Little Home-Body. Little Rnms-body is m tier's pet, Fairest an t swr etest of hon-ekecpert yet; U r went the rose* ia go'den light peep. He'pin-t he- mother to sew and to eweep. Tidy nnd prim in her apron and gown, Br ght st of eyes, of lire bonniest brown; Ti-ite-t ri- uro*. and needle so (hit. Pari cm of womanhood, -town at my feet t Little Home-body ta grave and demure. Weep* when von speak of - he wretched and poor Thongh she can laogh in the merriest way, While vou sre telling a ta'e that ia gay. Lilv that hhronis in aome Ume, leafy nook, Sly little hide away, mows sided brook ; FViries are flue, where the dews fall; Homo-f.iirio* —these are the beat ef them all! Farm, Garden and HonscboM. How ro QrtKT A HABT. -A farmer. wh> paswtvl tnnumemble aWphnts night*, immortalized himself try* discovering a method of keeping lvalues quiet The wtole of o jve rati on is ns f.Howa : A soon a* ihc sqnsHer awakes, set it up. propjved by s pillow, if It can not si alone ; then smear its fingers with thick treacle ; thee put half a doaen feathers into its hntxK and it will sit and piek the fe*'hers front one hand to the other until it drops s-h-ep. A* soon as it woke* ags : n. treacle and more feathers, and in pher of the nivrve-atonuding yells, there will bo silence and enjoy ment nnspeakabk'. T-v Ren.rv A CHIMNKT. —The &-isf(fc .4 -scrtoia gives the following hints to those who would " build a ehimuev which will not sm-vke The chief point is to make the throat not less than four inches broad nn-1 twelve long; then the chimney should be abruptly enlarged to double the size, aud ao oontiuued for on-* f->ot or more ; then it mav be grad n -'ly tapere flnea laa than sixty square inches. The heat shape for a chimney is cincnlar, or roanv-sided. as giving 1- friction, (brick is the best material, as it is a non -e-mdnctor,) aud the higher abov the r-vof the better. Hrso.vHi.vN ORVSS FOR lloasca. A g'-utlem u who has raisel his gras for many rears, and who finds tha' horse ke-p fat on it while on Timothy tbcv grow poor, saya. in T*v F*rm r, "that it j should tve cut in the blow, before any see,) i- formed; wilt in the swath same as clover, an-1 make in the cock. The stock is nearly a-lnl and the hav very heave, and if m -de in thia way will bea gveoti as grsss, t>d a horse will want little grain for ordinary farm work, ey ccpt in the Spring when doing heavx plowing. Give hoi*e& *ll thev will ea of It, and they will fat with decent usage. B-it if a'Hwed to tnru yellow ami form sof-1, it is the same as any other grain, and w'H. of course, injure a horse th rvne as if he were fed wheat in tha bun dle to exeaaa. Anv over-'ed grain is bait. It i bett r to rke it by hand, bnt on good oil von will tumid* np * big ooek ia a small space. Br ;NINO PriAi FOR MVAXAS.—L R. Anthonv, 11 amnion ton. !f. J., akd about the nse of burned el iy * manure. I>r. Nab said he could learn all about it bv consulting the reports of the Roval Agricu'tural 9oci-tv of England. Th*, preaent high rate of wages in this ooWß frv wo dd prevent this practice from bein- profitable here. John Cane bs*- tr eti it, and found it did well with rutalaaws and other tun-pa. Dr. Trim We said h'sexoeneoee was not fawablp. Prof. H. E. CWton said ha doubted i' any good would result exuept with anils e*vn*anvng lime, or peaty coils, in whicl tha potash contained would be made av -t'a >le. M'. Smith said in some pirt of Eirope heavy ekvs were bnrnedslvw !v in heaps, or were com posted with lime and c-v- rse vg-tab!e matter, for tko pur pose of rendering inert potash available This was done during the winters, which were much milder than our*, and during which laborers were not otherwise cm ployed. It w>s thus made to jmy. It was verv doubtful whether, at present, it could he made to pay here, generally, under so manv disadvantages as we hav to contend with. Sncocuß DEVASTATION —Captain For syth who was sent to explore the farad* of India which have been frightfully de vaststed by the natives, prompted to the work of destruction by the railway oou tri .*ri re and i.umerous speculators, who. foreseeing the value the timber was likely to acquire, owing to the railway operations and the closing of the forests, "wentirto the jungle with bogj of ra pees in their bands, and spread them broadcast am ng the wild tribes, with instructions to slay and spare not-to fell everv teak tree larger than a sapling thev could find, and mark tbem adtb their peculiar mirk." Cap!. Foraytl thm summarises the results of tin* pro ceeding:—"Scarcely anything that was accessible cscaj-ed the axe. Now come delay in the railway works, failure of the contractors, and want of money. Tbe cat timber was alvandoned wholesah whore it lay. Teak wook is fnH of oil. ard burns readily sfter lying for a short time. The jungle fires occurred as usual in tbe lor.g, dry graas where the log were lyiDg, and the treat majority of them were burned. The exact amount of tbe destruction can never be known ; th injury done to tbe forests and to tb conDtrv eaDnot be recovered in leas thai, two generations ol tbe |>eople's life. The niisehi, f has b -cn completed and moat of the rimber speculators h*d bolted from #beir creditors, leaving their loa* emnlj-ng hi the f< rests, before tbe for mation of the Central Provinces, and ere tbe f- rest Dcjiartment had entered on their labor of exploring and arranging what was still worth looking after. A QUESTION SETTLED— In tbe Supe rior Court in Baltimore, a few days ago, the widow of Lewis Follmar recovered £2,(XX) from a life insurance company, which had insured her husband's hfe for that amount, tbe insured baring come to bis death ti rough suicide. F r the de f.-nce it was set up that Foil mar's policy was rendered null and void through hi* having committed snicide. as there was a stipulation to that effect in it when it w.-is issued to him. But tbe Court ruled that it tbe jury should find from tbe evi dence that the deceased killed himsel' in a fit of insanity which overpoaed his consciousness, reason and will and thus acted from a mere blind and an controls ble impnlse, the company was liable; when-upou the iary returned a verdict in ta .