Farm, t.arden Mini Hmeh TCesfem Fhrntrr dnres to main tain that it would lie unite possible to take many of the so-called " run down " farms, and incronse the crops steadily for severs! rears without the aid of any manures, simply by more thorough cul tivation or better tillag. This of course would not be advisable, for the use of fertilirers in addition would be a great help, but it would illustrate what our authority fully believes, that there is comparatively nttle land from which the " plant food " has been exhausted. Tlie eighth annual Convention of the American Dairymen's Association will .be held at Cticn, Jan. 14-16. The Pros ident, Horatio Seymour, is expected to present a paper on the use of the micro scope in testing milk, cream, cheese, Ac., and other addres>ea on nppn priate tripics are announced by T„ fe. Arnold, David W. Lewis, 0. S. Bliss. B. B. Moon, Wm. Blatiding, S. A. Fsrrington, T, D. Curtis, Harris Lewis, Alex Macadam, J.V. H. Soovill Levi and Charles Sclier merhorn, and H. Cooler Greene. In addition to these, prominent cad sucee* fn! cheese and butter makers will be called on for experience, a •' question drawer' will be inaugurated and mem bers will have privilege of bringing for ward such pertinent subjects as they may desire to have considered. A pop ular churn will be given as premium for the best 20 or 25 pounds of butter. Further particular* furnished by the Secretary, Gardner B. Weeks, Sera,-use. N. Y. } Tike tome rump steak and pound it wall, to make it soft, and lard it thor aughly. Put it m a stewpan, in equal parts of whita wine and water, and add some alioea from a leg of veal. Sea.'on it with ipuv, salt, garlic,' thym and parsley. Boil them over a steady fire, lour or five hours. When sufficiently done, remove the meat, and strain the broth through a sieve : then put it into another par. and lx>d it down until it becomes a ;ellv. If it ss wished that th jaily should be clear, the whites of two eggs may be beaten up in a tabhspoon ful of stock broth, am: added to it, and wall mixed. It must then be boiled for •even or eight minutes. Some lemon u then to be added, and the ounienu of tin Stewpar. strained through a fine cotton •trainer, taking care ut to sqoeesa the cloth, or the dregs may be forecd through the pom of the material. The filtered jelly is then put in a cold place to set. When it has become perfectly solid, it is to be cnt with a spoon into large piece#, which are arranged on the diah, around the piece of meat. Sometimes the jelly is colored before being strained, by the addition ci a little cochineal. Very many persons seera to think that beoause beauty and utility are not the same, theT must be s&ugvau-tie. But do baautdnl oclott in a fowl's plumage make its fiaJh leas jm.y and appetizing after having been upon the gridiron V To be sure taacy hues do not necessari ly, and of themselves, produce good is regard to useful qualities, but neither do they necessarily do harm. Only those who love fowl", that is, those who take an interact in them and study their peculiarities, are the ones who will be likely to effect any improvements ss to their economical value, and it is these very keepers who mav also, as a matter of course, be expected to have their eye.- tought by external, and who will pre fer some'partictilar hues and colors. I am convinced that breeding for fancy and to a standard, provided due promin ence ia given to symmetry and sixe, and all "in and-in breeding " strictly avoid ed, is not detrimental to utility, and that birds thus bred will always com pare mora than favorably with common stock, supposing neither to be bred witi any special reference to extraordinary prolifioaees, as is not generally the caal with either fancy fowls or the common torts FoB-Dress Coiffures. The stylish Josephine ooifFore Is al ready preferred to the Pompadour, anc! for full dress, prevails almost withoui exoepuon. Ola-fashioned side-oomb tre worn at the back of the neck, U keep the hair up tmooihly ; the bmr i: lightly tied together, and arranged in t cluster of light finger-puffs at the top o: the head. A braided coronet is won shore the forehead, and light, triflint frizzes are is favor among indies witf low, broad brows. A very etrikmgooif fare is made by pissing three long am very light finger puffs lengthwise abov t the forehead. Flowers are worn upon the top of the head, but this style, though dictated by fashion, is often deviated from, an"' those to whom the extra height u un becoming, pbc flowers, aigrettes, etc., at tha left side, just back of the ear. . Carved oombs of tortoise-slied have been reatored of late, but these havt been followed by cheap and ungraceful imitations which have lessened :Le pop ularity of the real. All kinds of orna mental combs, however, are in more or lezi favor, and many of these, of gilt, and enamel are handsome of themselves A moderate wearing of curl* is not forbidden, and all arrangements of the hair that are seemingly unstudied and irregular, are particularly to be admired. Chfer and l'ickles fr Fever. Soma two moaths ago, a resident of Detroit named Broef, was taken ill with some sort of a fever, and for two weeks there was Little hope of saving his life. He oontmued to sink, in spite oi all the physicians could do, and thej finally gave hi in up. All through his sickness the man Lad continually asked for pickles and cider, and when lie had got so low that Ins death was considered only a question of a few • hours, Mrs. Broef decided to gratify his wishes. A gists of sweet cider was given him, and he declared himself much better for it. More was given through the night, in glace of medi cine, And tUe next moriting ie doctor declared that a most favor able change had taken place. Some strong pickles were procured and given him, and he began to call for gruei and broth. To be brief, he is now able to