Farm, Garden and Household, Poultry ParaBltei. The tine of Bftflsnf rsa wood for perches and nest boxes has been repeatedly reo ommcnd as a preventive of vermin in poultry houRes. A recent correspondent of the Poultry Bulletin famishes to that paper an artiole from the American Farmer of 1819, in which it is most positively as serted that sassafras possesses this vir tue. Every year or two this same old Btory is repeated by theorizing writers pn poultry affairs. Why is it that such idle statements so often find their way into print ? In this case it must be owing to a misunderstanding of terms as well as to ignorance of the nature of Borne of our poultry nests. The term " vermin," as used in the article abvo mentioned, is explained to mean chicken Hoe, yet the writer no doubt "referred to what are commonly known ns "jiggers," or chicken mites ; for chicken lice proper live on the bodies of the fowls, while the mites in fest the perches, and trouble the fowls chiefly at night. The chicken mites are to poultry-houses what bedbugs are to human habitations. They suck the blood of the fowls at eight, and hide away in the cracks and crevices of the perches during the day. They belong to tue class of spiders ; while the chick en lice are true insects, a diflerent class altogether. In neglected poultry-houses the mites are sometimes found in great numbers crawling over the perches, neBt, floors and walls, so that a person dare not enter for fear of being over run by them. As the true chicken lice ars never known to accumulate to such an extent, the sassafras preventive is no doubt meant to apply to these swarms of mites rnther than to lice proper ; and now the sarprise is that this pretended preventive (having no foundation at all for reliability, except in the fertile imaginations of some writers gifted with peculiarly sensitive olfactories) should be so often brought to our notice without calling forth the indignant protest of better informed poultry keepers against such senseless theories. We have been in the habit of using sassafras poles in our hen houses for many years past, because they were easily obtained, and besides the bark is just about the right roughness to ad mit of the fowls grasping the perches comfortably ; but the mites seem not to be annoyed in the least by the aroma of the sassafras. Even the free use of whitewash will not dislodge them. We have also freely applied sulphur to the perches, but without much effect. The only means by which we have been able to rid our fowls of these pests has been to well saturate the perches occasion ally with coal oil. This is applied with an old paint brush. The oil is very penetrating and quickly finds its way into the crevices and beneath the loose bark. The same correspondent of the Poul try Bulletin, who has again brought to light this old notion about the virtue of the aromatic sassafras, promulgates this additional piece of information : "The thousand and one remedies recommended to free chickens from lice are thrown into the shade by the fol lowing safe and effectual mixture : A spoonful each of lard oil and powdered sassafras bark ; mix and apply to the head and neck of the chicken, and un der the wings and breast of an old fowl. One application of the work, if carefully clone, is all that is neces-sary." isow tue larrt-oii alone, or common clean lard, win answer every purpose ot tue above mixture. It is the lard, or oil, stopping the breathing pores of the lice, thut kills them so effectually, and the sassafras has nothing to do with it whatever. Some writers have recommended sul phur and lard for the same purpose. but the lard alone will do the work every time, and the chicks are spared the risks of taking cold and being otherwise injuriously affected by the use of sulphur. Prairie Farmer, Salt-Itlslnz Bread. Put 3 teacups of water, as warm as you can bear your finger in, in a two quart cup or bowl, and of a teaspoou ful of salt. Stir in flour enough to make quite a stiff batter. This is for the rising, or emptyings, us some call it. Set the bowl, closely covered, in a kettle, in warm water, as warm as you can bear your finger in, and keep it as near this temperature as possible. No tice the time you sot your rising. In three hours stir in 2 tablespoonfuls of flour ; put it back, and in five and one half hours from the time of setting it will be within one inch of the top of your bowl. It is then light enough and will make up 8 quarts of flour. Make a sponge in the center of your flour with 1 quart of the same temperature ns rising, stir the rising into it, cover over with a little dry flour and put it where it will keep very warm and not scald. In three-fourths of an hour mix this into stiff dough. If water is used, be sure it is very warm and do not work as much as yeast bread. Make the loaves a little larger and keepit warm for another three-quarters of an hour. It will then bo ready to bake. While rising this last time, have your oven heating. It needs a hotter oven than yeast bread. If these rules are followed, you will have bread as white as snow, with a light brown crust, de liriously sweet and tender. WHY FRUIT DECAYS. SUMMARY OF NEWS, Indians at Work. The quiet which has prevailed of late in what may be called the central por tion of the West, says a dispatch fiom Omaha, Nebraska, is believed by well informed armv officers to be due to the fact that the Sioux warriors had been withdrawn to the north to watch Cus- ter's oxoedition. while the southern Chevennes and Arapahoes were oper ating on the Kansas borders. Events indicate that the Sioux have returned to their old country and that they are bolder man ever, xnree war pariies, supposed to be Sioux, dashed into Bra dy Island, a village and railroad station on the Union Pacific, 268 miles west of Omaha, and drove off a number of horses and cattle belonging to residents of the plac9. Section men employed on the railroad report that the