-or of tbe widow. THREATENED I>DUN HOSTILITIES. -Hon. Felix B. Brunot. and Thomas K. Cree, Secretary of the Board of India* Com missioners, have left Washington for an extended tour among tbe Indians of Da kota, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado Territories. Tbe object of their mission is to avert the threaten ed hostility on the part of the wild Sionx on tlie Northern Missouri rivir, as the Northern Paciflo Bailroad approaches their reservation ; the pn ohsse of a por tion of the Ute reservation in Colorado ; to effect the exchange of the southern part of the Eistern, Sho*h*ne and Ban nock reservation in Wyoming for land north of it, and a general examination into Indian affairs in the Territories vis ited. pEixTEi.s.-It was tbe custom in Qneen Eliz beth * time,on one day of the year, for tbe different trade- and artisans to pass before her palace at Whitehall; she standing on a balcony and addressing to each com;i*n'y a few wotcL indicative of its craft, H* skillful goldsmiths, clever architects, &c. When for the first time iu any reigo, a company of printers ap peared iu tlie procession, the clever old Qaeen hesitated for a moment how to a.u bj-s tiiern. iSbe then in a loud voice exclaimed : " Gentlemen printers, pass oa." oays tlie Bavauuuh Republican : u An A'too-ia youtli, to conceal it from his mother, puj, a lighted cigar in his pocket, which coutaiued some loose gupoader. His clothes needed considerable patch ing. S hss ao more appetite for cigars. ~ Item* of l#lrrwl, ENOUSR day in tbe Boston Jubilee •a* the anniversary of the buttle of Waterloo. THE Indians threaten hostilities in the Sevier region. Utah, and the miners are -ruling thetuaolve*. TBE piano makers of New York at a meeting held, declared tluur strike a fail ure ami left eaeh n.nn to do as he pleased. A N*w-Orleanarailroad eompinj threw BMJI in counterfeit nickels into the river a abort time aiuce. The were rveeiveit m paymeut of fans. THE next annual eonvestiou of the N. Y. State Sunday-school teachers' ns aoeiatioN will ta- held at Biuahamton, on the first Turarv Sundays, ou the ground that it conflicts with the law of the state, THOMAS QCIKLAN. aged acveu, Charles Walter, agi-d eight, Thomas aud Jaiue- Ktieahan, age-1 twelve and thirteen, were drowned in the Hudson Biver at Albany while bathing. Their bodie* have leeii recovered, DANIEL FBAWXEV, recovered $2,000 iamages in the Supreme Court, New Yrk. from the Flushiug aud N-rtb Side Road, fur hoing run over at Win Decembi'r, 1 A MAN nani\l Eilwanl T. Ilarilv of Sew York, shot another named W"m. L. Davis, engaged iu bu-iuess in Waahiug •oß, for an alleged iriaparii-le wrong to he former's daughter. The a-saalt was committed in the City of Georgetown. A LADY, vrbo asserts that her opinion is based upon a eloße observation for rears of the hemale. says that men, as a rule, regard their wives as augela for just two months, namtly, a month In-fore ■uarrying her, ami a mouth after burying her. AN dd seat'email of Ba'timoro rev 'ntj -two yean of age. visitel a cemetery m c tmpsuT with his daughter on Sao lay afternaon and while there pointed j -ot a spot where he would like to 1-e •nriril Soon after returning home he waa seized with ilhies*. aud witbiu three hours of the time of selecting his grave he waa dead. 0N tlie 4th af Mir the steamer Rous wUided 'the French steamer Avn near Shanghai. The Rons was aunk. .Measr*. VfcMeekin and MeQtiade. tlie second ind tknd engineers and M-aara. Hoole tad Boyle, tiie chief and third officers ; Dr. Thonpson, and fifty-five Chinese gjere drowned. Daring the performance of " A Strong Cattle in our Lord," at the Jubilee a cor- ; reapondeut weut outside the building t<- liatcu. standing in the o|>eu rpace that -urround" it. The 20,000 voices and 2. ■XXI iuatmments, he says, produced uo >tber effort upon the ear than that of u muffled rumble. NEWS from Monterey, Mexico, repre sents that General Treviuo has exacted mother forced loan from the people, and oil foreigners who ore unable or refuse ta pay are put in the fortifications to work. The American Consul protesteii without effect on tiehalf of the citizen* of the Uuiteil States, THE Mobile Register publishes llie fol lowing personal: A young ladv who ha been greatly annoyed by a lot of yonug simpletous who stop under her window at night to sing -4 if ever I cease to love," wishes to say, if they will cease their foolishness come in aud talk "business," they will confer a favor. TBE sale of hl*ofiolly found a -mall stony suh-tanoe of a bluish-white color, worn by the Chinese as a kind of amulet or chai in. RETORM IN SWITZERLAND. TIie Re public of Switzerland has just passed through a reform agitation. The pro posed new constitution contained the Mlowiig points : 1. " Military central ism military service to be univers-d, and all the arm age-meats, war materials. Ac., to be under th* ©o*trol of the cen tral power. 2. ** Unity of kgislation ;" involving th* abolition of much local and conflicting law, 8. "Free exercise of trad* ;" involviaw the abolition of local restrictions, whhm make a Swiss from one canton a foreigner in another. 4. " Freedom of conscience with guarantees of the right* of the state against the encroachments of the church ; right* which have always been upheld by the state in spite of excommunications." 5. "The protection of the right ol mar riage." 6. "The co-operation of tb confederation in secondary AS well as in pnmarv education, without whfcli liberty we will have no root in our soil, the country will only nourish ma*ters and slaves, and our republic would no longer have any cause for existence." MRS. Loomis, from the East, while lecturing in San Francisco against Wom an Suffrage, was interrupted by the hisses and jeers of the leading female suffragists, who were prefect. The Hun. David Meeker insisted that the disgrace ful conduct be stopped, or that the of fending women be compelled to leuve the bad. Mrs. Emily Pitt, the editre-s of the Pit inter, the Suffragist organ, drew a pistol on him and demanded an apolo gy, but was fored to put the pistol in her pocket by the bystanders. The heatheu Chinee in Idaho flies monster kites, which in sir pe resemble huge spiders, Icps and all, and after reaching a considerable height mesaen gers in tbe sbnps of butterflies and paper birds are sent up ou the stiiug. Eighty thousand acres of laud are ad vertised to be sold for taxes in oos county Of Florida ileus. Disinfectant* In Mel Ron**. ; " Doctur, arc not diaiuhotiuit* better than fumigator*?" ••Tbfrj sre far rndr* 1 "What is the hew one?" •• Chloride of lime, I ia inexpensive, awl