move around the beuse, and everybody in the neighborhood, as well as the phv sician, gives the cider and pickles the credit of performing the cure. The Cheyenne Leader comes to us with a vigorous protest against what it oalls the rape of Wyoming, or thepro posed annexion of a portion of Wyo ming Territory to Colorado, in order to Eve the latter sufficient population to ) deoentlv admitted into the Union as a State. The Leader affirms that Wyo ming possesses the natural advantages to become itself a State at no far-distant day, unless dismembered to accommo date the ambitious designs of Colorado. The latter territory, it says, lias only 60,000 inhabitants, and with the addi tion of Wyoming would have only 65,- 000, or only one-half the number re quired for a Congressional District. The consequences likely to follow the proposed annexation, if we may believe the Leader, ere truly terrible, and they Include the crushing out of human energy, stopping the march of civiliza tion, undoing all that has been done and blasting the bright prospects of all that might be done in the fair territory of Wyoming. Housi WcrDOwa —The more light ad mitted to apartments the better for those who occupy them. Light is necessa ry to sound health as it is to vegetable life. Exclude it from plants and the consequences are disastrous. They can not be perfected without its vivifying influence. It is a fearful mistake to curtain and blind windows so clot a j for fear of injuring the furniture by expos ure to the sun's rays, that rooms posi- ; cr 9. His j life was spared on condition he should Ibe seut to the United States, He did not remain here long, but returned tg Switacrtand to tlud his mother dying. 1 The French government again alarmeo, demanded his banishment from Switzer land, and sent an anuy to the front ir to enforce the demand. The Prince j again sought refuge in England. At the end of 1888 he took up his residence in London, and published there his celebrated "lies Idee* Xapolcouiemit- " In 1840 he made anotlier attempt on Fiance. He hired in London a steaiuer j called the City of Ediuburg, and em barked with Count Moutholm, General Noiain and tlfty-lhreo associate*, laud ed near Boulogne on Thursday, August 1 (.*, and auiruxoned the troops to *ur , render or join him. They refused, and 1 as the National tiuards begun to leal to arms, the Priueo and his party re j treated towards the pillars ou the j ne.ghts above Bolougnc, and there planted a tlag, with a golden eagle, on tor of the stiiff. He was capture! on the beach during an attempt to escape. They were taken ' to Paris aud tried before the Chamber jof Peers for high treason. On landing the Prince had distributed printed c r culais in which he said the Bourbon iynssty had ceased to reign, and that e appointed M. Thiers President of the Council, and Marshal Clausel Minister jof War. The trial of the Prince took place at the beg inning of Octoler, be fore 160 peers, M. Bcrrver appeared jas counsel for the Prince! He made a ; brilliant defence, but in vain. The Pnnoe aas sentenced to perpetual irn pnsoument fti a French fortress. He was conveyed to the Citadel of Ham, and after being confined six years made his escape May 25, 18*6, disguised as a workman. He crossed mto Belgium, •uid for the third time took refuge IU England, where he resided until the revolution of 1848, an event which s[>eedily led to his being elected a 1 representative in the National Assembly, and afterward President of the French Republic. Having reached this posi tion, he began to revive a love for the "family among the soldiers lv a liberal distribution of souvenirs of his uncle. So matters went on, the Presideut scheming all the while, until aided by the energetic action of such men as St. Arnsud and Fleury, he, early iu the moruing of December 2, ISoi, impris oned every statesman in Pans known for his public spirit and ability, dissolved the Ass mbly, seized the most distm | gnisbed generals, and proclaimed him ! self Dictator. In the autumn of 1852 he made a tour through several of the departments, was greeted with " Tim 7 Emperor," and, ou his return, immediately began bia impenal sway, the French nation j voting by a majority of five or six rail ; lions for the restoration af the umpire, which was accordingly proclaimed I>e ceniber 2, 1852. The Prince assumed the title of "Napoleon HI., Emperor of the French, by the grace of God and the will of the people." Iu 1854 war i broke out between Russia, France, and England, and was brought to a close in 1556, shortlv after the capture .of So bastopol. The Emperor married Eu genie—Marie de Guzman—Countess de Teha, January 29, 1853, the only issue being the Prince Imperial. Naploleon Eugene Louis Jean Joseph was born March 16,1850. On the 16th if April, 1855, the Emperor and Empress visited England and were received bv the Queen, who iu rested hia Impenal Majesty with the .nsignia of a Knight of the Garter, April 18. Early in 1858 an unsuccessful at tempt wa* made on the Emperor's life by Orsini, aided by Dr. Bernard, a Frenchman residing in Loudon. In 1859-60 the Emperor, at the head of his rmy, proceeded to Italy for the pur pose of aiding VictorEmniauual against :bo Austrian*, whom He defeated at Magenta and Bolferino. In return for this service Savoy and some neutral Swiss territory were ceded to him. In 1961 the Emperor acknowledged the jlaims of Victor Emm 'Duel to the title >f King of Italy. In 1860 joint exj>edi tions of France and England sailed igainst the Chinece and captnred Pe iin. In 1861, in conjunction with Oreat Britain and Spain, lie organized an ex pedition against Mexico, Great Britain rnd Spain seceded from the movement .a April, 1862, and the Emperor carried on the war alone. An imperial govern ment was started in Mexico, the crown of which the Arch-duke Maximilian, of Vustria, wsa induced to accept