HUMAN LIFE. After a while a knty brain Will rost from ll ! cure and pais. After while Earth's rash will ceasa, And a weft i led heart 0nd sweet reluaie. After a while Tanlshed fere . An empty Beat a vacant plaoe. After a while a name roTirot A crumpled headstone-unknewn spot I A Mississippi Gumblcr. In tbe good old steamboat days, the steamboats plying between New Orleans and St. Louis, and New Orleans and Cincinnati, never made a trip without carrying one or more chevalier d"indutrie, who turned any trick that came into his way, from robbing a atateroom to wring ing in a flat on a cold dock in a game of draw poker. The men were invariably well-dressed and gentlemanly, and were rarely without a roll of 11500 or f 2000. They generally travelled in pairs, as it was frequently possible for one of the fakirs to render his companion valuable assistance, especially in a little game cf draw, where the dealer would stock tbe cards, slip the cut and deal in such a manner as to give tbe man at his left a full hand, but to furnish his partner with a larger full. The victim, if smart, would "tumble to the game and jump it" after getting outrageously beaten once or twice on almost invincible hands, but the blacklegs would already have made enough to pay them well for the trip. One of the most noted of the profession als wag Humphrey Davis, a small, dap- Eer and rather good-looking man of per aps 30 years of age, who traveled al -most continually on the boats, but made his home in New Orleans. He weighed only 120 or 125 pounds, but his word was never disputed by his reckless compan ions, who knew that he would brook contradiction or interference from no one, and that his hand readily fell on the hilt of a knife or the handle of a re volver. Unlike many of the others, he frequently traveled alone, and was al ways ready to test his skill in a game of poker with one or more strangers, but the professionals who knew him only by reputation hesitated at trying to beat him by illegitimate means, well knowing that, should the cheat be discovered, it would involve the loss of their money if not their lives. On one occasion, when coming up from New Orleans, Davis met a party who ex pressed a desire to engage in a little pe ker, and, as he manifested no reluctance, they all adjourned to the cabin after supper, and wheeling out a table, com menced to play. Une ot the party was a man standing six teet in his stockings, and a perfect giant in muscle and strength. He had heard of Davis, but probably underestimated his shrewdness or courage, and determined to win his money by raising cold hands from his lap and playing them. While he' wag reserving material for an invincible hand. Davis noticed it, but said nothing, and the game went on. Finally, Davis received a more than ordinarily good hand, and bet fifty dollars on it. The giant adroitly changed the hand given him for tbe reserve on his knee, and thinking that the manoeuvre had not been observed, raised the original bet one hundred dollars more. Davis saw the one hundred raise, and in turn raised one hundred dollars. The other, think ing he had a sure thing, raised two nun dred dollars more, and so it went until f GOO or $700 were up, and Davis called. The giant threw the stolen hand on the table, and Davis quietly remarked, after looking at it, "That's a good hand." The other assented, and reached out to draw the money in, when Davis said, "Don't touch that just yet." " Why not '" said Goliah, " I have the best hand." " I say don't touch it," repeated Davis, whose eyes were beginning to gleam, although he wag outwardly calm and collected. "Yes, I will touch it," said the other, in a sneering way, as he swept the money towards him with his arms. He hud scarcely placed his arms on the table when Davis reached over the table with his left hand and caught him by the hair, while with his right he drew a revolver and fired point-blank at his body. Al though shot through the chest the vital ity of the man was so remarkable that the weund appeared to affect him but little, and rising to his feet he caught Davis by the hair with his right hand, and throwing his right arm about him, forced his head back with the intention, he afterwards said, of breaking his neck. Davis comprehended his design in an instant, and, quick as lightning, fired two shots into the giant's right shoulder, completely crippling his arm. He then lent another ball through his left arm, and as he fell back into his chair tired the fifth shot, the bullet passing through his antagonist s right arm near the el' " bow, severing one of the tendons. The wounded man's friends had, in the meantime, crowded back out of the way, and Davis swept his pistol, which still contained one load, around the table once or twice, and, still holding it in his right hand, called attention to the cards which the blackleg had dropped, and coelly remarked, " I told you not to touch that money, but you would do it." He then crumpled up the bills in his left hand, crammed them into his pocket, and, unmolested, retired to his state room, where he reloaded his pistol and packed his pertmanteau. At the next landing he left the boat without inter ference, and was quickly lost to sight as he climbed up the landing and entered the woods. It was probably owing to two reasons that the officers of the boat or passerv gers made no attempt to detain him. In tho first place, it was evident to all of them that tbe sufferer had attempted to swindle or rob him, and he (Davis) being much the smaller and weaker man, tbey felt a sympathy for him, not unmixed with a species of admiration at his cool ness and nerve. Secondly, many of them knew him by sight or reputation, and did not care to hazard their lives in an at tempt to arrest him when they could gain nothing by So doing. The wound ed man was assisted to bed by his friends, and a physician wag called