Indians numbered about fifteen men in each fiarty, They killed no one in the vil age, but were seen firing at a white man who was walking along the track, and an East-bound passenger train ran over a man at the same place. Exam ination proved that the body was cold and that it had fresh gunshot wounds. An Interfiling Bolentlfla Article on the SuUleet. Our worst enemies, says the Scien tific American, are the smallest. All the ravenous boasts in the world, mad dogs included, probably destroy fewer human lives than are destroyed in New York city alone by the ravages of those minuto but virulent organisms of the genus micrococcus, to which we owe small-pox, diphtheria, and some other malignant diseases. Similarly, the thousand sturdy weeds which annoy the farmer, the caterpillars and grass hoppers which occasionally devour his crops, are relatively innooent and harm iess compared with the numerous mi oroscopio pests which rust his grain, rot his potatoes and fruit, and other wise levy their burdensome taxes with out making themselves visible. Just at this Beason, not the least in teresting of these individually insigni ficant, collectively enormous, nuisances are the two forms of fungus growth which have most to do with the nntime. ly destruction of fruit mucor mucedo and pencillium glancum. Our apples decay, not because it is their nature to, as Watts might say, bnt because it is the nature of some thing else to seize on them for subsist ence, as we do, at the same time mak ing of them a habitat, as we do not. Kept to themselves, apples and otner fruit never rot ; they simply Ioho their juices by evaporation, shrivel, and be come dry and hard, or, if kept from drying, remain substantially un changed, as when securely canned. It is only when invaded by the organisms wo nave named that they lose color and duality, take on offensive tastes and odors, become oovered' with white or green mold in short, develop rotten ness and decay. It was not until the microscope was brought to bear that the real nature of , the process became clear. Now we know that, so far from being the com plement of growth, the antithesis of life, decay is in reality the taking on of a more rapid though specifically dif ferent growth. It is synonymous not with deuth, but with intensely active life. In general structure, the numerous, microscopies fungi ore very much alike, consisting mainly of a network of color less colls and filaments, called the mycelium. This is the vegetative part. There is, besides, a productive part, in which is produced the seed or "spore," the structure of which is different in the different genera. In the mucor each reproductive filament bears a globular swelling at its superior ex tremity, in the interior of which the spores are developed. In the pencil lium glaucnm the reproductive filament bears a tuft of from four to eight branches, which, in turn, produce upon their extremities a chaplet of small oval spores. It is called pencillium on account of this pencil-like tuft of its spore-bearing filaments, and glancum from their bluish green tint. The mold so frequently seen in oranges is produced by this fungus. It is com paratively of slow growth, and the al teration it produces in the properties of the fruit it lives in and upon is not so marked as that caused by the mucor. When a fruit is invaded by either of these fungi, the vegetative filaments send their branches among and around the fruit cells, and rapidly envelop them in a network of mycelium, ab sorbing the substance and juice of the fruit, and producing the chemical transformation characteristic of decay All this goes on in the interior of the fmit, the fructification of tb.9 fungus taking place only on the surface, m contact with the atmosphere. For this reason fruit covered with a firm, fine skin, like the apple, may bo a mass of what we call corruption within in other words, thoroughly decomposed by fungus growth while no visible mold the fructifying part appears on the surface. On the other hand, thin skinned fruits like the strawberry, which are easily pierced by the repro ductive filaments, are often covered with an abundant fructification in a very short time, for the fecundity of these microscopic fungi is sometimes as marvelous us the rapidity of their growth. For example : A single zoospore of the peronospora infest ans, which causes the potato rot, will en velop the cellular tissue of a potato leaf with mycelium nlameuts in twelve hours, and fructification will be com pleted in eighteen hours longer. One square line of the under surface of a leaf, where the fructification naturally takes place, may bear as many as three thousand spores. Each spore supplies half a dozen zoospores, individually capable of originating a new myoelium. From one square line, therefore, there may come, in less than two days, near ly twenty thousand reproductive bodies, and a square inch may yield nearly three millions I No wonder the disease spreads rapidly. In the case of fruit, decay may be originated in two ways, and two only by direct contagion or by wind-wafted spores. With firm-skinned fruit like apples, still another condition is essen tial, namely, a break in the skin of the fruit to allow the parasite to enter and take possession. In every case of de cay in apples, the center of disturbance will be found at a bruise, scratch, or puncture : and unless such a way bo opened, the apple may hang until it is dry as leather, or it may lie for weeks in direct contact with rottenness, and remain perfectly sound. To this it may be objected that the constant presence of the fungus in de cay is no proof that it is the cause of that condition, on the contrary, the breokinsr down of the fruit tissue by violence, and subsequent chemical action owing to access of air, may rather make the growth of the fungus possible by preparing a suitable sou for its do velopinent. The objection has been met in the investigations of