October 3, 1863. The French Emperor then en tered an agreement to withdraw his forces, and the last French soldiers left Mexico in 1867. The tragic death of Maximilian and the sad story of his un fortunate wife are too well known to need repetition here. The death of Frederick VII., of Denmark, November 15, 1863, led to the revival of German claims upon the Schleswig-Holstcin, md the federal troops entered Hols tein, December 23. The Austrains and Prussians began the war early in 1864. Denmark signed a treaty of peace Octo ber 30. The Emperor concluded, Sep tember 15, 1864, with the cabinet of Turin, a 1 ranco-Italian treatv, having for its object tbe withdrawal from Rome cf the French troops, which *a done December 11, 1866. The events connected with the late Franco-German war are so fresh in the recollection of our readers that it is scarcely necessary to reiterate them here. It still remains a mooted ques tion whether the Etnpernr voluntarily waged war or was forced into the con test by circnmHtancesoverwhirh lie had no control. His bravery in practically imprisoning himself with the army o'f Seden, and taking his chances with the noble troops, stamp him at once as a brilliant leader, a true type of a French soldier, and a worthy nephew of his uncle. The surrender, tlie interview with Emperor William, his life at Wil helmshoe, and his subsequent residence in England, were the closing scenes of aa brilliant a career as the world lias ever witnessed. The Philosophy of Frying Meat-. Of all methods of cooking none i so oommon, so convenient and so economi cal, as frying. And yet very few people understand the philosophy of a good frv, or there would certainly be less com plaint of its unhealthfulness, and less indigestion from its consumption. Perfect frying is perfect cooking, and is in reality very easily done. It is only necessary that the fat should be boiling bubbling hot. Then the article dropped into it is at once oovered with a thin crust, crisp, brown and appetizing, and the interior of the meat retains its juices and is quite free frem all suspicions of But the frying-pan, it is self-evident, cannot be a shallow one, for it must have a depth of boiling i*t sufficient to cover the steak or cutlet, Ac., for if this la not donee at onoe, the part remaining cold cools the adjoining fat and then absorbs it, so that the whole benefit of the boiling fat is neutralized. If a steak is at once oovered with a brown ri6p crust it will cook as readily as water would. The meat then is neither greasey in appearance nor reality, so that keeping this point in view there is no reason why this convenient method of oocking should not be is delioate and as healthy as either broiling, baking or boning. A young woman fondling her new born babe, and a young man his new born moustache, are two of the most beautiful sights in this world. The Growth of Jokes. An artiole in a late numlier of the flrlfiA A ( Quarterly fie new gives sn in sight into the history of many witti cisms thst hsve become famous, ss well as divulges the process of manufacture through which many excellent jokea have hud to go before their authora could paaa tlicill off an a|tontaucou*. "Wit," it says, "ia not always ao a|H>utaneoiisaaitiip|Muira. 'lmpromptus' arc often polished by the midnight oil; thus ShcridmTa celebrated descriutiou ill the House of Commons of Dumlaa a* one 'who generally reaorta to lua memo ry for his joke*, ami to his imagination for IIIH facta,' went through many changes before it came out in its present brillianey. The followiag are some of the earlier forms of the witticisms : • He employs In* fauoy in his narrative, and keeps ina recollections for hi* wit." ' When lie makes lna joke* you applaud the accuracy of hia memory, and 'tia only when he state* facta that von ad mire the flight* of hi* tmagiuariou.' " Wit i* an evergreen, ami jokea of great autuimtv are continually appear ing as new. \Ve can tna-e the seuti ment contained in the well-known line*, * I'm h *li Rkhll ut tui • a) M*> use to ihri day to Demoatheuea, w ho, when lie fld from the rubble, and waa reproached for it, said 'that he that tile* might tight agaiu.' "The germ of Dottghtaa Jerrold'a joke, 'that it wna better to ba witty and wi*e than witty and otherwise,' i* to Ih> H'Uiul iu a little lwok of * Conceits,' published ill li'dO. In the same work i* the evergreen joke of the man Gun, who having been charged bv a judge for talc-ltcartug, waa desired to give a good report in future. " Lord I.vudhurst used U> say of Lord Campbell when he wrote his 'Lives of the Chancellors,' that he had added a new pain to death. The original of thi* w.ttieism can bo traced t.i Dr. Ar butlmot, who styled the infsmous pub lisher, Curil, one of the new terrors of death. Cicero classes Fowpev among those who are *ui uiuantt situ rivali, and we often hear ihe same term of ex pre**iou used to describe aouie vain lauii. Mr. Rogers relatea that when Poraon wiu told that Dr. Pretty man had been left a large estate by Mr. Tom line, who had only seen him once, he said: 'lt would not have happened if he had seen him Iwuv.' Person appar ently borrowed las idea from the old epigram: t our ' au! Mcttu* 'ittuih to (Mi ni t*r Ouc only wa he i h- ic me f r hit Lir ' * Tru*. W ttu, hfOCr > ui r 11uttr• laJkr thru m Hit hclf you Uflf tnd h*4 he leru yt*tt (VlrA 1 •• Peter Pindar gave new point to an old jest when he said that if he had not been a ginnl subject to tin- King, hia Majesty had leeti a good subject to hint. Scaltger tells of a proud man who, hav ing quarreled with the Queen of Navar re, was ordered to quit her kitidom iiu inediately, and replied, * That I can do 111 a very short time.' This has given rise to the following modern version: A prince of Italy, whose dominion was of small exteut, ordered a person out of it iu twenty hours. • The prince has Ihs-ii