can he had of any ilr-ggiat." " How shall it Iw uiedf" *' Mix the chloride of lime with water iu the promotion of oue part to forty ol the water, in a flat diali or basin. ao a* to expose aa large n eurfaeo as way he to the air. In eaao the sick patient oee pica the room, set the diah to the lee ward of the bed. Hega or elotli way also tie saturated with the mixture and plaeeit about the room." " SupjHiaa, Doctor, that the putrid odW of the tick si|>artmot w eauaMl t-y ulcers or sores ou the patient?' "The sore* or nleera ahould l>e wosh ed with a aolution of the ehloride of soda, whioh operate* to destroy the fetor aud improvea the eotuhtii-n of th* •ores." " la there any objration to ita tiaaf" " The only one arise* frout the fact that theehhiride escaping from tin-dishes or saturated cloths mar eauae the tint* Lion of the lungs." " What, then, ia to lie doue?" " L*t the nurw nae a lew* quantify of the biatenal at that, and thru gradually increase it aa the patient may lie able to i-ear it. The lungs will gradually lieeome used to it " •• Are there other good disinfectants?" "Berermlof them ; but it would be use less to name tliem all. Bul|>hat of iron (copperaa) ia a very good one. This ia teudered more powerful if mixed with double the quanlity (weight) ot well powdered charcoal. Two or three table- j -pointful* of the mixture are to be placed in the dumber vessel uaed by the sick. Recently, oar la die acid (readily obtained , of the druggist) haatn-eu much used, aud with excellent effect." '• Let me impress upon you the great importance of keeping the room* of the aick thoroughly diainfevted. All infec lions matter adhere* with enrprUing te nacity to the aulwtuuoe* iu the aick room. Every article of furniture, aud every ar ticle of dotliiug, ami even the walla and ceilings become affected. Whether iu the time of aicknem or in that of health, every dwelling should he frequently sup plied with diinfectanta. and theii tht-r- I onghly ventilated. llememl>er the old ad.igo, * An ounoeof prevention is worth a pound of cute."" Secret C'orrrepomleiice. A young lady. Dtdy nun ad, tsting obliged i to show her hust<*u-l all the letter* she wrote, sent the following to an intimate frien i: " I can not be nthtinl. my dearv-t fricud. ble-t as I am in the happy matrimonial slate, tmle-a I pour Into TOUT warm, rrtend y Iwetn, ' which has always t-cat in unison with mine, thevariona sentiment iBO-l farmings which w.-l| with the purwst liveliest pleia-ri • my aimxt bursting heart 1 tell you uir d-ar husband is the kindest aud most amiable man I have now been married some seven weeks,and have never found th leaat reason, my dear, to rvpent the day that joins! us My husband ts both inpenson and manner.tar from resembling ugly crows.old,sillr. disagreeable, and jealous, monsters, who think bycootiuing ihustoweure a wife, it is hw maxim, I must say, to treat a a j Uaom friend and companion, and not as a plaything.or worse, a tnenialslaei.the woman of his choice. Another thing neither party, he say s* me. He Hatters me tatk h mure j than the gfwa and his intoxication my dear. 1 (fur such I must call tlie extern of his lovel oiten makes me blush for the nnwortkiness of ita object, and I wi>h I w.ui more desrrving of the man whose name 1 bear. Now, to OJUIC to a clone—to my all in one word -to ctown the whole, dear friend, my former barer - b now my iudulgrnt husi-and My fondness b returnetl.atid 1 mtght.as you know have had ! a wealthier man. tart not the A lieity I hud ih him. Adieu ; iua you be aa blest a* lam un able at present to wish that I could be more key to the above letter i* to read the first and then every alternate Ut-e only '1 he reader will then see the p-int of thb " secret eorresjKiode-nce " MEADOWS. Thousands of meadows and nplatifl postures are producing less j than one half the quantity of hay aud j fewd which the laud ia capable of from a deficiency of plants of those ktuda which ore most productive and suitable for the act!. In some cases, where the pasture ts very foul with weeds and moss, it is j advixable to pare and burn the old HW ml. and reeow the laud entirely, as above di rected. In some other instances it may I be desirenble to drain and manure the jland; but in most cases great improve merit can be effected by inert Iv sowing renovating seeds (which should consist I of the finest aud most nutritions kinds of j grasses and clovers) iu the following, manner. Heavy harrows rhould he drawn over the turf early in the Spring *o loosen the soil for the admis-ion of seetls, which, if sown freely, will oceti py the numerous small spaces Wtween the grasses already growing, and super cede the coarse grasses aud noxious weeds. After the seeds are sown the laud should Ire earefully rolled. It is a good practice to sow these seeds at the same tune as a top dressing, if aDy is ap plietl; but this ia by no means nereMuy. The months of February, March aud April are the most proper for sowing the seeds the earlier the better, as the old grass will protect the young from frost It is also useful to sowr in July aud August, immediately after carrying in the hay. Should the okl turf be very lull of uioss, this is generally an Indica tion that draining would Ire beneficial. The following is, however, u alwrost iu falliable r. rnedy for the mo-s, not nly destroying it, bat preventing the growth in the future. Mix two CH t loads of quicklime with eight cart loads of good light lonm, turning the compost rev rul times, that it mny Ire thoroughly mixed aud the lime slacked, and spread this quantity per acre over the pasture, drag ging the turf well with iron harrows. A WOMAN EXETCTED.