Davaine, The evidence that the fungus precedes und causes the changes which, we call decay is of the same character as that which establishes the connection be tween a vaccine pustule and inoculation by vaccine virus. When sound fruit is inoculated with the spores of penoil lium, decay begins at and spreads from the point of inoculation. Apples similarly wounded, but not mooulated, remain the same. Interesting Items ft-otn Ilotne and Abroad. Coegrovo, alius McMaster, alias Howard, one of the Welleboro bunk robbers was arrested at Waverly, N. Y. Ono thousand dollars waB found upon his person, and upon searching the bouse In which he was arrested, $12,000 in stolen bonds and money, together with the watch of Mr. Robinson, the cashier, was found secreted in a closot. Cosgrove 1b a noted charaoter, and is supposed to have been con nected with the robbery of the First Katioual Bank of Athene, last October A man named Salmond, and supposed to be a reBidont of Brantford, Ontario, arrived at Clifton, and engaged a hack to take him to Table Hock. On arriving at that point he handed the driver an envelope, with his address written on it, 92 in money and a letter addressed to Mr. Robinson, banker, at Brantford requesting that the letter should be mailed, after which he suddenly walked into the rapids and was carried over the falls Some twenty-five persons wore killed by the terrible Fall River mill disaster and more than double that numbor injured. Many of them wore young girls. The wounded were severely injured and a number of them will die. Frederick Dockray, the American who was arroetod in Cuba by tho Spanish authorities, and, after dotention there for some time, But to Spain, has reached Santandor. He lias been landed, and, it is said, is cruelly incarcerated. Tho will of Miss Mary D. Brown dis tributes 139,000 among the charitable institu tions of Philadelphia. Twenty thousand dollars is divided between the male and female depart ment of tho Pennsylvania Hospital; $10,000 to tho Pennsylvania Hospital, and the like amount to the German Episcopal, and Catholio Hospitals, and $15,000 to tho Soldiers and Sailors Home The Rev. Wesley Pretty man of the Northern M. E. Church and Post master at Marietta, Ga., waa arrestod for em bezzlement and other penal violations of the Post-Office laws. Bail was fixed at $2,000 A car load of twenty-one cattle from Buffalo were attacked by a mysterious disorder at Washingtonville, Orange county, N. J. Eight suddenly diod. The diseas9 io conjectured to be an affection of the lungs, caused by the recent dry woathcr and long confinement in the cara The Democratic and Anti-Mon opoly Convention at Vermillion, Dakota, nomi nated W. A. Burleigh for Congress The officers of the New York State Inebriate Asylum at Binghamton call upon publishers and others liberally disposed to supply their library with books. A largo number of their books were destroyed by fire in 1870 Alden Sprague and Howard Owen, of the Kenebeo (Me.) Journal, were arrested on a criminal process, charging them with maliciously libelling Gardner Vose, Representative elect from Augusta, in a leading article in the Journal. They gave bail in $1,000 each. Gen. Pope says Col. Mills has force enough to beat any number of Indians he may meet. A riot took place on the Isthmus between Italian laborers and Boldiers in which a number of both were killed General Lougstreot, commanding Gov. Kellogg's troops, says he surrendered to the citizens of Now Orleans for waut of ammunition The Money Order Department of the U. S. Post-Office is one of the most useful, and the extent to which it is employed is shown by the fact that last year nearly 75,000,000 order were issued The British Claimants under the Treaty of Wash ington were paid, through their agents, $1, 929,819, in gold, less two and a half per cent, allowed for expenses, and tho country is well pleased that they will got their money. The claims of American citirens upon the $15,000, 000 award by the Geneva arbitrators have not been paid.. The conference between the Kellogg and and McEuery parties in New Orleans in reference to tho fall elections failed to lead to au understanding Maine elec tion returns at the Kenebeo Journal office Hive Dingley 51,30GandTitcomb40,187, making Diugley's majority 11,118 Balances in the United States Treasury: Currency, $H,GG5, 947 ; special deposits of legal tenders for the redemption of certificates of deposit, $00,445, 000 ; coin, 73,807,233, including $28,051,340 in coin certificates ; outstanding legal tenders; $332,000,000. Treatment n Hay Fever, Professor Bina, of Jttonn, writes to Nature that from what he has observed of reoent English publications on the subject of hay fever, he is led to rup pOBe that the English authorities are not accurately acquainted with tho dis covery of Professor Helmholtz in 1808, that certain uncommon low organisms are present in the nasal secretions in this complaint, and that quinine ar rests their action. ProfesRor Helm holtz has been subject to this disease since 1817, and from the fact that the attack always commences in his case between May 20 and the end of June, he was led to the suspicion that organ isms might be the cause of the mis chief. Examination with the immer sion lens of a very good miorosoope proved the presence of vibrio-like bodies which he could never find at other seasons in the nasal secretions. Remembering the poisonous action of quinine upon infusoria, he made a weak neutral solution of sulphate of qui nine, containing one part of the salt to eight hundred of water. This was ef fective enough, and caused moderate irritation of the mucous membrane. Lying flat on his back he poured from a pipette about four cubic centimeters inte the nostrils, turning the head abont in order to let the liquid flow in all directions. This produced tho de sired effect. He could expose himself to the sun without bringing on tho fits of sneezing and tho other