liberal, for 1 can quit it in half an hour,' answered the banished man. " Wit is sometimes involuntary, and amusing anecdotes often gam their point from the naivrtr of those to whom they relate. Sir Walter Soott tells how he was at a country sale, and l>ought au old piece for five-ami-twenty guineas. This price much astonished an old wife, who was looking to buy something her self, and she cried out* 'lf the parritch pot gangs at that, what will the kail pot gang for ?' "An American minister was once preaching about Heaven, and to show the absurdity of Swislt-üborg's ideas, drew a graphie picture of the Sweden borgtan heaven, with its beautiful fields, fine horses, cows, and pretty women, when, in the midst of the glowiug de scription, one of the sisters went into raptures, and *hout-d -* Glory, glorv, glory !' This so discomfite d the preach er that he paused, when an elder cried out to the shooter, ' Hold on, then*, sis ter; you re shouting over the wrong heaven !' " It ia thought by some to be an ad vantage to the teller of good stories t<> keep a solemn countenance himself; but Chariei Lamb classes among hia ' Pop ulur Fallacies' this—that 'a man muat not laugh at hia own jest,' and says : ' \\ e love to see a wag taste his own joke to hia party, to watch a quirk or a merry conceit flickering upon the lips some seconds before the tongue is de livered of it. If it be good, fresh, ami racy, begotten of the occasion: if he that utters it never thought of it before, he is naturally the first to be tickled at it, and any suppression of such com placence we hold to be clownish and in sulting."' IhuidMiine lirer else folks is in a pet Itocausc I make* 'eiu wait for a bit. I knows lit a gin'ial way by the look* of a piece of meat just how long 'twill take to roast, but things don't alltir* work a* a body ealcu late* some tlllle* the meat weigh* u half-|Hiiiml more r less, ami sometimes the tire git* contrary. " Most o' my work, and roustm' in (mrtiklal the thlug most lolks git cro*- se*t over can't be done and put away till it's wanted, like dl*h wu-hiug, slid ironing, ami sewing. It's to be done juat to u turn, ami just to u intuit. A roast must go right straight front the tire to the table, u* you know, mum, yourself, aud sometimes folk* i* a little longer than common over the soup ami fish, and how am 1 to know, mum? And then, if the meat i* a little over done, it's ' That miaeruble cook can't even roast a piece of beef right !' And if it's taken from the tire, ami kept hot, why that'* ju*t a* bad, aud it'* 'That miserable (cook ! she ha* contrived to git the tlicxor out of the meat !' And if they are ready ts soon, and the meat i* too rare, it's 'That miserable cook ' again. Seem* to me that holies and geutlemili as is ladies an I gintlcmrn might think a bit how hard it I* on the cook ami have a bit o' patience, and in stcad o' aayiu' 'That niiaerable cook " might lie u-tulkin' pleasant among theiu selvea, and Walt a few minute* if tile meat isn't ready to the luinit, for you know, uittiu, it's an old say in", "It is lietter t0 fi*l, I was set U|m>U by a teiii)M-nt. Hie tem perature sank to thirty-four decree* b low rer<>. Nothing coul.l b<- nn-re ter rible than a wind uuder such cireuui stanees, except, |N*rha|ia, a furnace blast. Mercury hardened almost to tin .-.m sistenov of lead. The moisture of the breath froze 011 the tiearil in solid lump* of ice. The drifting snow , which came whirling along the icy plane, was like the suiulclollds of the desert, winch oftentimes overwhelm travellers, lhere was no chance for life except in tlight. It would Iw difficult to inflict greater torture U{M>U a mau than to expose him to such a storm. First cornea alarm, then pain, then lack of perception. One <>f ■ v com rades said, " f cannot go any farther. 1 do not want to; I am sleepy; 1 cannot walk." Auother said, " i am uo longer cold, I am unite warm again; shall we not camp ?' There was a great need of haste and exertion, or we should all have per ished. In Greenland the atiow foils dry. The mountains are loftv; it never reins upon them, and a fresh layer of snow is laid upon them every year. Enormous quan tities KK-ak loose and roll down the mountain sides in avalanches, hut the amount is small in comparison with tin* deposit. The glaciers are the mentis of drainage of these great snow tields. which are turned to ice bv n vvrv im- pie process, atul ice flows to the aea. In many places tn the awful country tin valleys are so filled that they have In come level with the summits of the mountains, and there is a desert waste of whiteness, smooth as the s--a, ipid void of life a* Sahara. The last paragraph forcibly d-Hcriles to us the formation of that slow and fearful blockade ng s ago, when javr tions of earth were *ll ice; the jteriod called by geologist* tho glacial > A. In IVril from n Drunken Engineer. A few night* since the locomotive of a train on the Pennsylvania Railroad was run lMtws-n Pittsburg and .Altootia by an engineer who hiul, itnknawingly to the conductor, lMeome considerably intoxicated in the former city. At tmu-s. at the most dangerous places, the man put the engine to its utmost test- -forty five und fifty mih-snn hour. Hut when ever he saw a red light he reversed the locomotive, and brought into operation the patent air-brakes. The stoppages from Pittsburg to Albania on this ac count were very many, nnd the traia was several hours lab- on arriving at the latter place. The jK-euliar move ments of the tram greatly excited th<- passengers and tilled them with painful amazement. The conductor had be come informed of the engineer's condi tion, but he could find no one to w houi he could entrust the responsibility of running the train. He studiously kept the secret from the passengers, lest its divulgement would till them with ter ror. Notwithstanding the dangerous hands in which probably a hundred lives had lu-en placixl, the train reachwi the end of the engineer's run with safe ty. It is needless to add that the drunk en employee af the company was prompt ly discharged. He hud previously been considered one of tlie best and most re liable engineers—as he was one of the oldest—on the road. On the dav of the accident, unfortunately, he fell in with a party of friends, and drank an inordinate quantity of liquor.