— Tbe execution of Mrs I'll CE be Campbell, wnvicted of the murder of her hns'iand in the town ship ot Nissouri, Ontario, in July last, took place recently. The condemned woman walked from her cell to the scaf fold. pinioned and without assistance, ber step firm, her countenance ruddy tod healthful, aud her whole demeanor that of a person in good spirits, satisfied with herself and all around her. On the scaffold her clergyman made a statement corroborating ler last confession, and bidding farewell to all. and advising all to take warning from her position. She hoped U meet them all in Heaven Tbe drop fell at 8:27 A. M. The rope was apparently too long, as her feet nearly touched the ground, thongh her neck was ins antly broken and she died without a struggle. Her paramour and supposed accomplice, Coyle, is in prison awaiting trial. In her confession she ac cused him *f committing the marder, but admitted that she bad been his ac complice. RING vi. A a SUICIDES. —Two remarkable suicides recently took place in Paris. A strong able bodied mar, who wished to shuffle off the mortal coil, took a long rope, re ching about balf way down from tbe fourth story. He then secured one end of the rope firmly, and tied the other end not about his neck, hut about one ankle, Fastened in this manner lie made a leap from tbe window. Of course when he reached the end of the rope he c&rne crashing against the wall of the house with such force that his brains were scattered upon the wall and the peo pie be'ow. The other sought death by tying his hands and feet and then sticking his head down between his bed slats, lie was found upright, but reversed, and ap pears to have made groat efforts to escape from the trap he had so carefully pre pared. SEA-SICKNESS.— A preventive of sen sickness is to he down ; but it must lie in the proper direction. The sufferer should lie with his head toward the bow*, when he will be, during the descent of tho ship, iu a position in which there is a tendency to reduce the natural supply of blood to tbe brain. Ou the other hand, if he reverses his position then the blood will have a tendency to mova L'om the feet toward the heed. Execution lu se Jena). John W. Awry. found guilty of UP rau-der of Jaenb ErlA, tH txecnted ' llsckensnck, N J. Tha gallows wa* eroc ted in the main corridor of the male |>ri# on, only n few feel from Ma old coll. Tin corridor ia about fifty feet l"p, eight* *i fret wide, mt h iu thiokneaa, and the uooee waa at tached hy a metal eatehanap. Tim IMMIS* •* a strong eon! of five atranda. Avert'# mother vi-ited htm the night lieforo tin execution >md hade a final adieu. Both were vary much diatreweed, and were closeted alone iu the call for aome time, The stepfather and toother were the oulv j relatives who viaited the coudcmued man nu Friday, lioth rtunonrd with him up to a few unuute* la-fore lit oil led to the acaffuld. Avery would fra- J quciitly hurat into tears and eitibrace hia hiotber oonrnktvely. Bharfly lieforo twelve o'clock Sheriff Pell vuited his cell and rami the death warrant. During the reading Avery's brother gave vent to a | loud aetdani and fell to the floor in a fainting condition. He wa* removed for a f< w momenta, although Avery begged hard that be might lie allowed to remain, -aviug that it waa only a fit from which he would soon rtcover. At the cutu lu -ion of the reading of the death warrant the prisoner lade Imth hi* father and; brother good by. The brother was com pletely overcome by hia emotion*, aud wu* w ith some difficulty induced to leave the cell. Aa the mournful cortege entered the corridor Avery gave a short, nipt) glance at the gallowa, aud immediately riveted hi* eyes on the floor. He walked up the *b*|>a to the scaffold with a Arm atep and took his position without uttering a word, although hi* cheat heaver) and hia hps quivered with emotion. He wan dreaaed in a gray tweed coat iltid vwt, dark striped wooleu pants, and wore a >mail black tie Kvery voice waa hushed and every eye wa* riveted on the culpri'. The noose waa fastened to the snap at tha eud of the rope, and Avery shook hand* with the clergymen and Vlp-rifL, bidding each good-by in a low broken Ibnci Kev. Mr. Rotneyn then made a prayer, during which Avery aot.bed aloud several times slid exclaimed "Christ ht lpiae, "and "Gh et into the house. Two days afterward he carried the dog's liody nnt of the house. Tlio neighlKirs overwhelmed the widow with thanks for ber spirited con duct, and the children now go to and from school without molestation. ti a JIM MACII Eastern farmers little appreciate the attractions of cultivating the soil iu the West. Iu lowa, for instance, the son* of toil are fighting the potato bug, chinch bug, cut worm, wire worm, grub worm, army worm, gophers, gronnd sqnfrreV mice, rats, meadow bole, caterpillar, j curculio, blackbird, mischievous neigh-! borsaud stock, rambling A shower of fish bones fn the interior of scw York la the latest recorded aatuai phenomenon. i'lrltom Trauma Terfwmanaa, M The Indianapolis SmUud give# tha fnltieat of onr city. The hsltoon wa* 'itfUtcd and at a iptarter to h waa net loose, and the fine formed henna, inctrcn* 1 clothes, dangling downward from the 1 tratu-ite bar, holding In her teeth a au*n which encircled the waUt of Tommy Half. 1 tier companion for her flr*t voyage In die |r, U-lk terra limit. Everything was 1 *lll a death, and It was observed that llnll Weakened a little, hut the pluekv "(juewn ot AnlllW*,"!'*""*. w*> prffcftfv ■and. Jurt as aoon aa they left (he earfli I .eona coniiiienced spinning llall around antil It luade ua gu' 'v. After Hill peg fonnanee, and aboQt three hundred feet in the sir, they commenced their hilalutin nerfonnance. and known in show language 0 the don big tr*|v*e, aud ti*ry toily who I tea attended the rimtrTan imagine much better than we can deocritie ' en field, and our party rode up In time to witness their alighting. Hall waa silent and oobcr. while I.eona laughingly aaid to Warner, '• ilow was that for high I" A Fstrrxx t?f A ilAT.—Abont the year IHffi (says a letter from C-dmart a po< r journeyman turner, of the name of M tilde, badly shod and with a wallet on Ills back, entered the vtU>c in *hivU stood th machine (Snttffxjf JIM. Wpfl A fktQfrotu and appliwt for w->rk. His raggedextrrTor did out speak much in his favor, and M Weil, to whom he had applied, refused to engage him. The workman sorrowfully turned on his way. All of a sudden he wa# recalled by the voice of the owner of the manufactory. "Slop: what sort of a bat is that yon wear F' " A wooden hat." >"A wooden hat f I.ct me look at it eloaerf When* did you bay llff' ♦'! made It myaelt. sir." " And bow did jrou make it t" H Olk.M the isrning-lalbwr'j " Hut your hat Is ovat, and the thing#' made on the lathe are round." *Yee, that is true," answered lh workman-"but n ayMe of that 1 made the liak I dia- MlneMst the centre, and then turned it as • j | pVrasfcd. 