disagreeable symptoms, and it was sufficient to re peat the treatment three times a day even under the most unfavorable cir cumstances. One treatment a day is enough if he ges out only in the even ing. No vibrios are then found in tho secretion. After treatment for some days the symptoms disappear com pletely, but the treatment must be kept up until the end of tho time during which the attack would ordinarily make its appearance. In Professor Helmholtz's case this is, as boforo said, between May 20 and June 30. ntkino- ViAB Gentlemen have behn troubled for want of a paper collar more closely 'resembling : linen, .This ja tnem m tne iMmwooa uui . surface that must certainly be linen from the quality, and foldod edges that prevent Its looking like paper. It is so perfect an imita tion of linen that it cannot be detooted even on close scrutiny. It is for sale at au gems iur- nishing stores, ana wo wouiu every gentleman to try It. Boston UcratO. Ladles Desire what Men Admire. And thu 1LU10 thing It Beauty. What do we tay it beautiful t A trampareat complexion and a lux- nrlont head of hair. What will produce meter Hagau'l Magnolia Balm will make an lady of thirty appear but twenty j and LTon'i Kithalron will keep every hair In lt place, and make It grow like tho April graet. It provontt the hair from turning gray, eradicate! Danarnn, ana n the flneit Hair Dreaalng In the worla, ana at only half ordinary coat. If you want to get rid of Sal lowneta, Pimples, Blng-marka, Moth-patohet,eto., don't forget the Magnolia Balm.ladlea. M. Durnof. in August last, was an nounced to make an aerial voyage from Calais to EDgland in company with his wife. The wind proved to be in the wrong direction, and a postponement was resolved upon ; but at dinner in the hotel Al. and Mme. JJurnof were taunted with timidity, which so en raced them that they rushed from the table, got into the basket, and at seven clock were seen mounting into space with a reasonable certainty of bing blown over the North Sea. Nothing has since been beard of them. The early extinction of the buffalo on the Western plains is certain, at the rate they are being slaughtered 2U0, 0U0 a year. Now that the Supreme Court has confirmed the constitutionality of the Potter law, a number of heavy ship pers in Milwaukee are to sue the rail road company for the difference be tween the lawful ratea and those paid on bills of freight since the Potter law went into effect, and also for penalties, Corns. Soft corns are oured by warm water bathings and buckskin nroteetors. and no parings are neces sarv. Hard corns on the top of the toes, at the ioints. can always be re moved in two or three days by simply soakino the feet in warm water for about twenty minutes, night and morn ing, rubbing the corn with the end of tha finoer while under the water. This hastens the softening, and in a day or two the kernel can be picked out with tha finger nail. If the oorn is shaved off the roots deepen : beside, trouble some bleedings sometimes follow, and in several oases have enqeu lataiiy, Il.eward.-i will give SlOO for any caeo eh, bone or mnacle ailment like Bheumatltm, Brulie, Spavin, Strain or Lamenett, upon either man or animal, which thoMcx'can Muatang Lini ment will sot cure when uaed according to direc tion!. Hear SO yoari haa proved It to be the moat wonderful remedy for Neuralgia, Burnt, Swc 11- lnga, Enlarged Jolnlt, noof All, Screw Worm, Sting, Caked Breaata, etc., ever dlteovered. Whe will let a hnrae limp when Muatang Liniment will cure it t Who will let a child cry and luffer from brulaet and chllblalnt when the Mnatang will pre ventltf Who will pay largo doctors' billa when they can buy Mtxlcan l.lntmont for SO ctt. and fl.ro r It It wrapped In a alool-plato label, tlgned O. W. Wcatbrook, Chcmlat." Wm, B. Evorion, Agrut. Founded on a Hack I The disai pilnted adveuturort who have from time to tlmo attempt ed to run their worthies" potlona agalnat Planta tion Blttori, vow that they cannot undoratand what foundation there la fur ttt amazing populari ty. Tho explanation la almpleonougn. -iserepu- tatlon of the world-renowned lonlo la founded upon a rock, the Bock of Experience. TABLE KNIVES AND FORKS OF L KINDS ASD KXCLTJSIVB MAKERS OF And the PMenf Ivory" or Crlluloia V fcnlwiY iioVn, Alwayt call for the Traoe war. by hot water, and arS.the m jat .InraWa "lfr "warranted and Bold by all dealera in li'lUkjllllKH rilTLKHV COMPANY" On tu? "'"V. vYnik. -.. . i .H h.tha MKRIDEN ntlTLRRV CO.. 49 OhembfrS , Half a Dollar WILt, PAT rOB TBI Weekly Son 1 without money, tl.V fc0Wy(m can gut one. Btreet. Chicago, and learn WHY NOT For the Next Half Year. The Wfiklt Sou la a Urge, S-page, .oolnmn. Independent Newspaper, which no mieiiiueu. family should be without, Try It. Adrireaa. THK u. Mew r v . . j ANY ONE ctK o eSOfs pord ynthome. Trmt Free. Ad ' $5 h 3U 6e. KtluBc.4Co.,Portlaj,Mjilne tof. particu St. Loula, Mo. d1t Kach Week. Agmita wantoc G3 I U lara free. J. WORTH CO. IIICAUO MIDttKR. -One copy of I thla oreat nan Br tent to any addretl, Lioota Co., 114 Mouroe StreeJhlcagOjJIl; (El () K Pca IA V Oommltelon or 830 a week Wurt Salary, and expenses. We offor It aud wll Apply now, u. wiBfl" " iny It. agents: Thoughts for Saturday Sight. Easy roads load to hard places. Habit is a dead tyrant's old law. To be poor is to begin to be perfect iiie most incorrigible delusion is conceit. Virtues and vices eo in troops from tear 01 tne enemy. Kindness is not relished plain: it needs the sweet sauce of flattery. Mingled virtue and vice make a very uncertain twiiignt m tte 1mm an soul, rne delicacy of ordinary friendship is sucu it cannot endure a naked or rag ged associate. When men grow virtuous in their old age, they are merely moking a sac- rince to uod 01 tne devil s leavings. uenuine modesty is tne sense of im perfection common to the wise and good, impossible to the fool and villain. Thougu sinking in decrepit asre. he prematurely