to attend him. Strange to say, he recovered, but for weeks after arriving at bt. .Louis, and becoming sufficiently convalescent to walk the streets, carried both of his arms in a sling. Davis remained away from town some time, but finally reappeared here, and officer Patrick HcDonough, seeing and recognizing him, arrested him, but in the attempt was stabbed, and rather badly wounded in the side. The man shot, for some reason best known to himself, re fused or failed to appear to prosecute him, and that case wag dismissed on nolle prosequi. How the case against hi in for assault with intent to kill upon offi cer MuDonough was disposed of, the Democrat informant did not remember, but Davis was probably released on bail and jumped his Dona. Jlusour, pctno crat. The Loss of tho Missonrl. For the" third time within two short month! we are called npon to chrrn iole the total loss at sea, and amid the most fearful oircumstanoes, of an American passenger steamer. In this case, as in both the preceding cases, the first ac counts which reach us of the disaster are of a nature to mingle'indignation with pity. In this case, as in both the preced ing oases, we have small reason to hope that future and more full details will tend to mitigate either our indignation or our pity. And how idle and how fruitless must either emotion prove I Our pitjkwill never bring back to life one man, or woman, or helpless child from those awful gulfs of flame and flood in which first the Bienville, then the Amer ica and now the Missouri have disap peared. That any word whatever has reached us of the loss of the haplees steamer, the Missouri, that one soul has escaped alive to bear intelligent witness of the dread event and its causes, we owe an inhabit ant of the British colony of iileuthora,in the Bahamas. This passenger it was who succcoded in launching, in reaching, and in bringing safely into port tho only boat which we have any reason to hope will ever be heard from. A dozen others whn of their own motion and by their skill in swimming wcro able to get with him into this boat were saved. All uie rest of that miserable ship's company; among them invalid women aud children . . . - -v' . i fleeing from the rigors oi a normem wintfir. went down in the waves or were stifled in the continuation which caught her up like straw m tno uiast or. a lur-nace. To tell ii a that the commanding euicer of a vessel which perisbetl thus and thus utterly was a brave man na a gooa on cer, and that he did all that could be done to save her, is to tell us as plainly as language can put it that tie vessel was unworthy ot her couiinanae.', " that she had been sent to sea tro.ni a country in which proper laws existed looking to the security ot passengers, ana in which a public opinion existed intel ligent enough and strong enough to see those laws entorced. We do not dwell we repeat that we have no heart to dwell upon the mere heart-rendin Fall From a Burning Balloon. An extra of the DeKalb (til!) Newt gives the following acooint of the death of a man by falling from a balloon, brief mention of which was male in our telegrams: ' -v.w . " Mr. Denniston, the aeronaut, who advertised that Mr. L. Durham would make an ascension at this place,' was in flating his monster balloon, 1 City of New York, and had nearly completed the in flating process, when people on the north part of the grounds .discovered smoke escaping from the top of the balloon. It was scarcely visible at first, but faster and faster emitted the smoke, and the alarm was given, but hardly had the de fection in the air-ship become apparent, before flames were issuing front the very top of the balloon. Quickly the shout went up, 'The balloon is on fire I' and as those near by began to retreat, the hors es were also driven here and there to es cape all danger. The dry cambrio and its covering began burning, first slowly, then the flames spread, and upward and onward went the fire, a premonition by this thno overtakingthe spectators eve ery one present feeling that some fearful if not fatal calamity would result. Scarcely had tho flames burst out, how ever, before an aperture of 'two or three feet was mad'i where the guy-rope holding tho unwieldy thing crossed it and the rope burned off and away to the southward shot the balloon, carrying with it in its course Mr. Michael Mo Mann, a laborer assistant in the inflation. Being near the basket as it started off ho became entangled, aud hanging with one foot inside the basket his hands holding to the ropes ho thus ascended for perhaps 100 feet, and regained a po sition in the basket, which again hung sideways, and in another minute he was hanging te the ropes alone at a height of probably not less than 300 feet. Now his strength tgave way, his presence of mind deserted him, and in another mo ment the poor man is seen falling to the earth, filling with horror and consterna tion the 400 or 000 spectators on the grounds. He descended to the earth ueai'ly in a standing position from 300 feet in mid-air, until, when near terra tbe AOR1C ULTURAL. Model Fabmiko iit Missotjm. From an aooount in Coleman's Rural World of the farm property and practices of L. A. D. Crenthaw, of Greene county, Mo., we glean a few -hints, which some of our readers similarly '.situated may make valuable to thfcnislves. The cultivated land is , R00 sores in extent, and is in closed with Bois d'Aro hedge and good rail fence, with large, strong, well-hung gates at all the openings. The crops on this farm this year, as usual, consist of corn, wheat, oat?, and timothy. Of these, Mr. C. finds oats least profitable ; of wheat grown on the farm this year, there were about 4,000 bushels J corn, 10,000. Nothwithstanding such huge piles of corn and hay, Mr. C. has none to sell fortunately, he never has oorn to sell. He feeds his corn, hay, eto., on the farm to his mules, horses, cattle, and