1 required a hat what would; • answer the purpoee of an uinl>rlla, and as 1 had tu> money U> tmy one I was .obliged to make this for myself." The ■ poor workman had instinctlvtjy discovered I the /fact hod of eccentric turning, which' , wgs to prove of so tgueh iraportanne in i ' gipdern mechanic#. M. W'eii jierceived i w{th the keen sightcdnra* of a clever j mannfiirtorer the imwwnse importanee at the diacovery. He retained the man with i Uu- wt. den hat, and found him not mere- . (Jy a skillful workman, but a gi-uiu*. Uiat on! * wantc! opportunity and a small de j grew of culture tor its developemeiit. The , workfian Uuhle soon oktaiaed a sliare in ' 'he protita of the business, and i-ecame.' 1 it.-r on. andgr the nmne ot Moulin, the I proprietor of it. He died a abort time, | since posseaird ot a large fortune. The California Mustang. p The native CaTilbrnia horse, like the !tt- i -11*11, will anOQ be nuniU-fd aiuuug tin thing* ■>< tin) pact. With aH W dekrctsdM-. ha* qualities and points ot raw- value, that should bu prtkvrvi-l. lie can thrive and ,wi*wae the wr kngbah bluoils neid srarvc t r* Mec% atwl swrw . looted a* the mule, while hia power* of: endurance in the harm--* or under the* -addls are uoequallcd. lie M small of -ts lure, but a-symmetrical as the Arabian; , • ild by nature, and often vicious, but al ' wa> s *|Mritt, and. with proper training fiitl kind tnaipient, Itequtftiy exhibits >. 11l the etUwtlmiiteaar-lkilbtfMaf tlaafost I hrceds. It is no unroißnion feat for htm to cartr a good rider ltK) miles in a day, and ' it i* clamor! that many ot them can go lunch further m that time. We have area specimen* that, at the age ol aixUrtjn years were a* cay inA fiery a* the best bfooded five year-olds, ami (bat would kill the ( most •-nduriag ol tbrra on a short or lung journey. As saddle hor*es they are pro (erred "by all w ho know tbem bi-vt, aa thev ate also lor tbeir tight work. If ha* a'-! way* sretned to us passing strange tbal no attempt ha* ever ywt Iwa-n maile .iu California to preserve the admirsbU iqnwfiri*s of this ancient stfle of horses in i their purity. To permit tbem to ignobly perish, as nowr seems likelv. would w a* -iiigwlar a* unfortuuate— l'fH/um SigooL THaMAtgaLAW.—ThefollowiDK. from i a Western correspondent, has the merit ut trntti, and shows bow sly and*hwinor twin are Ihe methods adopted to airotim veut laws enacted to prevent the vend ing of alcoholic Is-veragen : Daring Ihe brief existence ot the Maine hd' ,or l* w • live showman (uot ArUmna Ward) made hia ap|>earanoo in , with a null, ; dirty, Uttered cavna knnt, n Imlf-ttart- j (bl vt'ilf, and a stispicioua-looking krg. • The adtniwum fl Un Ui#* wa* , cheerfully pail"by a iftiftilk* fit sports." tfno manifested a pectlHarly j strong ! cat re to see this very oummwu i and villaiDaus-lookiiig sjiecimen of the animal kingdom. But the oddest part ot the show to the bv-standefs was, that one particularly haru old cnae had prei ned in to " lo take guother look at flizt wolf" no loss tlisu seven times during the afternoon, The aeeret waa at last revealed. After several unsuccessful at tempts to start for home, he approached ne tent door with an utmUaily step, I and handing his last dime to the show man (!), bioootighcd, "I b-blieve I'll tnke atti wore look nt tbnt irotf.' *" Hrwwrtt SitoWk**- —BednchoTi of pa-} caaiß.tbe order ot fbv day at the large dry-oood don# in Xew I'otk, a ta.L ionniile lunTnal aava, and < otnai nn.-h eatHff tliau nsuak Gagt-ful alaf>pcfw thai, seromtmble fr* d- ur# alrendy te*;jier cent T>trer (ban thay were in tlt sprint. Btofty pribts Tift; new dusigtis arc aold for IP cent,-. (Fygrd ; piques in the new satin strfpaa. Lhough 1 ! Bot of heavy qnaljli?, are from lo To T<), cents; mid Dolly Viudoa rd|iarafi *Hh buff and Rray grounds stamped with ! brilliant floweiu, are I2| coots a yard. American oimbrics and pcrmlea, in the even strips that moke up so effectively, are 25 cents ; and for a triflo more can bo hnught those 'loft-finished percales with wtylisli dOve-eolor and buff grontKl# j with bold stripes ol white. These wash | gooda are now so simply made that { they no longer require a French latin-' drea* to do tliera njs aad eonseqttentiv can be worn with more comfort Our fntnre la always before tts. The paat is Iked. No tear# Can wadi away fu 1 fads. 1 bet u waste no vain regret* upon j it; bnt from tha wiadorn lU mistakes and j sina have bequeathed as. start afresh on i the race. Themrh yesterday we were - weak, selfish, Indolent, let. ns to day—at this moment—begin to be strong, brave, hopeful, just, considerate, generon*, teu- j det\ trntiifn 1 , pure, patient and forgiving. "Now r, fck* a glorious word. "Hcnoe-i forth:" is always within our grasp. Wuv A \fcfct. W J'¥ W r sistin rnilre*| suddenly in the <-o>wJo.l tlior oughfsre, in front of a liwiw, aud bold- j I Ig Miller by the arm, exdaimed in a . ! Uwd voice : I "What, air! Do vow mtvnlo aaaert 1 that yon don't like tripe t" "fiumT mutbaml Miller, " don't ( talk oo laqd ; people arv staring at ua." j " I a*k yon air,' continued Liatou, in i auU louder tooea, *do yon like tripe f" I " For heaven's sake bold your tongue!" i cried Millar ; " Yon will bare a crowd ' atoned as." And naturally iieople began to atop and wouder what was the matter. This I wa* exactly what Ltaton wanted, and 1 again be aboated : "Do yon mean to aay yon don't like tritw ?" j AliiW, makitig a deapeiafe eflort, broke fruui him. and hurried away io oonaterna tion, f alltHve,! by I Aston 1M W ling after 1 him ! " There he prwa! That's the man that . .loeeo't like triiot !'* to the immense | amusono ut of the irunoruus wayfsns, many ot whom rwnguiaed the pjk up the cry : " There he goca 1 The man that don't !" EH Perkins fn Hostoß. I found Boston jammeil with people, nays Eli Pertrins, aud having owe of the irrandtwt ißternsriotia) mumrwl triumph# of this or any "flier country. She was iliai tag I Hitter mnaic and more of it than I w di£ll e*'- r toe together again ia tkm generation. I found thr Jubilee a musical and financial ai*ereas. I 1 found a akßpßuftoww four arte CoHaeum, ciwtinxr, with musical appoint men ta, up 1 ward ol SSCfIti I OPO-W feet long and 350 feet wide. 1 saw 20.000 people, aocom- I pnniee built juat at present. NEW YOKE PRITTEBB.