fails whose memory re cords no benefit conferred on him by man. They only have lived Ions: who have lived virtuously. Simplicity or purpose begets sim plicity of life. This is manifested not in one way merely, bnt in every way. There is no double meaning in busi ness. There is no praying for the sal vation of souls, and then, for the Bake of making money, helping them down to Hell in tne ordinary avocation of life. lVIld Horses. The habits of wild horses are well worth studying, for in some particulars they possess almost human intelligence. They choose their own chief, which gives the signal for departure. When they find a field dried up, they walk through at tho bead ot tne column, and are the first to throw themselves into a ravine, a river, or an unknown wood. If any extraordinary object appears, the chief commands a halt. He goes to discover what it is, And after his re turn gives by neigh the signal of con fidence, of flight, or combat. If a fierce enemy presents itself that cannot be escaped by fleeing, the herd unite themselves into a dense circular clus ter, all heads turned tovard the center. where the young animals take refuge. It is seldom that sucn. & nianomver does not force the tigers or lions to make a precipitate retreat. .12 v . .Hi'ia .11 '4 . .(I? .('7ii .4U.00 a85.00 . . flV.a . 74" ,. . Ht'a . 9! . .(9 a .0!)jj .10!j M . S.25 a COO . B.2D . :n . 1.1 . M . .01 . .'JO . .M ,. .40 - . S .23.01) .14 6 Hi-fined .11 .41 .24 .2'J .28 The Markets. NEW TOBt: Beef Oattle Prime to Extra lluUocks.$ Common to pood Texaufl.... Inferior Trxana Milch Cows Iloga Live l)rfsea..... ., Mhr-op Cotton Middling Flour Extra Wostern Rtate Extra Wheat Kfid Western No. 2 Spring Rye Hurley Halt .)-it8 Mixed Western Com Mixed Western, Uay per cw t Straw per cwt Hons '73 s 20 a .25. Fork Mess T.nrd.. Petroleum Orudo Uutter State Ohio, Fino Ohio, Yellow ., Western ordinary.. Pennsylvania fine 29 rheese State Factory 14)tf a State Skimmed 5 a Ohio 12ifa Eggs Stato 13 ALBANY. Wheat 1.81 ltye State 87 Corn Mixed '.Hi Barley State 1.7S Oats State 03 nCFTALO. Flour 6.00 Wheat No. 2 8priug 1.08 Com 90 Oats S3 Rvo..... 00 Uarley 1.80 Lard , BALTIMOHE. Cotton Low Middling (lour extra , fi.io Wheat 1.24 Corn...... 95 Oats , 07 VHII.APKl.PnXA. Floor 0.00 Wheat WeBtern Ked 1.19 Oorn Yellow 99 Mixed 91 Petroleum Crude a C.40 a 1.2:1 a 1.10 a .91 a 1.15 a ,5 a .90 a .70 a ,R0 a .10 a23.25 Make more monev selling Sin- VKKB' PATKNT 1IBUOM lean any other article. One Agent made 7'.i'4 in ;l 1 tlays. Reeommendod by Am. Aflri mlurnl and over IIIO.IMM) families using tnem Circulararee. CLKOOACO20Cortlandt St., M.Y, AGENTS WANTED for THK CKSTBN1IHL GAZETTEER Sliotwhrngl,n,1ra8n,dat,e.: iilta of fnr nnt 1 OO law. EveryWy bnya It. Bond .or circular. 7,l-ler . Itl'l-llrajr Phlla-teiphla. ra.. or Kprumnmo. mass Wanted, Young Men & Ladies To learn Tole(rrnphy at Buffalo Teiesrar-n uoiieun Salaries frO to fioo per month. Bend stan-p for Cata logue to C. h. BRY ANT, Slipt., Bunal, . H. V. riM POSTMABTKKS. - Onr commission to L Postmasters are the moat favorable offered by any first-class newspaper in the toui try. Address IfSDOan UO., 1 1 Ilnron on no muM.u, . iivruTiERitn i Am. Newinaner TJnlon renre, ..,,(..., 1 fton mnnn. divided lnto7suDdt visions. Send 8-cout stamp for map showing loca tion of papers, with combined and separate lilts, . . . , . m. ... ........... toil. Irtrlr... cm vtiiir nmim tl-i i, r vji ,.u . t. .. 8. P. BANllORNjjyIoiueJthlom v -..-.., lii Vlt-slnla 1 jrices.c. WM. 1. Mooei Co, Send for full description, HiinoiK. va. Agents Wantett.-Mcn or -women, i or 100 forfeited. VnueMe tamplea fl t once to V. M. BKt'.Tl, Blcfhth Street. N, 134 a v-tok ret. wrt ew Yorw, VVrALDF.N'S PHOTOORAPHIO VISITING CARDS. T New and tlaliorito In dcsig i. Your Nome a,4 TihntnomTih neatlv nrinted on one dozen flue Cards, tor only 1100, by aenul"g Photoarapn or joursclf to crpy rrom. AKenis wamea. Send cts. fur Sample, or 15 cts. for Agenta Outfit . w ti wr.TiF.N. Vnrlh Adams. Mass. N. B. Hoosao Tunnel Btoruoscoplo Views, 11.50 per dozen. .45 .27 .30 .31 .30 MX . 2 .12M 24 a 1.30 a .90 a .97 a 1.80H a .ti3 liMT PnDQnM by hl comrade. D. w. poters M I lAriOUltl. it. g, a., the only Authentic anrt A,ithfri.(eH T.lfft nublishBd : OOO DaffOS : beau- tifnllv Illustrated. Agents wanted eueruteherc, 20,000 already sold. Cin lira oi all our works free Address PITSTIN. OILMAN 4 CO., Hartford, Conn the world Importers manv In America staple artlclu plcasea ovtryDoay xrane continually iu- ..... nu-Auents wantoa evervwnere ueat in ducements dou' waste time eeud for Circular to ROHERT WI'.l..jS,43Veaey St.,N.Y.. P.O.Box lies riiiAS The choicest L prices largost O KUAINT, KUEER & KURIOUS rathe valuable bot.k we give to all. Full of facts. figures aud fun ; 64 pages ; 60 pictures. Inclose two stami s and aa's jilackib Co., 4i uronway, n.x, Best Organs on Most Favorahle Terms, Cabinet or Parlor Organs are capital thines for peddlers to worn with, be cause very poor ones can be made at half the cost of good ones, and few peo ple are competent to tell the dijjerence irom a nrst examination. juauuiac turers print in their catalogues prices which are three or four times as high as the value of such cheap work. Then the pedler starts out and puts them on the people in varions ways. He sells at an enormous discount, if he can get cash ; takes part trade, if necessary, or leaves the organ awhile on trial, and sells it on long time at "manufacturer's orice." exhibiting the catalogue to show that it is Buoh. or even at a dis count from this, which he can well af ford. The Mason & Hamlin Organ Co. have recently announced a plan which is likely to interfere with this business. This Company, as is well known, makes only the best work, which, by its uni form excellence, nas obtained tne nign est reputation for their organs. They proved the best, and obtained the high est awards at the recent Vienna ana Paris World's