— Attnona (Perm.) 7'rifiunc. Sllx'ritt. Hiberia rnnUinn an area of 4,7HO;<*H) • square mi lea, and lin* a population of | 8,000,000. This va*t oonntrv, writi'* a correspondent of the Alaaka Herald, i*. j without doubt, one of the richest min- I eral region* in the world. The Rolil 1 yield for a aingle year of the mine* of | Tomsk i stated nt eleyen million*. Im ] menae quantities of iron and copper I abound, and there are valuable coal, tin, ' lead and zinc mine*. Jieuutifnl apeei- I men* of iaaper and porphyry are found j in aeveral of the districts. The fur pro | ducts of Hiberia are not surpassed by any country in the world. In 1871 there were exported to Sau Franciaco, among other valuable fur*, nearly 4,000 aable *kin* ami over 43,000 dried and salted ftir-seal skin*. Large quantities j of sea otter skin* were nlso sent there, j There is an almost endless variety of ; fur-bearing animals—bear, deer, beaver, j marten, mink, grav, red, eross, white and blue fox, A-c. Most of the products ! of a temperate clime are attempted, and 1 in the more southern districts corn has been harvested. The inhabitants, as it ! is well known, nre principally Hussinns, | and in great part, consist of persons whe have been banished from Hussia proper for political or other offences. Refined Oil*. —A writer in Van Nos trand's Kclrctir Mannzim for December proposes that reflnded oils for illumin ! ating purposes be sold by weigh in ! stead of by measure, as is now the cus- I torn. The better quality of oils are the heavier, and if the retailers were oompelled to sell in the same manner as ! the refiners the small purchaser would ■ have in the weight and color of his oil a readier tost of its worth as an illumina tor than anv legislative enactment would supply. Tlie same writer calls attention to tlie delusion in the public mind ttu.t adulteration is practiced by the refiners It would not pay. And hence inspec turn at the petroleum refining still* is time wasted to no purpose. The small d< alers, who are deterred by no inspf o tion, are the persans who perform tfie ingenious change by which an illumin ating oil carries death to those that use it. Associated Habitual Mot anient In the hotter Anlutnl*. l>og*, whan they wtah Pi go to sleep on a carpet or other hard surface, gen erally turn round and round and scratch the ground with their fore-paw* HI a neuaelen* manner, a* if they intend Pi trample down the gins* and stamp out a hollow, a* no doubt their wild parent* ilid, when they lived on open grassy phtitin or ill the W.HMI*. Juekul*, fell nocs, and other allied uinmul* ill the Zoological (lardeua, treat their straw in tin* insiiiier ; hut it is a rather odd air- | euilistuuee that the keeiicr*, after ob serving for OOttlc IM< illtlt*, have never aaeti the wolve* thus liehitve, A aetin and an animal in thi* coudiltoii l would IM> particularly liable to follow a senseless kahit---wa* observed by a friend t-o turn completely round on a carpet thirteen tlllle* before going to sleep. Many eamiveroti* animal*, a* they crawl toward their prey and jirepare to ru*h or aprmg on it, lower their head* and crouch, partly, a* it would apjiear, j to hide themselves, urn! partly to get ready for their rimh ; ami thin halot in an exaggerated form ha* lieeume heredi tary ia our pointer* and aetth r*. Now I have notmml MVINW of times that, when two *trange dog* meet on an open road, the one which see* the other Hist, alter the lir*t glance, alwav* lower* it* head, generally crunchen a little, or even lie* down ; that l* he taki** the proper attitude for concealing himself and for making a rush or spring, although the mad is quit* open ami the distance i* grat. Again, dog* of all kind*, . when intently watching ami slowly np pmachtug their prey, frequently keep one of their fore-leg* doubled up for a long time, ready for the next caution* step ; and this i* eminently characteris tic of* the (tointer. but from habit tliey behave in exactly the snise manner whenever their attention t* aroused. I have seen u dog at the foot of a high wall, bteiiing attentively to n Sound on the opposite side, with one leg doubled up ; and in thin there could have liccu no intention of making u cautious ap proach. I scratch themselves by n rapid lunVclilsnt of olio of their hind foot ; mill, when their back* are rubbed with it stick, HO strung in the habit, that thev cannot help rapidly Kctub-hing the air or the ground in tireless and ludicrous ui aimer. Horses scratch themselves by nibbling tho .<• part* of their laidies which they can reach with their teeth; but more commonly one horn* shows another where lie niuiis to IM- scrub-bed, and they then hibble een ornrr. A fro nd w hone attention j had called to the sub ject, observed that when he ruhtied hi* horse's neck, tho animal protrude* his head, uncovered his tee til, and moved hi jaws, exactly u* if nibbling another horse'* neck, for he could never have uildih d IIIH own ueck. If a hor*c in much tickled, ad whetl eurry-eojnbed, hid W'ldh to bite something IMS-OHICS so intolerably strong that he will clatter hid teeth together, and, though not vieioua, bite hid gruoru. At the same time, from habit, he eloaely depret-*- * hi earn, M an t<> proUwt them from Inn ing bitten, ad if lie were lighting with auother horde. A horse, whell eajfi r to start Oil a journey, make* the BHUMI appr< h which be IWII to the habitual movement of progression by