4, 354 World ls very Aull tho othon alnhods THEM OPERATION, fo retvriqvith tho bush of tho atorin, whero" oguiite” mtopay — wonne is nilowed | gro willing to take & very low proiit, or iu widel A Vegetable Substitute for Calomel, Sisikeal no xolog, + in, tH wovUrOINGAt aud profit nt all, for the auke of gutting thelr fron | pho great soa throbs with novex-ccasing moan, EC ds rt Aalomel For thoso dreams come back in tho w! lonmaina, ee a eo otore wa by 8 | off tholr hands, A great dent of English iron | And only Death enn uve to euch his uve? Perfovtly : tasteloss, Glegantly, coated with, To curtain the ight frum the skies, Hresldont and Boar of Diructora who appolut a | fy coming to this country, and will continue | Harriet Troweruiye in Lipphivott a, swout guui, purge, regulate, purity, cleanse,und And whianer teat) shah severe ee qSuportntandont of Iuduaery | 10, dieeut Me | to cone aspltent our high protectivedutics, ————— + | Hronyehou, Pituavay*s: Puls tor thy caro ot alt ar auw bor ouliived to moldor RWRYY {iigor Superintendent of Subsistonoe,” und | Wut not neat! y, 40 uel us, wag lnparted ‘Tho Next oun, disurders of the Bibmack: Liver, Bowals, Kid- Yot hor finitxo tloute ovr PERE al bend tallor, woo is pulled, if "Bu perintendont oF during ts ae aE ae ther vated wean ie Cimetnnat Huguirys Cee Hiisilon, Poe nag a tres ston iE iy cl r. u u ‘s he Lay w= KX And her volco Jv unbushod by the sounding | Clothing WOndh fe thot apie worunotens | about enough coming now. to Make too | Handa elawitiee thondxk Houscor Kopruscntar | Piles and all doradgomonts oF tie titeraay Viet Ox i oe of he nen HH app oleae ngieaaqot bieuone| hui, In wusuantatinptonuel oc Analen | ANH LRTYS sone o st mentary an | Fey satel atts Sees a Thopo for the best in tho futuro, tho Couaunitystocred its oouraa toward Utopht | Age Raees iti £0 Fey ee enemies Tense aul | Of thle number tho Htepubtleans viotud 147: | ‘erul, Or deieteriot aac drugs, bavrvo the fullowing symptoms rouult: from Disorders of the DI; sulvo Orgnuar ae Constipation, Inward Piles, Fullness of the ave oir prosunt location tho coune | wake a llying profit. Thedopression $0 plg- | Brumm, of tho Schuylkill District, Poungyls | Blood in, the ‘Head, Acidity of the Btomach, And the fears that surround io to-diy ‘ Tuy uvvabaute wid as mitteb ot a a wilderncaa't | (ron, however, is no Indication of n stagua- | vaulus DemouratlceGreunbacker, Ladd ane | Nausea, rietethuene Disqus’ of Food, Fullness Wil appenr us tho geiote of my childhood time, | as thorelia now unywhero on the Continont. “No | ton in tho fron, business generally, Tho | Mucen of Mutu, Mosgruve, of Pennsylvanluy ( Of wolubt in the Stumuck, Sour Eructutions, Aud us cngily yaulsh, way.” - raltrouds, telegraph, or dally newspapers wore | inills and factorics of all kinds throughout | two Hoadjuster-Democrats, Paul and’ Fulkere { Binkiuws or Flutterings fa the Pit of the Stome anya, Il. 3 * 8B, It Kings. Anown Io that part of lows, and none of those | the. country are as busy as they can be, and | 60, of the Boventh and Ninth Districts of Vi ech, Bwimmtiurof the tHoud. Murried and Dith Auonta of oiviitzation “and. progress distracted | HHO, COUnETY ATE De Dey a es eccen up | fldlas wud one Indupoudent, J. Myutt Smithy | eull Lrewthtnur, Hluttoriny of the Jteure Chokiug “\ Undignant Germans, the attention of tho bulluvers, Like tho Mor { with their ardors, Only. In the. steel Peat Third Distrio Now York, ‘Threo vaouneles : OF Butouutlug, HEA ODS when ina lying poss pact ta Uineianatt agulre. tuon_ dove, thoy readied Woladon, Hveninow | itis fethora any aymplon of stocknoss, and | $y "ual waa onq ranged ee a nent a Bult Pail ia the ticud, ‘Betulcagy of Purspirue AV AamRaTON, Jue 18-—tus uppulhtment of | Togatbio ta do with tho agoncios of eivitiaation, | thera It x only Ly comparison. Al