hogs. Of the latter there are large numbers. They are fed all the time, summer and winter, and killed while yet pigs, but of most hog-ish weights several hundred pounds. In this way he makes a bacon-ham that excites admiration at tho table, and takes the premiums at the fairs, as well as the hijzhost price in market. By this con stant feeding of so many hogs he realizes 75 cents por bushel for his corn at homo, and quite as much or more when fed to mules, besides a heavy barn-yard crop of manure, which gives back to his fields and meadows 10 per cent, of the land's value. . Last winter 1,000 wagon-loads of manure were hauled from the barn and field lots to the farm. Here is a point in Mr. C.'s exainple worth remembering and worthy of imitation, and here is an other : We were much interested in a grove of black walnut, from six to ten acres, planted 12x12 feet, and cultivated two years. The nuts were planted fifteen years ago ; the trees are now from 30 to 40 feet high, forming a most compact and beautiful grove. This should sug gest to all the propriety of planting trees in the prairie lands. Thirty YeaHs Expkhienck With Cattle. Thirty years' experience in feeding cattle teaches me, Bays a Tritmne correspondent, that where they are kept Arma. he fell backward, striking -round with his back with such force as I in a yard and supplied with clear spring horrors of this dreadful to produce a concussion beard some dis- water for some time they will lick up . . . . I -rr it , v , I 1 .1 11 i i J. 1 !1 story. The imagination pictures them all to readily, all to vividly. The out bursting fury of the flames ; the bewil dering, volleying, choking volumes of the pitchy smoke j the howling of the gale J . . tl At . , 1' i.1 . the savage welter, tne aeaiemng luuuuct of the waves ; the sickening sense of ut ter helplessness ; the cruel clamor and mad mob of the headless, undisciplined crew, making hopelessness more hopeless every moment to dwell on these things is but a dreadful mockery in the ears of men who have made all these things pos sible by their own wilful folly, their own wilful selfishness, their indifference to law and to honesty, their lack of public spirit. We feel them to-day with a thrill and a shudder. To-morrow we go our ways, this man to his business, that man to his pleasure, and straightway forget that such things were. A West field explodes at our very wharves, mak ing dark the bright summer Sabbath with a sudden, indescribable horror ; a Metis goes down beneath the waves of the Sound, within sight almost of the daiv cers and within sound of the music at the travest haunts of opulence and ease ; a Bienville and a Missouri sink hissing in the waters which divide us from our pur ple dream of the health-giving, lovely, luxurious tropics. We are stirred lor a moment to pity ; we glow lor a moment with indignation. But the pulses of our passion subside unfulfilled in purpose or in deed, even as the waves that have swallowed up our dead in the midnight and the storm laugh away every trace of them forever in tbe sunshine ot the blue, unremembering morrow. Aew York World. Edited Two Papers, Both Dally. An antiquated writer in the Memphis Appeal has dug up out of his memory the following rich story. a lie young lawyer referred to is still flourishing in Memphis : " There was never greater local excite ment than that which grew out of this infernal navy-yard business. Half the people were in favor of accepting the property, and halt or more opposed to it. the latter thinking that the Government might be induced even yet to make -lib eral appropriations and perfect the navy- yard, and build ships and Bteamers here. There were two newspapers published here one a morning publication, edited by a gentleman of no ordinary ability named Bankhead, who was tragically and mysteriously assassinated some six years ago. There wag another, an alter noon paper, called the JSlewn, (1 believe that was its name), edited by a man named Yancey. These editors opposed one another on the navy-yard question, and their discussion had begotten a good deal of excitement, when both went away for the summer, and each without tho other's knowledge employed the same man, this young lawyer, to conduct his paper in bis absence. Ihe young limb of the law naturally enough took to both sides of the question. He made the controversy between the two papers hot ter and hotter on each successive day. Crowds gathered each afternoon about the Neici office, and somebody expected that the two furious editors would shed blood. The coming duel in Arkansas was confidently anticipated, and the fe rocity of the two paperg was marvelous. Popular excitement was intense when Bankhead came hurrying home from Virginia and Yancey from Alabama, each thinking the other was about to murder his own substitute. Such was the fervor of popular feeling and exas peration that the story was necessarily kept quiet. If the mischievous fraud upon the public passion had been exposed at the time, the deceiving editor would have been hanged to a lamp-post, tance away. He was utterly crushed, the blood streaming from his mouth and nostrils. McMann left a wife and sever al children, who depended on his labors for a support. The balloon alighted but a few rods out of the fair grounds, and was soon consumed. U. S. History Condensed. 1 607. v lrginia first settled by the Eng lish. 1614. New York first settled by the Dutch. 1620. Massachusetts settled by tho Pu ritans. 1623. New Hampshire settled by Pu ritans. 1624. New Jersey settled by the Dutch. 1627. Delaware settled by Swedes and Fins. 1635. Maryland settled by Irish Cath olic. 1633. Connecticut settled by the Puri tans. 1636. Khode Island settled by .Boarer Williams. 1650. North Carolina settled by the Encrhsh. 1670. South Carolina settled by the Huguenots. 1682. Pennsylvania settled oy vvuiiam Penn. 1733. Georgia settled by General Ogle thorpe. 