Expositions, as they have uniformly done in American In dustrial competitions. The lact tnat these organs are the best in the world is too well established to need further endorsement. The Company have now added a large new factory to their former extensive works, and design to greatly increase their business. This they propose to do by offering organs for time pay ments, or for rent with privilege of pur chase, at barely sufficient advance on the cash prices to afford a reasonable interest for the time. An organ may be hired by the quarter with privilege of purchase at any time in one year or longer. If purchased within the year, the whole cost, including rent paid, is only five to ten per cent, more than if the casn nau been paid aown at me oe ginning. Persons having any idea of purchas ing, will be wise to send a note to the Mason & Hamlin Co., at either Boston, New York or Chieago, and obtain their new circulars, beforepurchasing. Vom. .Ha 15X-a tt nn i SS T V No 89. send 25 cents and the addresa .,,,, n.0, sons and receive by ,-ll la mo else 7 by rf worth tl.BO and t. ?t" tJtfon, toTclear a day. Addres. Pi.u m b A nn iKgtjQMth Bth St.. Phila.. ra. HI onrv ITl offered. MnkliiK K tiloyment. Beit over ITinniiiK " T.iivvr.T.. Ttrie. Pa. Aflan-B, - ' ' ' : . ,.t. sending ns th address often PPI""' 10 cts. will receive, free, a beaunfu e'lnimo and lnitrnctiona how to get rich. P"-',ap" City Novelty O"., 108 8 ml h bth bt.,PhU THE BEST YET Agents Make $150 & Over per Mrnth selling our new naps, ricruitKS, chro- Itms, r.. new Mnp Oil 14. STA'l'B. Bond fjr 1W4 Catalogue and see onr new i,neis. K. O. BIUDOMAN, 5 Barclay aires- . 5113; Dr. J. Walker's talitorniii ,in fSar Bitters are a pur?:y VeffoiaDiu preparation, made chiefly from the na tivo herbs found on tho lower rantres d the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal properties of whicii r.e extracted therefrom Without tlio us jf Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily osked, "SVhat is tho cause of ths unparalleled success of Vinegar Bii l'EHsf." Our answer is, tliat they romova the ca'aso of disease, anil the patient re covers hia health. They are the greai blood purifier and a life-giving principle, perfect Iicnovator and Invigorator if the system. Never before in tha bistory of tho world has a medicine beeri nnmnrmniM nossessina tho remarksbla sick of every disease man is heir to, 1 bey sro a eentle Punsiftive as well as a Tunio, a fl.2.1 a 1.93 a l.no a .'J4 a.OHH' Keflneil.liJJ VSKVVING JI1ACHINK Is a good present for a ludv. A few davs' canvassins for the Chtcaoo Lrdorh will enable any man to obtain a machine. Address ledoxr Co.. 114 mouroe street. untcafrn, in. The Crill-ial Tear nf the v.lnn nr & mArifleln Is time. Does experience coDflrm the claims nut forth in its fvor at the outset? is the grand ques tion. Apply this criterion, so simple, yet so searching, to Takiiant'b EFrrmvascKKT Sultzeb. Ai'KitiBN-r. nv has it worn? Wh.it has been its history? Hw dues It stand to-day ? Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient Is a housi hold name throughout the United States. It Is adtnlutfttored as a specific and with success, In dyBuotisia, sick headache, nervous Best Organs for Easiest Payments. 1 S5wlIitir,m"7r t"?m,i:V,'.i btUoV8 T;',n,"'"''. a ' bowel complaints (especially couatipation), rhou- The MASON HAMLIN ORGAN CO., winners c.f THREE HIUHE8T MEDALS and DIPLOMA OP HONOR, at PARIS, m and VIENNA, 187S, and HIGHEST AWARDS IN AMERICA ALWAYS, ro spectfully announce that, having greatly Increas ed their facilities for manufacture, they now offer their celebrated Cabinet Organs, not only for cash exclusively, as formerly, but will p.lao rent theiu with privilege of luirclinfte, or sell forpaym.nts running through one to four yeura. One may rent an organ and thor oughly test It before completing its purchase; if paid for In the course of one year the cost will be enly Ave 1o ten per cent, more than the low- eat price for cash on delivery. The following tablo showa amountB and times payment on several plans, running through year, for a PIVE OCTAVE DOUBLE REED ORGAN, stylo P, with Five Stops, Vox Humana, &o. styles are at proportionate ratos. matism, gout, gruvel,uausea, the complaints pecu liar to the maternal sex. and all tvoeB of Inflam mation. SO mild ia It lit it rtnciflilnn that it .in be given with perfect safety to tho feeblost child ; ana so agreeaole Is it to the taste, so refreshing mai cuunren novoi reiuse 10 lace tt. For saie by all drutttristfl. nANVASSKRS WANTED fir the Cnicxon VV Lbiiokr, an eight-patre uewBpener, for (I. GO per year. Largest premiums ever offered to aaeuta. run particulars ou application to Ledger Co., 114 Monroe Btreet, Chicago, 111. Cash Prlcc,lS0. Tlmo Price f 143. Rr-nt 3 Mns. $14.30. one mm$gm Other 4?'Kl'tM,,V-?,tiH l&!Aa'j! mr'Wifff The level of .Lake Constance, Switz erland, recently went down eight feet in two davs. Ca nse unknown, un less it was that a piece of the bottom fell out. Popular Fallacy and Deceptions It is an infirmity of man to cling to the teachings of a past generation, and to stubbornly resist tne light of reform and prcaresa. Health-reform and Temperance growth are jealously watched over by the IJoison flitters compounders. One great prevailing deoeption of the present age, is the im pression that every human biped of either sex must be stimulated, and the poisoned chalice is labeled " Medicated Bitters," the better to palliate their nse and prolong the epidemic One of the most zealous workers to cure this mal ady, Dr. Joseph Walker, Inventor and Proprietor of the famed California Vinegar Bitters, believes in making Bitters that are " true medicine," and advises the sick man to swallow draught that will wash out the Leprosy of his disease. In tnis faith ne is steadfast, and his Vinegar Bitters, though a contradiction to the general character of all other Bitters, are, as a great auccess and Life Vitalizer, evi dence of one popular fallacy and cor- Interesting to Invalid Ladies. Harlem villb, Columbia Co., N. Y. July 9, 1873. E. V. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo, N. T. : Dtar Sir Your favor is just received. I intended to have written to you several weeks since concerning the improvement in my health, which is now vary apparent, I have used one bottle o )Favori'.e Vrewriptton with the beet results, altlioueh I will almit I was somewhat dis-couraijed atter its use (for a short time only.) I tiok it aider ?ry disadvantageous circumstano98'ia7i.ng the supervision of the house aud lur.ag the eeason or house cleaning " I wad obliged, through the incompe tency of help, to do more than 1 ought, and, of course, suffered dreadfully, lifted when I oucht net to have raised my hand, and did all I could to bring "order om or cnaos, mil upon laying aside all cares aud continuing the remedy I find aftoi using less than one bottle to De SO mucn Donemeu mab i nave uisouu- tinued the use, with no return of the symptoms of which I wrote you. I nave Bunerea lernuiy, and what added to mv distress was the con sciousness of not procuring rolief from or dinary sources j at times it seemed about im- nnHHihle tn Htanrl. so creat was wo uisuesH, AU of those severe neuralgio pains have dieap neared. thev were so bad at times I could hardly walk without some external pressure. Thav seem to have left me like magio, sudden ly, aud have had no return; all other symptoms have been removed. The severe weakness and faintiinaa liava ditaripeared. and I can go up stairs with comparative ease now. I would have informed sou ere this of my improve- A M l It Kill f waa fttarfitl if uieub, lur a npjjreoini-ou - " . was only transient benefit I was reoeiving, but I think sufficient time has elapsed to consider the beneficial results permanent. Aooept of my best wishes for your future success and ygur KinuueBS in aa vising u. x - . . 1 11. T UU1B MUijr, SIM, Plan, No, No. 2' No. S No, No. 5 no. e 114.30 SK.Ii'l 2M!4 71..T0 C7.II2 fj'J.DO n Three In Six 14.3d 1.2t 16.43 I4.30 58 00 SH.24 lti.4.ri t7.03 Ia Nine Twelve Months. inovtrs (14.30 2-1.24 ie.4o (s'fl.H) 2H 24 lti.4a (Ml Vil , $14 30 in advance, and $10.41 each month for Orgaus will be furnished ou these plans, either through ageuts, or directly, to almost any part of the country. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES w.th full descrip tions cf the organa made by this Cempany,'aud circulars showing lu dotall the different plana of payment on which they are now offered, sent free. Address MASON t HAMLIN ORGAN CO. Bos on, Now York, or Chicago. t DVKKTISKHS I Send i9 eta. to OKO. P. ROW J. KLL ,t CO., 41 Park How, New York, for tlioil famviuet of 100 vaocs. containing lists of &va nowi- papcrs, aiidestlmaU-s showing coat of advertisinff hoc; KiivufcK. THE NEW IMPROVED REMINGTON Sewing Machine. AWARDED The "Medal for Progress" AT VIENNA, 1S73. Tna iionisT Ordkr o "Mudal" THK BxPOBITION. AWAltSBD A flMWirAMBMMl 15,000.000 illnsa, ?l.tilli Clttooral. &,&0O 'loue Bold. Yin Moth r Dnlt?ra BrM ThfUI. ...Dfrcrtl, Ulnripr lUO&ktv, Tou(81,v5, by mail, jtuat imitl, circulars ireo. auutcu n, W. Hill & Co, Dooatur, 111, CANCER. It Is well knuwn that the whole medicsl faculty of all schools of medicine have pronounced Can cers Incurable. What eublime effrontery lu nuy nerson to stand un boldly tn the face of all this authority, and claim to be able to cure Cancor. To nut tortn sucn a claim in tne ieiin or mo mam Droff ssiou. In the citv of Prtil-vtelnhia. with it worHreuowneil BCientiflo profvss'jts and moolcil coll . ges, would l)e,u:,lzea it hit eubutHiitiated in the most unqneBtlonable manner, u height of Im pudence rarely attuned ny mortal man. nr. Thorpo boldlv claims that he cau cure, has cured, does cure, and will cure Cancer, as well as dis eases of a chrontn and scrofulous nature: ali. further, that he cures svihT cash takes bt him. He does this bv a system which noother physician luthewmld practices. His method of treatment Invigorates tue body, stirs up the dormant eucr iriea of nature. nurifltiB aud cieaasea the system. and tmparis lone auu neatiu iu an iue orgai:s oi the tody. His method is tho most potent ever dis covered, aud that it is what tt is cUlmed to be will be established to the entire satisfaction of a-,y one who will investigate. Address. THORPEAN INSTITUTE. No. 820B Chestnut St., Puilaiiolpatit, M. Nettjjs S.WDEB, No Sewing Machine Received a Higher Prize A FEW HOOD REASONS I 1, A Aeu Jnvenfton TnonouoHxr Tested and secured by Letters Patent. it. Makes a perfect lock stitch, alike on bot sides, on all kindt of goods. 3. Runs Liout, Smooth, Noiseless and Rapid test combination of qualities. 4. rJUBAP.i.1 Bum for Fears w, thou t Repairs. b.WM io all varietiti of Work and Fancy Stitching In a superior manner. 6. Ia Muat Easily Managed by the operator, ength of stitch may bo altered while running and machine can be threaded without passing thread tbreugb. holes. 7. Design .'. ingenious, Elegant, forming the stitch without tne use of Cog Wheol Gears, Rotary Cams or Lever Arms. Bits the Automatic Drop Feed, which insures unijorm length of ttitch at any speed. Baa onr .ew Thread Controller which allows easy movement of seodle-har and prevents injury to thread. 