pnwmg the ground. Now, when horse- 111 their stalls ure about to Pe fed and are eager for their cum, thev paw the pavement or the straw. Two of my horse* tliua 1M have when they **-e or hear the corn given *t> their neigbliora. Hut lure we have what may almost IK- called a true ex pre-*ion, as paving the ground in uni versally rvd'guiß d as a sign of eager are*. (•euerai t haiurarnh-r, the I'rodjiertbc Huler of I ran re. Among the lively veterans whom the Inte >t French revolution has brought Upper-Most, after years of enforced or voluntary exile, This distinguished man is now acting as chief of the ltight Centre, or Drleanist M < tion of the Assembly, and is not un likely, should M. Thiers finally curry out his repeat**! threats of resignation, to IK placed at the h< ad of the Govern ment. The gcucrel is four or five years older than the president, having passed his eightieth anniversary, jet displays a vigor in action and ronv in sjw-och not inferior to that of Thiers himself. Cbaiignriiier, after a successful career in the African oauipisgn in the reign of Louis l'hilip|H', suddenly iMs-ame a prominent tignre when the lbjadutnm .of IK4M superseded the Orleans r>-,7ntr. He was active in aiding to suppress the June insurrection, ami. when iV-na part*- became president, was made com mandant of the military force* in Paris. Hut the sturdy independence of Ins character made llonaparte doubtful of his co-operation when the coup ifi'at was planned, aud the suggestion of his name as a candidate for the presidential succession added te this feeling of dis trust; ill consequence, Bonaparte re moved him from his command. Chan ganiier, like Thiers, was one of those who were arrested MI the morning of coup d'etat, imprisoned, ami finally ban ished; and, like TliiA*. he never for gave thrf indignity. He disapjicared quite out of history until the Franco- Prussian War, whereur he received com mnnd of n division, aud shnnsi Haxaine's misfortunes at Met*. Elected s mem ber of tho Assembly, he has taken u very active part in its proceedings throughout, showing himself to IM> as able a debater as he was valiant on the field. He is a conservative of the (>r lenmst tyjie, and has made himself e*jn>eially conspicuous for his violent attacks upon Gamlvette. General Chan garnicr has been compared, in jiersonnl aiqieanuice, to Major Pemlcntns; he is the shs-kest and most timcal of nntiqua ted dandies, attires himself in the latest fashions, always seems to have the in stant l>efore issued from the hands of his valet and his coiffeur, and has the jaunty, springy step of a fashionable man in the vigor of his prime. Hia brown wig ia all bio brown; this is the onlv article in which he displays a want of taste ; but his gray eye is bright and stern, his mouth firmly set, and his whole expression one of liellig erent determinat ion. His party real is as notable as was Ins dash and spirit on Algerian plniiiK forty years ago ; more than once he has iiK*aih-d Si. Thiers with a courage and eloquence which has frightened more than his own support ers. The secret of his influence, how - ever, rests not no much upon his orator ical J lowers or his jsilitieal shrewdness as U|KI his prohitv and incorruptibility. Few men in the assembly are so com pletely trusted. His character is open, simple, and sensitively honorable. Were he to liecome president or dicta tor. no one doubts that he would regard with exclusive view what he thought to be the weal of France. I A Pari* correspondent of the /Vi/f 1 Mall llazette write* to that journal a i pleasant story alw>nt the Bey of Tunis. He wished to have some rifled cannons, f and naturally addressed liimsclf to a German, who hit upon some old <>rd ' nance, which had long been standing on i the ramparts of Frankfort. Tlie intini- E oipality were delightiil to find n pur . chaser, and sold the pieces at a low price. The guns, of course, ware not rifled, but this did not hinder tho eon tractor from buying thein. Ho aenf for n blncksinith and ordered him to rifle them, and then to forward them to Tu nis. Thine months afterward the guns arrived, but what was the astonishment of the Bey and hi* Artillery Committee i to find them rifled outside. j __ A well-known minor in California recently visited his mine and stepped into the bucket nnd wns let down. Dur ing the descent tlie rope broke and let the bucket loose. Its occupant seized the upper end of tho rope and held on for some time. llis assistant kept on lowering until he thought his employer I had reached the bottom of the shaft—it being 250 feet deep—and then stopped. Meanwhile the victim clung to the rope and shouted wildly for help but none was near. At length, when exhausted, he indulged in a silent prayer, in the expectation of being dashed to pieces by the fall to take place, and, closing his : ' eyes, let ge and fell—about eighteen | inches. When found he was in a state of unconsciousness. Uw Ultitr and Xvrr Happiness. We favor a qvstem that ahall contri bute moat to the happiness of tha indl vidua! and tha alaaa. If tha one hour ' saved from lalor be devoted to intel )actual improvement, it ia wall. If the litlMirer thu* ralcaaad applies hia leisure hour to til* own domeatie huaiuaaa, to hia garden or hia simp, Pi hia ucodcd rc*t or tha education of )ii* childrau, to | the |i!cii*iuit interchange of idea* and p< M>d will between neigh I tors, to aliiUMtt anything except di*i|>atiou, idlaueaa and debauchery-It will prove a blessing, taking htm out of the enforced treadmill of grinding toil, uod giving him aatatu* lit the world MIMIVO that of the mare toiling serf. One hour n day aaved from slavi*!: tot!, if rightly employed ami improved, can lie the ineaiia of creating a new chin* of melt—new in their rajan-lties for enjoyment, and for toil itself. The devotion of una hour a day to self-edu cation, to itiruUd development, can