17lJl. Vermont admitted into tne Union. 1792. Kentucky admitted into the Union. 1796. Tennessee Union. Ohio admitted into the TJni'sn, Louisiana admitted into the and swallow small quantities of subsoil earth when they can get at it. If they have access to running water made muddy by a freshet or snow thaw, thoy will oiten drink it in prelerence to clear water, and it will not injure them ; but stagnant water, with decaying vegetable matter in it, is always injurious to them, and I think I have known them killed by drinking it. I have drained all such ponds on my premises, and think it pays. 1 give what salt my cattle want, which shows that it is not for salt they lick up earth. In their natural condi tion they have to drink turbid water during freshets, and it is doubtful whether they will continue a long time healthy without getting to the bare earth. The hog in hig natural condt tion. living in forests, has to swallow a portion of decayed wood or leaves with bis food, and when domesticated and fed on grain he seems to crave some rot ten wood, iiveii. tne ngiisn geoiQEisi, who visited the so-called salt licks of Kentucky, says they are not salt to the taste, but does not tell whether there had been an analvtis to test the chenii cal nature of the earth at that place. It is said the wild gramimvora ot that country eat so much of it that if it had been salt it would have killed them, it is likely there is lime in some of its forms that the cattle get instead of chew Secret Marriage. , Every now and then the pnblio is startled by the exposure of some do mestic or social villainy, based on a secret marriage. Some confiding young lady has been induced to marry her lover se cretly, and to keep the marriage secret for months, and perhaps for years. In a recent case, a marriage had been kept secret for nearly jeven years. Of course a man who wishes to koep his marriage a secret; is always actuated by selfish, and usually base motives. He is acting a part playing a game, and his con fiding wife is pretty suro, in the end, to find herself a viotim. o-f hig treachery and baseness. A womim should never consent to be married secretly. Her marriage should be solemnized in the light of publicity, an d not in the shadow of concealment. St.e should distrust a man who has any f.-eason for shrouding in darkness, the act which in his estima tion, at least should be the crowning flory of his life. The man who always as some plot a a hand, who naturally takes to tricks and concealment, and is never ready to have his actions brought into the clear lig ht of day, is apt to be so constitutionally base that he seldom, even by accident, deviat into the path of honor and vi rtue. No woman who values her donvwtio happiness should ever listen to tl te suggestions of such a man in favor of a secret marriage. In Oki o Fits Minims, Headache, Earache. Nen ralprla. Lame Back, Diarrhoea. Gronps, Sprains, and all similar complaint, are relieved bj f noo a lKSTlKt Bluer, or money refunded. ., .... , ' dAtrrroif.--In ourehanrcable climate, eonirhe, eolds, and dissases of the throat, lung, and cheat will always prevail. Crnel consumption will claim tie victim. These disease. If attended te in time, can be arrepted and enrcd. The remedy ii Dr. WUtar'e Baliamof WUi Vherry. Not To-Morrow, or the Next Day, Bat NOW, If you hare a Oontrh, Cold, or any Irritation whatever f the orrana ef respiration, npe Hali's Hon it or HoetHOnnn aud Tin. It la e vegetable bal aam, compared with which all ether pulmonics are valueless. Pike's Toothache I) root cure Toothache in one Daln- Bold by all Druggists at D cenu. ute, England ajjd America. The Pall Mall Gazette, i'a commenting on the, case of a man who, had been literally " wor ried to death,," in London, expresses the belief that t.here is probably no place in the world chere downright brutality is so unchecl.'ed. Jn seme of the lawless towns of America, the Pall Mall Oatetti says, there may be more bloodshed, but the knowledge of the fact that a six shooter or a b3wio-knife is ready for pro duction at moment's notice, prevents much of r,ha' ruffianism which disgraces London, and which frequently causes far more misery and free fights than in the drinking vBaloons of America. The case in questior i was that of a hawker ot cheap goods, ' who hung himself in consequence of beir ig so tormented and made a butt Seasonable Suggestions, The heavy mlstt and cold night dewi which charao terite the prciont reaion are very trying to delicate oriranliatleae, and In lew-lying and swampy localities they produce an enormous crop of intermittent fevers of various types and degreee of intensity. At this vary time there are probably half a million of people in the United States suffering from periodical fevers by mias matic roars and exhalations. What makes the pro va lence f thie evil the more deplorable is the fact that It tnlirht In'all cases be easily prevented. Malaria and damp preduoe little or no effect upon the system pre- rortifled by a course of Hostetter'a Stomach Bitters. Every fall aad spring hundreds ef letters are received from persons residing in fever and ague districts, who stata that while their neighbors are Incapacitated for labor by that debilitating disease, they have been hap pily exempted from attack by the regular ue of the great vegetable antidote to miasma. AS a chlologoplc or speclfllo for intermittent aad remittent fevore the Bitters may be Justly accounted infallible. They eradi cate the eomplaints In their most obstinate forms ; but the wiser course le to forestall attack by taking the preparation a a preventive. The amount of produc tive labor withdrawn from active service during soveral months In the year by malarious maladies is Immense, and the pecuniary losses to Individuals, families, and the nation from this cause is incalculable. Bear in mind that bv