—The unem ployed printer* of the city, aay* the New Fork Star, have issued a circular for a ; meeting of tha craft, declaring that very many <>f their craft have long been with out "work, and that some of them are ' almost in a starving condition, while many others who have work are earning from S3O to $35 a w eek on aome of the morning papers. Those out of employ ment seem to think thnt they should bhure in the work of thoae who have 1 good rotoaUona here. These unfortunate men, so long out of employment, must ! consider the reason why so many arc out of work here. The high prices paid in : New York for com|MiMttoti have takeu one-half of the work formerly done in j tbo City io Old England New EuglanJ, , Wast rn New York, and elsewhere. Ail j through the country we observe that the i typo on Many weekly newspapers is now being " set up" by girls. The scale for type-iottinp in New York is considerably liighcr than country prices, aud the talk ft Mill higher prices or nborter time, has Irfrented a great many publications eou ftroplated a few mouths since. I w ERT LIKII-T.— The Khedive of Egypt win received with royal pomp by the Sul jtn. It would lie sale to bet that the Sn'tan demanded hi# presence in Btram houl and ordered Ismail to bring along : sinnu stamps with him. The first thing ! Attfiul Aaiz knows the Khedive will whip the conceit out of him and dwlare the absolute independence of Egypt. He hsa not bought all? those Krnpp guns and *ur. rounded himself with a staff ot ' cttPuwy cttoen for nothing. . The Mrmorj, II waa aaid of Thorean, wa beliave, that be could tak* tin any grvan number of tsad-prncils without conn ting. A tvl*' ruled trapper otto* a-it rod ua that lie emild tell how many lutll* be bad in hia bullet-pouch by placing hia band on it and without skipping to count them, aud added, " 1 can tell the number of bullet* inatenUy without counting, ea yon pronounce a word without spelling It" Bouthey waa accustomed to take in the eubatance of a book iu turning the leaves over continuously, glancing down the |iagea. llouduu the magician trained hiamelf to quieknaas of percep tion whim a boy, by running neat a show-window at fall speed, ana then trying to tell what was in it We once met a men on a canal boat, who wae amusing himself by going from pas senger t' paaaenger, and telling almost every one where h<- bed seen tbem be fore, on meh e train, in such a hotel, in In euch a street, giving date aud plane to people with wuom he had never ex changed a word. Thia training of the facultiea in particular directions is car ried to a marvelous extreme by woods men, trappers, and men wbo gnna* the j weights of animals Perhaps the most ' remarkable iustaucea are tue markers who leap from log to log at the mouth ul a boom, aUndiug on tha floating log and translating instantly an old mart into a new one, remembering what eqi vahmt to give for each of a hundred marks, and chopping it upon the log in the time that it float* its length. It ia aaid that Thoreau knew the relative order of the flowering of all the plant# |in the Concord woods, and knew the note of every hird, aud a thousand other out-of-the-way thing* besides. WHAT A Worn* Pi-ixau OCT or A I VALIM!.—FUIIUV tilings eometimca occur | iu the roans of a photogniplier, aa well aa serious ones, and iH-rliafta one of the I moatacrit •comic incident* that overtook tlace in a picture gallery, was that which appi-iied in the parlor'of a prominent I phouqjrnplu-r in Cievehuid, 0., a few days since. A ladv, evidently from the country, breathing hard, a* if fr in se vere exercise and carrying a large-sized carpet aark of the otd fwhiuncd kind, entered the artist'a rooms aa Middi-uly a* if propelled f. otn i eltind, and cardeaaly throwing her carpet-coverwd valise ink* one eorner, tiegsn to inspect the differ ent specimen* of pictures in the show rates and upon the walla. After half an hour sjx-nt in this manner, she approach ed oue of the attaches of the shop and asked to aor the different styles of chil dren's picture#. These ahe" rioaely ex amined and finally selected a certain pic tnre of an infant, anJ inquired af the artist what he charged for taking a pict ure like thai. The prior waa named, and she remarked that it was sattxfac ory, and *aid she wu!d have one taken ike that. "Where's the child f o--ked •the photographer. "Hereit ia," replied the woman, and stepping ov.-r to the orte-r ul the room where she Lad thrown her carpet-beg upon entering, ahe pick ed np the latter, opened it* mouth, aud from its cavernous depths brought up an infant that bad oeen dead for twenty, four hour* at leant. The look of curi osity upon the nrtis 'a face gave place to one* of horror, but his customer wa in dead earnest, and nothing remained for him but to perform hia work, after which the woman stowed away the de ceaacd lathe in her valine and departed PwrTErno* rom Emaßxjrt*.—At the lost meeting of the t'ommiaaioners ot Emigration, hi Id in New York city. • r<►rr*wjoudne- between Mr. Ca*aeriy. .Superintendent of the board, and the Umanl General of the German Empire. Dr. Rosing, relative to tiie adoption by the German Government of measures for the protection of German emigrants in the selling or exchanging of thoir money liefure embarkation and during the voy age, wan hud twfore the Board. Mr. Ouserly call* the attention of the Consul to the frsada practiced on emigrants, when exchanging gold and silver coin for U. S. currency and the purchasing of draft* on peraons doing bnaioeoa in New i York City and elsewhere in the United State* previous to embarkation at Bre mem and Hamburg, and other porta; and be states that the commiaaioncrt are satisfied that the loan to each emigrant averages from five to ten per cent., in addition to which he i subject to fraud by counterfeit or worthless paper. Mr. Cassrrly aaka that those intending to emi grate bo warned against exchanging their money before arnval here, and that Mich legislation may be adopted as will insure them the receipt of the full mar ki4 value of their money when exchanged In Germany or on German vessels com ing to this port Dr. Rosing replies that the evil referred to has been fully recognised by him, bu he does not ace how it can be remedied by legislation without interfering with the freedom of commerce, but promises to do all in his power to bring the matter liefore his Government, and recommending perti nent action. PHTMOLOOIOAI. ACTIO* or QRTXIXE The phytiolocicol action of quinine hsa lately tieen the subject of detailed experi ment by Bins, who foond it to have ex- Laordinory power in arruating the pro* eeas of fermantation and pnttefacttoa, and to be a powerful poiatm for low