theso | and two’ owl to tho resignation of thy « Hon. pullowuos af tie Bul and Byes, Dla i FE a ee a era ctiamee |. HuLtbisty youre was ting onough fora now ) Hillis nse busy, but moat of them would be | Hon. Levi, P Marton, of Nuw York. aud Se Tinea tho pica, wudden Flushes of Rare ee Te ee ee aa ree wilt be | weuuration to xrow upiu the Community; many | ablo to take an order which tt was specially | William P. Eeyo, of | Atutuo. | Asuaminis fe Selueadiis ba the Paa ouita wilh: trates ado Uy feuding €cetoand this weuk to have the | Uf tuesn wera, HOt ONY Hor a haa of hu: ea to AM Once gnelt cut ound Tis a a cet teitscautieny | Watesn from ull tho ubovo-cunied disorders, y Tae Uso. ° fron orders have te tal y| and In } 3 bh, i u it SL A end "631 Fea ra rea ey ae ee eet icing | wat bolnye word’ Vont nin Any OLKOr UPON 4 suite ‘cuuea thelr turn Will not cule for a | ot te 144, watch thoy hope th ueveusn ta LN by RUICB ME CRNTS FEM ROS sirong tempcrunce mun, Krumainann, the pros. | geverning things faocording to, the dictates of year or oven elghtocn months, yy the yolcsot the four Ropublican-Grecnbuckers SULD BY DRUGGISTS, Tiuoanent ‘wus i] painted by Saideau hans their individual “uner eonsclouuoss,” it. is Atala and tho fodepandent, the Hoy, J. Hyntt th. Read “FALSE AND TRUE.” Soh ano bis rotontiom Was Uryed by Charloy | YOUNT wouen,” bocauso,—wall, * Hroauye,”” ‘ gs Se pT aTE But, white itis possible that theso Ureouback - df a. Furwoll, Cot asinun-elcot from diinuls, When | that's the rasan |: A Groat Maul of Drum Fish, Independent morabers may voto vith tho Bond a lottor stamp to RADWAY & ¢ Hoeia-beat Varwelt in ane imutton at iuo unr | ,,téwaa thie clus of human tolnge thet about | a0. wioax, of einsenoeNas land, on Tuees | Rellyy OE Sia oly dorrousen {1 ang Desune 8O;ae WAIUN-GE. COR. CHONCH-St,, NENP Poltmontof a Murshul of Ullal, Farwoll wae 1 ouy of clotues provided by tha patorauy Woe | Ainge made. an Haul that -aetonisued ‘tho | durt(tl, of Virw alk Wil noe voto for mo cad: YP s eormation worth thousands will be seat tail dat ata ova erelaiannshould wate | etal sBURAPRGHER FG ola ion tie | fehfag af aia faeces txotne, | uved by hay mb hav etavane tbl ator PH 0 uses wud mira) a ih G41 al ry wa PE eR AERC OTR a aE So eee are coy voutdcnoe | Aitwit out bis coiness hu was fust in tino fue | ut the candidato of tho cuucus, ven It Nes TO THE PUBLIC. Hons with Gurfeld, and rocontly told w friohd | Te thoi. iio louked ay tho malcontents through | an uubeuird-of school uf drums which usually | cuplablo to the Adiministration und Aut Ad: . that he woukl Hot eater th White Hlouso 00 ION | iy gpectacivs, over ble sbuctauies, and under | swim oles to the bottom, but I tha instance | winlatration Ltupublicans.cuu obtuln wor hii | were can be no better guarantey ot the valve eee ey Gen. fun Hurrison. bs Bis spectavlos, butut. whatever sume, they | wore nearthe surtuce. }lis crows scoured, 1V votes, or two more thin nucvssary to elect: gf Dr. Radway'a Old ostablishod It. R. Rewer Soourad by Gah, fun Are nOn, poniod toni whut tholr mutbere bud been me | tween ‘nnd 100000 largo follows, loading | while, upou the otber band, i the Oyht betwoun ies than the base and worthless fuitutions of PERRO cient tholr age, This intimation nado the rebels furl- | twoecbooners. Sr, Wilcox gave them ey to | Blalge ang Conkling continuys, the chuuces ar’ gyem. As thoro ary Fubu Hesolvents, Ketiofs, -More people have u Bt Jacobs Ol! for | ous, Tho faut whe that during the thirty yeurs | white and black, glargo surplus rewalned | thats majority caunot be gotten Into caucusty and Le sure and oak for Kudlwuy's, aod soy rheymatival thau you have auy idea of, {a Whivh the Community bad slinply ateaadatopt | undlaposed of, i be bound by its edict, That the awe " Hadwas” bb Od WAM YUU Due < ' } 6 ;