toning and regulating the syptcm with Hostotter's Bitters before the ealninltycono-, I may always be escaped J and let it also bo rrmombored that Indigestion, genorul debility, biliousness, constipation( nervous complaints, and indeed almost all disturbances and degrangementa of the physical system are contral ahle by this genial restorative. mill HEHS. Head stamp for Ill'd Catalogue. UUILU liicknell 4c CO., S7 Warren St., N. Y. VOU WANT TO ADVERTISE in one paper or one hundred, address W. 11. WILSON, A pi Allegheny City, Pa, FOREIGN COLL.KCTIONS Or Remittances ef every kind promptly made bv i. Y. SHUKAUFF, Attorney at Law Columbia, Lancaster Co , Pa. oi oeir ig so tormentea ana maae a oun -c a yn per day l Agent, wanted l All ciae. of f, th ,t his life became unbearable. The w fcw working people, of either sex, young or a, f t ji . . . . j old, make more money at work for lis in their spare "yOUt! 1 Of London, It 18 Stated, may pelt moments or all the time than at anything else. Partic- peoph i with stones, insult them, assault them, hustle them off the pavement, and condi ict themselves like incarnate de mon! u without fear of any more terrible cons equence than a "suitable admoni tion ulars free. Address U. bTiyaoM dc Co., Portland, Maine. AGKNTS Wanted. We guarantee employment for all, either at an a day or Stt.OOO or w works by ,ti ra. Is. B. Slows, and more a year .'' N others. Suoerb Premium Given Atcau. rapidly and eaailr at work for us. w rite a Mpn?y made loo sr-e-. ticulars free. Worthingten, lluatln Co., Ua Par- iarUord, Ct. I nvkst your spare cash in first-class Ha ilroad Bonds. Write to Charles W. 11a bsleb, No. 7 Wall St. N. Y. AMERICAN SUNDAY SCHOOL. W ORKER (4th venrl. a 38 nage monlhlv. has leppons for everr Sabbath, with expository notes for teachers; Lesson papers lor school". Specimen cuny with particular free. J. W. MclNTtaa. Publisher, S. 8. and Theological Bookseller, eu Louis, Alo. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE I th be"t lOW-imeeri Cm-ShllirTpr Trntonterl. Let farmeri and reryhntiy who tan corn to sbMl teud lor irular to " FAMILY CORN-SHE LLER CO.." Uarriburft, Ptv The New "World's Grand Remedy. -The Old World seems to have played it s part in vegetable medication. But imperfectly explored. One new and POWeP HOIStlllQ IVlaCllineS! imnnrtsnt rftvplatinn trnm t.haf. I admitted into the 1802. 1811. Union. 1810. 1817. Union. 1818. Indiana admitted into the Union. Mississippi admitted into the Illinois admitted into the Union, 1819. Alabama admitted into the Union. 1820. Maine admitted into the Union. 1821. Missouri admitted into the Uni'n. 18130. Michigan admitted into the Union. 1830. Arkansas admitted into the Union. 1845. 1845. 1846. 1848. Union. 1850. Union. Florida admitted into the Union. Texas admitted into the Union. Iowa admitted into the Union. Wisconsin admitted into the California admitted into the London Equipages: Carriase horses in London are now al most always "jobbed" that is, hired for the season, or sometimes for the year, This applies to some of the finest pairs in .London, for wbose hire a large sum is paid. The . convenience of the plan is that it saves trouble, and if a horse fills dead it can be instantly replaced with out coBt to the hirer. The carriage hor ses in London have shown a decided iib rirovement since the fall of the second empire. Louis Napoleon's agents and Parisian Grandees were previously con tinually buying up the finest. A pair of fine coach horses cost irom $i,uuu to f 000. Those of the late Lord Joley, wbo ing bones, limestone, or oyster shells, as they oiten do. Oyster Shells. Oyster shells, whi -n burned, produce a lime exactly simil ar to that from a majority of the pure lin le jtones. Any animal matter they n lay contain, of course, is destroyed by the heat, and the simple caustic lime, wi ;h a very small proportion ot phospnat e ot lime, remains. They may be burnei 1 by putting them in conical heaps, with coal or wood for fuel spreading ever the heaps damp leaves, straw, or sods, and covering closely with a few inchi is of earth. The heap should be fired and burned slowly, air being given as n eoded by moans of vent-holes at the botfom to sustain slow combustion. If the. heap falls in at any place, as it burn s down, more shells should be added until the hole is filled up, damp leaves thrown on, and covered again with earth. Three days are sufficient to burn a heap of 500 to 1 ,000 bushels. When they are burned, the lime should be spread immediately, or while in a caustic state, on plowed land, and harrowed in, or on grass land, and a harrow drawn over it to insure an even distribution. Get Eeady for Winter. Gather up all the odds and ends, make all neces sary repairs, finish painting and glaz ing, clean out the furnace and stove pipes, sweep the cobwebs out of the cel lars, sweep the floors, clean up the fields, cut away the brusn Irom tne fences, burv surnlus rjotatoes. turniDS and beets. bank up the celery, and got ready for winter. n lost important revelation from that 1 and of wonders California has recent 1 y burst -upon the world, astonishing the s cientifif ;, and accomplishing such cures of disedsesof the stomach and bowel?, 'oilious complaints, malarious fevers, ner vous a' lections, and all diseases proceed, ing fr oui a vitiated condition bleod , as have never before been neese i in either hemisphere. B fore Walker's California oar Bitters all the herbalized poisons are rapidly going down. They cannot res iat the overpowering evidence broueht fo rward every day of the immense supe- l r lority ot tins medicine, without a draw- V'back. Not a drop of any variety of dis- If in need of an Elevator of anr deserltition. we can fumUb one. and guarantee autisfactiou. We make tLem to be driTon from shattmr by a special engine, or by water in cities wnere there are water works, jror ae- seriptiTe