or romisma, or, in other words, foral! mov ing bodies conaistittg of protoplasms. It appears to kill fuagi snd bsctena, which sooompany fermentation and putrefaction, and puts a stop to these proo- anew. It airesta the motion of the white blood corpuscles, snd thus pre vents tbem from making their etft from the b ood-vessels It, therefore, dimin* isbos or arrests the formation of pus in 11iff*tarnation, pus consisting in great measure* of an accumulation of whit* corpuscles which have issued from the vessels. It also destroys the power of certain substances to produoc ozone. The red blood oorpuscles have tbis power, and, by depriving them of it, quinine, when present in the blood, tnast diminish the change of tisane in the body, and thereby lessen the pro duction of heat It is also found that quinine lessens oxidation in the blood ; other subatanoes, such as snake poison, inereosing it When putrid fluids are injartod into the circulation of an animal, its temjieratnre rises ; but if these are previously mixed with quinine, this rise m arrested, or very much diminished. According to Zuntz, the use of quinine has s marked influence upon the excre tion of urea, the amount diminishing very greatly. PATRICK Momuasxr, of Buffalo, aged 28, while intoxicated, stabbed his mother with a carving knife killing her instantly. _ EntToatAL OputtoK*.— An advertise moot is, as a general rule, an elaborate enloginra on the merits of something which tha advertiser desire# to sell. The editor* and publishers of the paper in which it appears are not responsible for iu statements: Sometimes, however, highly Important discoveries or inven tions, announced to the world through the badness departments of the pro##, seem to drmand a few words of editorial com tnendalion. We hsve no hroitation in saying that the exoellent medicine intro duced by Dr. Joseph Walker, of Califor nia, under the name of VIXBOAK BITTKRS, belongs to tbis category, snd has a Just claim to a favorable notice. There can be no dnnbt as to iu utility aa a tonic, stomachic and alterative. We are cog nizant of many insUuoe# in whioh it has cured cases of chronic dyspepsia, supposed to lie incurable, and know that the esll ination in which It is held a# a remedy fur bilious and nervous disorders intero mittent arid remittent fevers, rheumatism and general debility, isfoai ded on experi ence and well deserved. The testimony of "a nlood of witnesses" goes to show that it is eminently useful in a large ma jority of the disorders to which the human family are subject. The fact that it con tains no aloohol commends it to the confi dence of that large and increasing class of the community who insist that all spiritn ous stimnlanu are active poisons.— Com. RrrTTRi can be en red without suffer- S. Elasti# Trusses are superseding all em. Before bxrying Metal Trasses or Uupporters, eend for a ducriptive circu lar to tha Elastic Truss Cfo., 088 Broad wgy, V. Y.—Cbro. I'rovrp ITH Stpuioritt. BarnaU'* Buoodlb® for tta lf!r hot proved it* anp*- rioriey ow all oth*r prepxr atloßi. —Cm. A* * rrmHy for Bronohial Affection* ■nil Chroolo th* Lnnga, nothing ever before di*r to Charlm W. H AMI.M, Na 7 \V1! bk, N. Y. • How too tub joa ar* to i< adnovo by foe* and intHHjtiii'w* wuea yoa out not only 101 l and drive tlx in out of the boot* but koett them out - found an invaluable I.uuaietit. and worthy of na# by every resident iin the land. W* know of no propnidAnr mndi r m or art trie now uaerl in the United Hivtee i which ab area the good will of the people to a ' greater decree than thio.—Jf. T. JWiapeadeuf. Rave ynaaeew the la'eet Novelty 1 If not, iCO to the Gent'e Kumirhinf Hlonw and call tor the Eltuwel Collar. It ha* folded edge*, la a i<*rfoet At and wul keep c'ean longer than aay ; other outlay. Try it—Cbra. T have elcrant hrhi Biscuit*. Bolls, Bnck i wheat Cain*. Prnit Pumt.llng*, Ac., you abould i nee Dooler'a Y#*et Pwdair. Ask ynwr Grocer ' for it. It to a pure Baking Powder—Ota. "Can't do Without lt M -nia to whet the stage and hetaa oar dWRMRItd. b*rry-etal! keeper* : u. ruber* of the torf.e d all greoraa aad tnlnaro aay j <>| Iba Kant AM Lumrewt • They oral do without ia." Aed why I Bcwara M tatatltbty rMaet tb* 11 imaal ai|tiiil iln whlcti, aader variant oaiaa*. impair th- aarfu-nwa u>4 vahw of the ktag of *u*A. runada. and aiao because, tor •pra-ee. stratus. rail* and other tnjartoe to which tin Aaab to tahto.lt la th* art iraatwo*hy |naparatiaa m tha market i Vrt thr.c rer mmendaitooe compels* only a yiniae at It* >'iai te public ooufideuer Paring a pOd I a# marc than at atom year*, it has ba* rwongalaad j as a apael*c tor many of the nut aaeniciag Amor j dee* which aflkd the human toaally-md m ftwa- I matiam, gert neuralgia. *umbagu. ttedoioraua aor* ! throat earache, toothaehe , and likewise aa a jwwr toes awpßntti i for euta. bratom. boms and acaldu. —(Cam] Beat nod Ola rut rurally M*girla*.-ht tofi tow Je**** refer—A purely tegeuhie OUtor. tie and Tbefe—for Pyprnaia. CaaewOM. Milto, ! fHcttalMMkdhtflllMir A WHkcJl# AA4 Imt A4Hntft|f4Hßkl^k(Sk of Ltear. Momerb and Boarela ** year hruckW lor M. Anear* f lau/ehea* —ICom i Br. WlrtaCi Kahaatr W'M fkrrn u*i 1 mmtoa** OS and a form * u*f" for hWe *ad eerum .1 u—ettoitrai laaaaudahaat. Il eate* a rang* I br kmmetag and rnunuag Ih- laser *d ii*>oa nr.- I lira; U>— ..n m> go um, ia*l*ad *f drying op tb* | anagh and laawae ih dmi bah nd.—cam. *1 eonr th* lifllwat ran Prlla—Ora. Fiacy r Intaot Relief baa atoud lam'f yaara' Mat b warranted to ctm iradtm 'Utay teab Chram*tor, Kea i — —ah. u . KacU aclara. j ' OtßtrahfoaU -Am Himoial Notice*. bra Health hrgalatad. j ftof-nagtoet tap* th* tuendwam* af ma*b baddy raf larise Aa a ml* men am map* nitbdlara a* repair and , gypßhßCV# tiww bwUMMk, wtoc% Ht ffyj* ghlSgsg j aid* pe*partr ihaa ta repair aad praaarra thamratraa. Thay era am nam a wmH nt*au a prop, era uaah •uwetom a gwdar. but a*prar ta be aeaouaaram of. ar ' tadfCaaael I*, th* c*aak* aad ttou* aad eridraea* af : 4 ma* ta lhatr aaa trail and aaraftma alflmltoaa. that thoauaifo tell by the weymd# til the pro* af IB j mmi year ehe aught ham Irrad ta raw * hatoaed haarly aid tga. 8 tnay had i inrtil ts the propar mma •f rraratuac thnr failtag tncor at b* proper lama. Seectif what thai iameur ranttatag aad iarigeraunt abas. RntrCrf * tupra Bita***. he* den* far sous* ' torn BelWafM of th* aererraand and t rohra dawn, and wiib th* loo*, aabrahm record of it* asm* tutor* him, jlt taraw amoatar tha* aay oußerar torn prramtum deaay. bcvtub. urakaeeo, dyapep**. toboueeem. chrome ' i oomtapatfoa. or dtooaar af a mm-Meet ar fiitm aitiaent j raaractar. rheuM drday. tare tor aa hear, to aeak tha wd whaoh Ha Vmtag. mgaJattag aad lartyarMlng preiwr- M* ham Borer huWd la agord. H to na asactrraUoe ta*ay that BeUtbr'i flreut Bitlem to the una faith foil ally af aatam la bar Mra*- j gto* atln a*A*tin rad lui*ii. thai aiMtnai traany and ; hdomt abamhtcy bee* y*t clrae to the acrid. TO COttrgPTlTM. TO tonvgpnTßt. I The adrarttmr. bariag bmn pansaaemly eumd of thai dlead dlmam. OaraampOra. kg • aimpl* eauwdy. to oatioa* lo asahr knows to hto feilea aagarar* tb* m*aa* Jof ear*. Tb sS wha datom to. be wfR aaud a aepp af tha : nemcHplloa amd. foe af chore*: with Um durawtoun 1 It* prepense aad M the mam whleh *a ail' bud a * sSßSrm'ttsraa Prnveawra^tom^^ra^^addrm. 