do what ha* ao often been h>ne liefore ; tranafonn mrw drudge* into thinking, intelligent heiuga, with their capacities for heulthfitl enjoyment increased in projairttou to the eultivation of Uteir intellects, Hut tin* will not lie tha re milt to the man who covet* tha one hour aaved from toil in order that he may have so much more time pi dcVote to the *hiiflling of eurda or the shaking of dice at the corner grocery. It i* a common miftake made that release from the ucceaaity of lalior en sures happiness. Employment ia the h.w of all really intelligent, certainly all really progreaatvc, nation* and in dividtlala. Other* may exist, hut they do not live lu the true seune of the word. We mu*t work with the mind if not with the hand*. The iuviNthlr wheel* and Kjiring* of the hrain muwt ha kept moving. Thought will lie evolved, and in it* proper direction i* the correct cue Pi happiues*. Jet the lnlwirtif get hi* release from the hitherto extra hour or two f enforced toil, and then devote it sensibly to lietter pttrjMHwa tliau di**ipation, or idleuea*, which h ad* Pi dissipation if not Pi VogulKiudage and crime. liiil N|M- tklng. Spt-ukiiig evil of other* i* mc of llit iiiost uiiamiablc habit* that cau lu* ac quired, ami nc that lead* to liiflmte mischief; it i* uot always easy to avoid it, for there are a great many persona in the world who am t..t what they ought to be, and who do many thing* they ought not to do. It is hard for a blunt, geuenms mint I to refrain fmni exurrw* nig itself ul*>ut mean |H*o|ile aud mean acts ; time i* something in meaiiiie*s mid tbshwiit-sty that rouses the indigna tion of such a tnind, and it liki* the luxury of denouncing them in Isild, un sparing language. Hut the prjetiee, us a practice, is a troublesome and danger una one. Then* ar occasion* when it i* our duty to sjx-ak out in t-SJsstlire tif wrong ; but in getiera), it i* l*i-*t to almlaiu from evil *|H-aklUg, even of evil pemoua. We are not luatb- judge* of outers' actions; no one ha* the right to assume the char acter of arbiter am! ceimnr. Even the I test of us have our faults, and if every one should presume to delumnrv the vices ami iui*condiict of others, the world would Ite given Up to defamation. We may see and hear much that we do not adunre ami cannot like; we may l econte cognizant of many wvil deed* dons by evil |M*r*on ; but it is the (tart > f wisdom and discretion to pa** tliem by without notice, except when to *jxwvk of them cautiously may be necesaary aa a wanting to a friend. We all have enough enemiea in this world, without provoking otlierw by lll tcmpered eomtneiita. The eumitv of evil men is a thing to lie avoided, for wlule it ran do us no good, it may do u> murli harm Besides we mav make mistakes in the hnste of honest indigna tion, and speak evil of good men for sets we do not understand. Such a mistake is worse than the other; for while it is imprudent to promiscuously denounce evil men, it is cruel wrong U> defame a good one. About Hear*. Tlie previsions of nature are strange. Climate forces upon animals different habits. Towards tlie end of lWem lT the female white la-sr places her self tu a position where the snow will drift over her. Lying still UJKUI a riM*k, the suow falls thickly upon her, aud a cell is formed for a winter habitation. In this cell the animal reside* during the period of accouchement. The cubs are produced, snd the inotker remains -eluded with them antil the month of March. The young are very small at first, but as they grow the heat of the ISHIIC# melt the snow and thus enlarges the ix-Jl. The warm breath ascends up ward, and makes an ajx-ratuiv for the ndniiasiun of pure air. Ih-fore Inbcr niiting. the bear eats enormously of nu tritious food, and becomes very fat, on which fat she exists during her winter retirement. Tin- phenomenon iaall the more singular, as the femaleU-ar is com pelled t*i give sustcuciice to her young .a* well as to live herself, and tlie sur plus fat in her own IKMIV her only store of food. Pertinent to this, I>r. Wood remarks; " It is worthv of notice that in the bears of the Old aa well as tlie New World, is found the curious phenomc non of the • tspjK-n,' a hard concreted substance, which plugs up the intestines and wi'iu* to 1M- of service in retaining the nuimnl condition. In Scandinavia, where the la-ars of both sexes retire b winter quarters, and remain in their hidden recesses for five full months, the tappen is very seldom cast until the lieur leaves its den. In the rare iustan ees w here such an event has happened, the War is said to have lieeoni misera bly thin and weak." The snow (tacks closely, and makes a warm IMHI. The caloric exhaled from the IMHIV is not swept away bvthe wind, but it is conservixl around toe animal, and sensation is preservsl. The Hirhesf Man In the World. This enviable person is pmbablv the Kbcilivc of Egypt. His yearly income is $50,0(10,000, ami lie has twenty-five richly - furnished palaces witJun tlie wall* of Cairo. He is vastly-more pro gressive than the Sultan, fiis TurLisli master; is rapidly extending hi* do minions, building railroads, and making commercial improvements, and will ul timately become independent of Turk ish domination. He is at present mak ing arrangements for the connection of a railroad up the Nile to Ihmgola, and thence across the desert to London, wliieli country he will make one of hi* own provinces It has been remarked of liini that as Viceroy upon any throne in K'irojie.he would lie the greatint mon arch of the Bfre. He is not only a prince but a merchant, a capitalist, a states man and a cultivator. He sleeps only four hours out of twenty-four, and at his desk center his railroads, steamship bill's, telegraphs, postal service, private estate*, sugar mills, cotton culture, army, navy and civil service. A 1100 Slory. i Fritu California comes the utonr