8. Cokstbuotioh most careful and vikishxd. It la manufactured by tho msst skillful and txperi enced mechanics, at the celobratod Ilemlngton Armory, Uloii, N. Y. New York Office No. 6. Madison Square, (Kurtz's Build ing.) BRANCH OP'FICKSl US 5 State St., Cliicngo, ill. !ITO Superior St., Cleveland) i as a eouna sr., uiucmnaii, if. I uo Plain St., Buffalo, N. Y.t 334 Washington St., Boston. JMaas.i e)10 Chestnut St, I'liiladelplila, Pa. 80 Sixth St., Pitts burgh, Pa. rniit-;r f.n irnst inn or lnhamiiir.tiiu. oi tho Liver and Visceral Organs, in BUiout Discuses. Tho properties of Dr. Yat.b.er 3 Vinegar Hittkrs are Aperient, iMiipnoreno, Carminative. Nutritious, Jjitxutive, l.Muret e, Kcdutivu, Count er-lrriuut, Svulorilic. Altera tive, aiui jMiti il'lniDS. Grateful Thousands proclaim Vnr egak Bitters the most wonderful In. vigorant that ever sustaiucd th sinking . system. No Person can take tliescr Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided tbeir bones aro not do stroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. Bilious. Remittent and Inter mittent Fevers, which are so preva. lent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Bio Graiulo, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Bo. anoke, James, and many others, witU their vast tributaries, tnrouguouc ouv entire country during tho bummer ana Autumn, and remarkably so duriuzsca sons of unusual heat and dryness, ara invariably accompanied by extensive de rangements of tho stomach and liver, and otbor abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful influence upon these various or gans, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dk. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily remove tho dark colored viscid matter with which, tho bowels are loaded, at tho samo time stimulating the secretions of tho liver, and generally restoring tho healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Bitters. No epidemic can tako hold of a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head ache, rain in tho Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of tho Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of tho Stomach, Bad Tasto in tho Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita tation of tho lleart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Tain in the region of the Kid neys, and a huudred other painful symp toms, aro tho offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise ment. FREE TO BOOK AGENTS An Elegantly Bound Canvassing Book Kor tne beat aua cheapest Family hid e evor pud liihed.will be leiit ttee f chuia- to any took agent. It contains Over 700 fle Scripture Hiui- trauona, aua agortg aro nieenuj una unprece dented auccefli. Addreii. slattnd experieuce.etc . and we will show yru what our aeuta are doing, NOVELTY PRINTING PRESSES. Th Beat Yet Invented. For Amateur or UuBLiiesa Pur ports, Mini unsurpassed, fr Gen eral jod murine, Over 10X00 In Fie. rpm.i r wnnnQ IV3 jutuuiivmisr uu irpBirr 44 m rvery u liu n lit mil tn SIprtntino material. 140 Federal mil lb 4 Knee laud M. lluittoik. Aoints-K. Y. MacKuiick. 6 Mur ray bt., New York. Kelley, Howeli A Ln-'wi, 917 Market Bt., Philadelnhit. S. P. Bounds. 176 Monroa Bt., Lulcag". Bend fir Ilimtratrd Catalogue. M'AlIister's Patent Artopticou. The most powerful Magical Lantaru eve made: with a brilliant Oil ump; for Home, Sunday School and Ledums, ttrrriM ntiuuni Ac. SHdea at reduoed prices. A vroHtabU buiM8 for a man WM, Y. MrA!iLlST&, 1314 Chestnut Bt-, FMla. I GENTS WANTED I'M Mi Mi Aiii Br Mra.T. H. H. Huuhou. fir 2S rear, wifaor Uor. idoo High-Priest. With au introductioo by HarrlQC Beecher 8tOWe. i wo jeart ago '.ha author wrota . taui)tblcl ou lJui)Kam7 which xcttl the Mormon iei.aeri to nrmy(y mvue aer fo wril a 600 and -TmII It All. The Clersr aud emiueoL into mad n. Lied hir loacci-Dt the challenge. Bhe did ao. and TmII I At i ie the remit, ltie a work of extraordinary intereet. fuUor 'i .rtlina reveiationa, trutuiut, ooia, nun gooa IM only ooo on f. ';-'. t o.ject ever written by a real Human woman. Tbeelory 'Ellia Ann, Wife No. I B,' ie loid inuu or..(. 625 i'l'- iiti.itrli tiiuttrattd and bound. It ie the moet popular buoe ever stid 'of agenti, outselling all others lAree to om. It taxes like aililure. OT'lOO.UJU wilt be Mold. Steady work or for pare hours rcr Men or auMa 525 teSgOO 'BOhthoae"? male. Our li'tcnptirmpamplUit, term. Jc.. Meittree to all. evitl 1W (in. Atldteu A. 1). WOIU UL-iGTON CO., UarUerd.qt. Scrofula, or King's Evil. White Swelliups, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous liiflauimutions, Indoleut Inflammations, Mercurial ji (lections, Old Sores, Eruptions of tho Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. In these, as iu all other constitutional Dis eases, Walker's Yineoak Hitters bava shown their great curative powers iu tha most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Ilcmit tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and liludder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Dlood. Mechanical Diseases. rersons en gaged ia Paints and Minerals, bucIi aa Plumbers, Typo-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, aro subject to paralysis of tho Bowels. To guard apainst this, take a dose of Walker's Vin egar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tet ter, Salt-Kheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carl'" cles, King-worms, Scald-head, Sore us, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolor"' .as of tho Skin, Humors and Diseases i,no Skin of whatever nama or nature ..e literally dug up and carried out of Rysteui iu a short tiuio by tho usa of rl .,e Bittors. . . i'in. Tape, and oilier "Worms. , in king iu tho system of so many thousands, iiio cll'ectually destroyed and removed. jSru svt,tum of medicine, no vermifuges, no an thulmiuitics will free the system from worms liko those Bitters. For Female Complaints, In young or old, married or single, at the dufl'U of wo manhood, or the turn of life, thosa Tonio Bitters display so decided au influence that improvement is soon perceptible Cleanse the Vitiated Dlood when ever you tind its impurities bursting thron 'U the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sorfs cleanse it when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when ' ; j foul ; yonr feelings will tell you whea. Keen the blood pure, and the health w the system will follow. It. H. Blen&NALD Sc CO., Drug(riaU and Gen. A rU., S.in Franoisoo, California, tnd cur. of WiuLuneum and Charlton Kt NY ol4 by nil IruiiittU tud Dealers.'