1M ISmn. turn. Wain amarth- 1. T i Tke ■urtetb IfW TOEJt. HBQUIU-Mmlab totoito Ml I -ttii Pirat q0a11ty......... .Ilit* -life Second qua) .11\( .IT Ordinarythla OHtto.. .!•,* M% InTr er hraast grade. Jla* .M UltraOowc 4AJW litto j Hons Lira Athn -tou { Dreaaod .-*• k intt... .Os a .et Ooriuto—WMdUng to be -*H flora—Elton Went0m........ ...... dto aAM State i tlr* gto • *lO Wat**—Bed Waatiitn..■ LTSS* '.flii Mala I.** e las go. t Oprtng. A'* • t * Km—Wetorrn 8 • H RiHST-MMI .to s .*> I Ooaa—Mlaed We-tora .t> s .'1 i nra-Wbamra Mined AIKi dd j Hat I dh d I.T* ; tr>AW—Hyn to a LB Nora 'tis. .11 a dO-TUt. .* a .M ' Pons—Mete WIS aXIM Um —— .rase sv PamohßPU-Crade ITM Bnrtoh—foatr f * to Ohir Yellow U a to •• Pnnry ... .1* a .1* VWrra trdiaary 10 a 15 Pennsylvania She . • ti Derate totiiTiri-r- .IT e lib - 5kium0d............ .05 a .14 Oktb Jd a .11 ■OITAIh Baap Catvu t Id d A'lh tar t.se a a75 Ron*—lira. t.to a AW rum .* dluto WIIAV— No. TSprtn* LM a Ltd Ooaa -At • IT Ota If t Jt Am..... 1M d i to d .to d .ITS ALhART. WWtAT. If* d Tdd Iti tokto . d -to 3oan—Ml tad .to d di BAtunr—fOate to a •* CUT* Bata... . t • mn mrt aan Ptotm—Patut. Extra ■to alLto Wbaat— Wratrrn Bed Ito at.to While. Ito IIP Ooap Tcßew... ft d .to Ml ted to a NS iRMLdca —Crude Üb'RaSned.lls litrcimi <* a Jf Ctotrii lus TOO *lol* Timothy T.to in pAAttof. Oorroa—Low Widllara .to * to ftori—Kttra IK ejl.to RtUT Lto alto \MP-YdDow.— to * to into . . *t a to / d WATCH FMET, worth (R atraa mtu to •very lira man who will fet aa oar agent- Putnam aad honorable l ay' ATI par day aar*. No gift PHtabaryh. Ha. TUB WSeat Fii ofAnrin HeuUhfnl Climate, Free Bomee, Good Markets. THE JfOITHEBR PACIPTO BAIT. BOA It oifare form!* in Leads In Oaatrel aad Para* aad U>* Fir* ; X Btoh Prairie Paattuaaaaad ftal oral Meadow, watered by clear Lake* and ranntny -t-ekro—in a Bealthful Climate, vAart for aadgp a* u a.rata out beahtpprd beam hy laka to market ta obaai'li aa from Eaalera lowa ar Control II loot. Oars now ran thrtmyh t nam Land* trout Lah* Soparint to Dakota. Price of land clone to track, f* 0# tofi 00 per sore : farther away. $2.50 to ft TO ueven 1 ears* Credit | Warranh* D -ed ; Northern Ptctfo 1j Bunda, m.a aelhn at r, reoeirad for ia>>d a. sl.l* No other unoccupied Lag, j pre a act >aob advaataga* to " hOLDICRN under the New lew (Mtreh. 12) *rt I*o acre* FREE, near the railroad, by one tad two ''THAJFNROHTATIO* AT BBBVCEB MA Tito tu ralahcd from at principal po'"** Btei to purchaaore of Tiailro d Lands, and to Set tier* on lOT ernment Homratoad*. Purchaaara. .tour wiriw aad children rnrrlrd tbee oeerth* Northern Pacific Road. Bow ia lbs lime lor bottler* and Ookmim to yet Raii i i>a nmdi Cllt'Wtold BHew i • lattimit lovefs, IBs node* of to* Bdnd, Ltvor, KOil- I Mlmhtof, km d*dL ftodi ninisw< arm Iy ttu&mi UM a Tonic, praaraadngtkd ,mt nf a* r SSSJSfXjuw Oi*MA Mid in J Par tkla Ptaenaa*. Ernptleara, Tvttdf. BMt r *f ih* ayutd ia a *twt ttm* of th* nto m totM 3DC"irsss!; •ssspsrst wra ggai ,.;,„ tw , ' Drnggtau and Otn. Agfov. • f cut . R. Tw. m. u* i ao ■" A'A-.Yi-Sfasssijp.VTk.JSy; u ifal—T- m. ¥*. i CrßMßgMSggSfifoggg . TRUE TIME FOmdWgg • .-^"^G** 6irr ' c Tiwr-K£iyft, , gfg TJ& [ cdTlt Becerii if Tod < M LOW AI L. Mm. . praam 72 m. r. BUANHAM 9 - d r"* HEW TUJUHWB • mtki. SSZSU 4arn *£ |if J[^Vt ml Aiiii itiH MMm, If MttfelMHiMr 4*m~ t ghrta 4s mm kmp tvvtk at *■!> luwtw m> m-K ftmni Aa eeg. m wilt tab* g fowtc ft tejyfc i tmhJUeum i*Ucraa i' tha meAkmalifal UfU amd parf'.m tone erar nmde. pan raaihlkitiaa al fit Bwnfra. New Vork. • Qdhtonc raiiiaaugngd nnn^H \ ||||sfn K r^rr uHaUUUssagftZa i IThea-Nectar • BftSllrJi, 1 afra $ BLAC* TBA i the geww foa /torn-. Th* JhtoZSumC • PKtl k.su'T.r. i IhMB ' i Mdhr*rbm-Miiaw fkmata^ MOTHERS!!! Bnn'a (hit to ymrara MBA WITILOW* ' tOOTBIIC aTRCP FOB raiLBBES TBBTBIKto. It am aaty istuam th* enM foam pata. bat iaetam ■ aim th* stomach aad bowel*, eorrrma aridity, aad ciras too* aad enemy to the wbake epetem. it witTatad to stonily relieve <• rip tag ta the Bawtli aad Wind Cwtlr, r ft VoTLiJ DtAKJUtEA IN i HILPBEN. whether anem* tram toeiota* er ear other earn* Depend apna It netbam. It will glee mat to yoniaelrm aad Betlet aad Health te Tewr faftonta, Be aarw aad call far " Bra. Wtaainw'a (aatktag yr*y," Haria* tha fafoUmil* of 'XTBTIS * PEBBOIir* •a the oukdda atappar. Bad* hy Brggra tkraggkaat the WaaM. " Their Xerne ta Leatne.**—Dyepepna ts tba'n*. rent ol mom en., then foa rat at PimVi't boa. to mam, war atomaeh. hoedacbe. aoraUrattoo, rarrooa debility, nnm and tnd* ciibehl* mental misery at* among k* leenble ofcrnna OieeMum all the amp dr ym* with Takbaxt • Rrvnvi XXIIT SCL,TXKR tpcati. ROT. which twooeatos and regalata* the bowels, 'em* ib* atomaeh. and i a tore isaaady tor iadtgaelaoa aad all it* cooeomtt*oe. "in ww atv nrwrawa THE HEW BOOKS. thi.'^ES HEART IIUNOKY —A naw ooral by Mia. Ma'a J. TrrayUS norcl by „ 'ta*. t anlie hr Selma Boa* S!.IA MORMNCi (iLOHIW-Arbarmta* book by MIS Al i""il author i-f "Little ti Ml. INEE.-A noral bv Aura-'* K vara, author of !*.< ■*-. • ' St. E!roo," "Vmhti" "Mm-arta," ete. *1 Tg. WHAT I KNoarAHiatT FARMING -An iatorara a iSffIHS riirSnxEghm, * f'A *W" HILV'S N?WM*I)K BOOK.—TI. UM .oilM "*4rS THE ABTOF t ON VCR'-ATlON.—Te**hing aeermoa AEgTr^ffi'^sirrsf-EiKift ■cjrjgagH'jßaai *,41 tha famous Michrlet author "La Femma." sLgfi. r s?*^Sl ,l '"* u badutifnlly printod andbonndia Q. W. CARLETON A Co., rcauaExm. 1 TMladldtm Bauwe, N. A