ciiculars, aHdre." eAna u. UAtss or. ij uincinnau, u. liHE best 1611102 book in the market is 1 Tne Struggles of ? Petroleum YsNasby Vine- it is illustrated by THUJxiABJA8T, tne great t of American artists, andcontains an Introduction ij Hon. (juaries Bumner. a ecu is wanted ror tins nd otherpopulnr books. Adores I. N. Kicuafdson f Co., lioaton, Mass., and bt. JLouifl, Alo. IVo Person can tnke those Bitten accord" fog to directions, and remain lung unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond (lis point of repair. Ulyapepaln or Indlgention Headache, Pain fo the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dis- ' tines, Sour Eructation of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilieus Attacks, Palpttation of tha Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions of the Knrineys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, nre the offsprings of Dyspepsia. In these complaint! it has no equaland one bottle will prove a tetter guar antee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. For Fetnnlo CompltUnta, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Hitters display so decided an influence tnat a marked improvement is soon -perceptible. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rhen mat I am and Gout, Bilious, Remittent and Inter -mittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Hitters have no equal. t Such Dis eases are caused by Vitiated Blood, which is generally produced by derangement of the Digestive (frgans. They nre n ttentle lMirffattve as well as a Tonir, possessing also the peculiar merit of actinf 1 as a powerful agent ia relieving Congestion or Inani mation of the Liver aud Visceral Organs, aud in Bilious Diseases. M . For Skin Dlaensc, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt Rhenm, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Car buncles, Ring-worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes, Ery sipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolnrations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug ap and carried out of the system in a short time by tne use of these Bitters. r.rfffiil Thnnmindi nroclaim VmaoAW Bit thus the most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. J WALKER, Proper. R. II. McDONAtD & CO., Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Erancisco and New York. CP SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS N Y N U-No 40 IIiou Art Sick LEND MEJHINE EAR. I Mtsblv was 111 nigh nnto death. An aching head : a fntnt and dis tn eased "all none" feel ing at the pit of the nomacD ; aipirrss aner eating ; pain in the back. wit 11 a lame pme ; a oaa taste in the month : a Irv.hackinircouKli, with terrible depressed ner von system.all of which maae nty poor, leemo oul iong even for death to come and rolirve me ot'm vsutferings. I tried all ports of remed'es without ben cut. lint relief came at last, and ' I feet that the hand of a kind Providence notnt- ud me to the remedy I As It ha proved fo good forme, I recommend t to suuertng friend, in hopes that it will cure them as it did me. If thee buy . a bottle and it does not cure, thoe can have thy money again ; an ii thou art poor, I will give thee a bottle , wituout monev. m I have known it to cure many cases or uvsvevsia after other remedies had failed. 1 have witnessed its rondeilul cur.itivo power in uravct ana tyianey dis eases. Litwr Complaint (tne forerunner oi uonaump- , tion) rarely, it ever, fulls to yield to us tiitraiivc I powers. For Nervou Debility and broken down con st! ntions it works wonders, a it makes the pule and sunken check blooming and hoal'hv. Mmv LsYIHAM IHtunn. 40 Warren (street. New lork. AflPVTS WANTED whora I bavo none. Send for circular, and ieirn tho names of t hoje who have beer beuetitted bv its use. Sunt by mail to places where I have no aeont. THE NEW SCALE V CSoctsl If LtsRAVEU.I msm Sea Sickness. Mr. Bessemer' orig inal plan for preventing sea sickness by building veitsela with saloons which are to be Luhe: in such a manner as to keep them level and steady, with the aid of bydrauuo apparatus, even when the ves- died two years ago, were long noted as gei itself is tostiing wildly in a sUrm, is the finest in London. That nobleman t0 fce put , 8n actual test. Mr. Reed, sold his ancestral estates for $4,500,000 formerly naval architect to the British to the Dresent Earl Of Dudley, and, COn- ArlmiraHv" in nnr .nt.t,iinn th nkni nf ft oentrating all his forces on his London C0Upie of vessels, intended for the Entr- . l " a Al . .1 A.a-l.. . . ... . ..a. esiaDiisnmeut, auuiuveu mo iuuu vm- i il8n ijnannel, which are to De provided tilled or fermented liquor enters into 1 its composition. It is a gentle aperient, a tonic, derived from entirely new vege table sources, an unrivaled stomachic, admirable in all pulmonary diseases : I and, in fact, coming as near to a univer sal remedy as botanical discovery and 8cientiho skill can nope to attain. Dr. Walker considers it a cure tor all diseases not organic, and really the great variety oi diseases in which it is successful seems to warrant the opinion. Com. ENSATION OF NEW YORK. A WORK DESCRIPTIVE OP THE CITY OP NEW lOBH IH Alls ITS VARIOUS F1IASE3, ib opiuiiuura aim wriciitjuneni, us umu uuu iuw me, its marble palaces and dark dens, its attractions and dancers, its lllngs Al Frauds, its leading men and puiiinjmilJt ill mi vuiiiiii trf, iib miiiritiu. li niysifriM- an I crimes. Illustrated with nearly 8 SO Fine Kntrra vlikurs. and a Jul! drncripttonot thexoork. Address NATIONAL PCBLISHINO CO.. Pnihtdulnliie, or St. Louis, Mo. Strut for Circular, with terma Pa.; Chicago, 111.; 27 Union Square, N.Y.. Moutiteclly tie lest Spare Piano Me. SonU for circular wim jiiusirruions. Prices ranging from 350 to 700 dollars. Every Piano WAUUJLMfciJ lor live leaxa. For dyspepsia, iu digestion, depression A $5 PICTURE FREE! TmTI 1T1 t.hA K 1 00(1 I various forms alse as a preventive against fever-and-ague aud other remit tent fevers the " Ferko-puospiiorated Elixir of Caxisaya," made by Cas well, Hazard & Co., of New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic, and as a tonic for patients recovering irom lever or other sickness, it has no equal. torn. ELECTION IS FAST! PEACE PREVAILS 1 PEOPLE PROSPER ! LSD NOW IS TUB TIME TO GET A fo 1'KEMIUM BV BUBsciuuiso run A Youth's Publication. For nearly half a century the Youth' Companion, of Boston, has been published. It was start ed in 1827, and is to-day one of the brightest and most vigorous papers with which we are acquainted. Com. If yoo kekl dull, despondent, drowr, de bilitated, have frequent headache, mouth tastes badly, poor appetite, and tongue coated, you are Biifferinfr, from torpid liver or " Bilious ness." Nothing will cure you so speedily and permanently ag jjr. Tierces Discovery. Com. THE CHEAT ILLUSTRATED Rural, Literary and Family Paper, A.T PS5.BO lT3n YEAR, MOORK'a IlITRAT. NRW.VnltKRrk. thA PlnnitAr InnAr In its Snliore, una for vears huen the l.curlliiK jouriml of Its Class ttie th-st in Circulation, Intluonce and Usefulness the HtHiidurd Authority In Hiirnl and IMuipstio Affairs, and u HrM-class. uuih-toned lllus. truted Literary und Jr'uaiily Paper is conceded the ui:st ahe'.kica: Hi:i:iii,v An Kxclianeo truly snys that " Moohe'b Run ai. U Tli PERUVIAN SYRUP mnkesthe wen amvncr, aud cxncU disease by supplying tne blood Willi Nature's Own Vitalizing agent IRON, i Caution. Re sure yon (rot Peruvian Syrup. 1 Pamphlets free. J. P. DIXSMORE. Proprietor,' ;so. so ucy ct., rew iorK. , Sold by Priiffgists generally.'. $75 to $250 per month, -SHEEra iti UI.-VMI.'. k'JMH.Y KKWlli MACIll. This What the Pio Died Of. There was a miser who was considered impregnable to charitable associations until a Hiber nian genius "came Paddy over him Teddy went to his office one morning, and told a piteous story about losing his pig, the only one he had. " Shure," says Teddv. " Misthress (naming a very excellent lady, whose eood opinion old Hard Fist was anxious to retain), "towld me to come to ye, for ye wor very rich, and rev a power of money to the poor, Uod blees you I l only want to tinction ef bavins the best dinners and best appointed equipage and servants in the town. Oddly enough, as is the custom for people who have grand equipages to make their bravest show at eight o'clock in the evening, when they go out to din ner, and when there is no one in we streets. The coachman and footman are then in their finest liveries, the former sitting imbedded in his hammercloth on the box of the state coach. When my lord and my lady are in, the two Jeameses jump up on their perch behind, each with a long, gut-mounted cane in mi hand. When they have deposited their load they pull up the shutters of the carriage, and, mounting the box, one on each side of tbe coachman, thus return at a slow rate to the stables. This is a very old custom, which has been handed with saloons ninety feet long by thirty ieeet broad and twenty feet high, con structed in accordance with Mr. Bes semer' plan. Above the saloon will be promenade deck seventy feet in length of equal stability, and Mr. Bessemer says that in the roughest weather the saloon and deck will not be subjected to a great er amount of motion than is felt in an ordinary railway carriage. The Providential Boat. The boat which was saved from the ill fated steamer Missouri was one recently pur chased by the company, intended tor use on board the Morro Castle. When the United States Inspector of Hulls inspect ed the Missouri, he found five life boats aboard, and took exception to these as insufficient, refusing to pass the vessel until another large boat should be pro vided. At that time the boat already aUuded to lay on the wharf, and was tanen aboard the Missouri, one was not hung on davits, but was lashed to the Clap-Trap and Cant. Invalid reader. If you are. unwise enouiiu to put yourself outride of any of the mock tonics eaamnteed to con tain " no diHusivo stimulant," you will inevi tably come to grlvf. Ask your physician if any liquid preparation, destitute ot etimulat uiK properties, is wortuy ot tne rnuio oi a tou.le. He will tell you no. 8hun all such nau se'jus catchpennies. Plantation Bitters, the most wholesome invigorant in the world, owes i 'jo rapidity witn wmcn it relieves tue disorder ed stomach and the shattered nerves to tbe diffusive agent which conveys Its medicinal Ingredients to the seat of the complaint. That agent is the spirit ot tbe sugar caut, the most nutrlclous and agreeable of all the varieties of alcohol. The mediciual ingredients of the Bitters, valuable as tbey are, would be compur atively useless without this distributive basis. I hey would lermenl and sour, beware, as you hope for health, of the horrible compounds oi refuse drugs in a state of fermentation which humbugs are endeavoring to foist upon the puuuc as medicines. vom. Tne seosoB for coughs and colds Is rapldlv approaching, and every one should be prepared to cnecat the nrst symptoms, as a cough con tracted between now and Christinas frequently lasts all winter. There is no better remedy than Johnton'i Anodyne Liniment. For all diseases of the throat and lungs it should be used internally and externally. Com. Lung fever, common cold, catarrhal fever, and nasal discharge of a brownish color in horses, may be checked at once by liberal nse of Sheridan'i Cavalry Condition Powder: vom. " . "F""" " the mo.-t AhU, t'.;il,,l, h:ie..,nllu Printr.l. Wi'Mu ir. tl uOlden Medical lil.l.m.l llemttlu HM.omcl Paixr. a wlmlr, which ruiu'jiftai iisiu.ii imony ru t'cople." it la ivatlonn! in Character and Ohu'Cta. nnd umtpton tn hoth Town aim uouuiry. sixteen quarto ruges, woeaiy. $7.SO 3rjOIX 2. SOI raise enough to buy me another little shlip of down by generations of Jeameses. a mir" The miser couian t resist tne influence of Mrs. , so he gave Teddy The San Juan Poundabt Case. A A faw dava afterward ha met BDecial despatch from Berlin says the TT7.11 rpJj t,aiA vA u AlA ru I f Vivck Araita f wVi-ktn AVin "Rm rornr Wil li im, Mil lOUUI, UC, UtU JWfcss I , AAA V. V v.uua ( tw " - . , . . s , a hniindarv aeon Dy rones, and thus, wnen me nre a fine one it is." " Then take better care case, in their report to His Majesty, roc- broke out, it was comparatively easy to jt a;a nfih. Vior What Lmmanrlsrlaa a Mmnrnmiu nf tha dis- launch her. It was this boat which did the pig you lost die ef ?" " Die of," pute the middle channel as the boundary said Teddy, raising Lis eyebrows j "shure line between British and American ter he didn't die he was fat enough and 1 ritory. The reports of the experts have killed him I 1 pot yet been pupushed. proved the salvation of the twelve human beings. Had the vessel gone to sea as was at first intended, none would have I lived, to tell the tad story of her less. All who Day S'i.M will receive tho nriiAi. for 1S7S. (or fur a year f rum this date or Got. 1. '72. aa nrotor reu, i ana n pnst-inuri copy or tho .Ntprr stcci-i'uttt Etwrni'iM entitled " HlKTH-DAV MohxlN'O. ORTllF frAltltENKH'H PltKSFNT " a Beautiful und Pleasing rivture, wunu 4. in met wo mrntsn cveiyuouy THE BEST PAPER, AND BEST PREMIUM, . FOB ME LEAST PAY! Moore's nrnxt la only S2.50 a rear, with Premium Engraving, in cluha of ten or more, without Kn- aravlna. 3 ner cony. Great Inducements to Clut Agents, ana one wantea in every pcnooi uiHtneion the Continent. Specimens, Ac, sent free. Addrcu U. 1). T. MOORE, New York lily. THE A-NECTAR 18 A PURH I1L.AOK TEA with the Orn Tea Flavor. Th best Tea Imported, tor tale evtrwohtre. Aud for sale whole sale only by the Great Atlaift tie and Pacific Tea Co., No. 191 Fulton !., and tec 4 Church St.. Now York. r-u. uox. 93IIO. Send for Tnea-Sertar Circular. Elegant, sweet, light and wholesome Bread, Rolls, Biscuits, Cora Bread, Marlins, Buck, wheat and other Griddle Cukes, and Pastry and Cakes, with Pooley's Yeast Powder. Bold by iZtTLl sTk EACH WEfak. AUifiN'id WAPl- I it f FD. Business luaitimate. Parti a- larsfree. J. WORTH, St. Louis, Mu. lioiSlsl. Bent by mall tor 10 cents. . rj. ruui fi. ai. v., mo L,exiugton Ave., New York City, T A tf3 CHANCE FOR GENTS agents, we aaa a. .a 4 will pay you aw oer weea in cah, to engage with us at once.eyorytht t furnished and ex- pensaapaia. A. uuuijiri ac tu. uuariotte. Mich. To remove Sunburn and " Queen's Toilet." Com. Tan, use the Oni Cold aptbb AxeTiBB. will, with riiiit nnHtn. tions. secuiely establish ihe seeds of nnnHiimnHnn in the 8ystm. Those In need of a remedy will find Dr. jw" cxpeatonuit always prompt, uoroUKa sua CUIVWIVIili $30 PER WEEK and expensea paid. We want a reliable agent In eyery Couni y In the U. 8. AilUreis Ui'usoa Hivaa Wim Co., Ut waiueu liui. ci . i..gr VUlcaeo. 111. As Omc as A Flash or Liohtkiko does Caisri. DOhO B EXOELBIOB ailllVItetliiinnl i.hal, kers and mustacaea; ue chameleon tints, but the purest r i w. tsyav vt -iviiM VTVlVSAf which cost tlli.OO.ff-nt on receipt of 16 ten's. Ad areas i. dciwajua, bi. tioais, alo. A CENTS WANTED. Ne misy required In ad. ia vauae. jsaaiesa Sjai laa uu., rirubufftb, fa. CLBOB.-ui raparsnd Maeaainas. Want Aunts Bend Iiaaip. It, U lAlKCHltvT Rolling Pralrif ,VTis 5 Machine will stitch, hem, fcU, tuck, quilt, cord, bind, r hnirtnmi embroider in a most auperior manner. Price oruv $15. Fullv licensed and warranted forflvcyeara. Cat We will pay $1000 for any machino that wiU sew a - ... ..... Knailtiflll fir mnrt. " 1 . . II. loinl thlttl anr it makes tha "Elastic Lock tititch.' Every second stitch can be cut, and aUU the cloth cannot bo fe pulled apart witnoul tearing it. sr epay asnus iiu C $7a to $-')0 per month and expenses, or a commission Chicago, IU. or St Louis, Mo. 1823. JUBILEE! 1873. or TBI NEW YORK OBSERVER The Best Religious and Secular Family Newspaper, I $3 a Year with the JU'ILEE YEAR BOOK. SIDNEY E. MORSE fc CO., ' 37 Park Row, New York. '- SEXI FOR A SAMPL.I3 COPY." A New Colony in Kansas ! At ' 8KTDDY," In Ncsho Talley. on MISSOURI, KANSAS AND TEAAS BA1LIT A I , Under tha auspices of the NATIONAL PUREATJ ur llllA I lun. WM. p. TOMLINSON Local Agent, TIT AMERICAN COLONIST AND HOMESTEAD JOURNAL, contaiuine maps, with full particulars aa te the Organization oi me uoiuuy, iuh ijiiuuk, rroauc tions. Climate. Wood, Water, etc.. SKNT FREE, on nnhtinn to A. R. Wklls. Sec'v N. B. of Miiriution. S89 Broadway, New York. THE CONFESSIONS OF A NERVOUS INVALID. PiiKllfihAfi for the benefit of vounu men ana otnert who suffer from Nerroun Debility, etc., upplyinir tub ' ubans or BKLr-coKB. Written by ouu who cured him- I self, and sent free on receiving a port-puid directed envelope. Address NaTUAMKL WAVfAltt, Urook- iya. n. y. 390 Peutt tttreet PITTSBURGH. Pa. Longest eneaeed, and most successful physician of t h ace. Consultation or pamphlet Iree. Call or write. J ust published tor ben. jt of rouug men who suiter from i KervoumerfM. DebLlit v. 6lc. a treatise ot 36 natti. for 1 stamps; a book of 860 ptijtea, illustrated, for w pent. WANTED, Agents for the fastest ellinr anicla If in the world. One arent oleared $83 in one week, and has areragea w per mouin aurlBg the nast year Aatiref , tue past year. RANDALL CO., 767 Broadway, New York. Ilomest. anorectic, Uod-feann( men and woroem eaa have pleasant, profitable work ; no riak or capital. Write to a. L. Ilastiiurs. Is Lindall ku Uoslou, Mass. (5 p i VALl'ABLK-(lend three-cent slatnp for H) particulars. DOboON, HAY NEB as tel.. St. Louis, lio. - . ,. AGENTS Wanted. A (tents make more money a work for us than anything else. Particulars free O. BTifaov & Co., f'lM Art PublUlun .PorUane Me. SHEEP. WEBB 80TJTBD0WN8 FOB 8AL GEO. U. BB0WN, MUlbieok, Cuwhess Ce,. N. DR. WHITTIER,