of a hive of unusually busy l>eos. The hive i is located in n cleft of a rook which is IfiO feet in depth; theentmnce is 30foot high am! 17 feet wide. The lees pass in and out in a solid column n foot in diameter, ntul in such vast number* that it is sudden and certain death for any - j man to attempt to capture their accu mulation of honey. A party of miners attempted to drive n drift into the rock so a* to mine the honey, but Hnallv pave up in despair. Year l>y year the sweet hoard increases. A man, whose name, early history, and present occupation nregiven circumstantially, to add weight to the a ton - ; gains his supply of sweet ening for Ins slapjacks by gathering it from a perennial stream which flows from this strange fount. Truly Califor i nia is the modern land of promise, a verv Canaan whose streams flow witli j milk and honey, but honey mostly, if ! this story is to be credited. Here is something from the /■hrsiers' Chronicle, an English paper which is decidedly apropos to ourselves : "Fnrin- ! ers are neglecting a mine of wealth or foregoing nine-tenths of its profit in neglecting their poultry, because fowls are a kind of live stock concerning 1 which the least is understood and the j most faulty management practised." ! Ho say we. 1 MEXICAN ML'HTANO LINIMENT ro* TH* STASMI, TUB aroca-frsfi, x*i> rr*i sows. A naw rlaita e public mwiAdana* kaa baan acquired by Oils iiro* tainorad axtanial remedy lu i>ii*r-|n*iM * nf its ruraa of Uta •jsdamlo horw IIIMNMM, whtrh lately swept over the land. In more than on* thousand llvary stable* It I* now u**d w a *|MM*tfle fur all the injuries and diaiiu|>r* whk-h can he reached l>y an exterior •PI li> KIIOII It ba* saved the live* of thotisuxU of v aiualiln horae* and other l.kx-Utork during the ysar. and It I* regarded tiy shrewd aud id err v ant vetarinary eiirgatNie, horsemen and • atlie breeders, aa lmtiepetw*ble to the (Wiper tr*sl luniii of a large elaee of dlwvubil<- riaitniug tha mm* won derful and uulieardof ruraa. they all liava liiKinulnl Ui nothing, and havs only Involved the |s of perfection may be mora certain)r euiunt and pnerrsd by tho use of l.ros's KxTMttao* than by any other means at prMwut known. 1 kcc| the hair ngoroualy aliv* and (k atwip I cAithy. It ta an MuoJUent as wall as an lovtg vrant, in ether words, it random the hair soft. • Iky. and ductile, while at the same time tf in fuses new Ufa aud alasUcity tnto tlie 111 re* and in lo.es them to mrt The wavy appearancw given to the whole mass of hair by the regular applies turn of the Kxrttxiaox ia a matter of i, tonetv among Udtce who use u at their m iru log sid cvetung luileta. Thai it ftourtaboe the bs r and promotes tta growth in an extraordui- BI .trgraa, ia beytaa) all question naldnear • xu i ever be the tot of any man or woman who t rui-hew in this ferttluting. (Nirifying. and 1-eaa .f.,ng prejwrwtnwi uoot or I wire a day. •ui)ilaiiit* requiring uivlgurating and regit lUmg treatment In thi* quiet, unjireietiuou way I'IXWTXTIO* Bin issw as introduced to the world. It was a mora frvm the beginning. All that was claimed for it as a tome, a correr uve and annd<*e to malari'sia fever, was foun ' t-i le stnctly true Within five year* the anur aJ i-dav of thi* article amounted to over (He Million rd Mottle* A few years mora and tb d< mxnd bad swelled to bv* nulhons. The xiuit. si c nsumpiiou of the bitter* ha* now react** I the almost lurrndlhle aggregate of six nuiwt < i aorruta. and for every bottle eold iscwpy > r the lu nentxTtn Unocal. Awnrxu. put hslie.! IT the propriMoni. at a cost of ?15rkKun In<4e|eiitteiil auii faithful Again*' Public Plunder 8 paga*- 41 a yusun Seiti! i ,sir lMllii In* Iltarr Nmnru. Th* Vastly X. V. Hun. Rpsgw* 4ls*"r KeodyrmrDoDar. Has An thic New*. - The WeekH w York Hun tl irwr. Keml v.air I Ml* t'ue llacT Btku- M worn " instantly cures lice Stings. Wasp Slings and Moequito Ikies It neutral lies the poison and removes the I'aui and Swelling in a few momenta. It should be applied at **. The wTiter has need it many lime* without a aing'.e failure. It will tie eqnallv effectual in tieuirxJ ixing and extracting the jsuson fmm the 1 Ulee of all Venomous Insects or lie)*lies So oue traveling in the wood* should be without it.— a Hub Dvr art upon t! • hair, whisker* anil u>>u*tsohe*; no cAflmetcon unt*, hut Ih* purest Raven or the meet exquisite Itrowu* will lie evolved. (Y- In one to Are minute*. Headache. Earache. Xeurmlgia. I .am* Hack. IHarrhira. Croup*. Sprain*, and all similar com|>lait)t*. ore reMere! hv Kijiiio * Ixtast llai.tr.r, or aaiaiey rafttndod. —(bin. Loo**'* Natiokal Musnu.t I* a Magmalne of 48 pages pttbhabod hv I.ocke A Jonee. Toloilo. Oluo. Mr Ixicke (Xaahyl wrile* for every Xumber, availing [ mlilice. Read hi* "Ambi iiihi* Young Man." hi the January Xumber. To get it. aek your Xewislealer. or eeiul 10 centa to Publisher*. llt the year 4100. Hetal for *]*>- cuU circular to Agent*. Sent free. An Agent a anted at every Poet-office. —(Vim. Chees Up, and Stand By ! TBH Advtce, girrn hv klnff Captain Colli* to the forlorn Mr. Tool*. II cordially tendered to all who are lAhortnir under tht eloud of depreeeton end inetanrboly wbn h ueually arcompaiitea ckroate lie 1 dtgeetlna, Mltunaneaa. h*Sttnal eonatipetlon an fiervona debility. "Cheer op I" woe-begone tov*. Ildt. The eanere of your Bloomy feeling*, though they mey be rhronle and of king (landing, are not incurable A eor*e of Iloetetter't Stomach Bit ter*. the'poreot and mot genial of *ll vegetable stimulant* and corrective*, and especially adapted to rate* Ilk* yonra, will relieve you of your totily allmrnle and eonaeqnrnl mental miaery. speedily, rertetnly, and wttbonl pain The rhllla and damp* of the present season, In fart, all It* atmospheric condition*, are unfavorable to dyapeptie, htttooa and nervous sufferers. They need a stimulant aa well ae a tonic aud alterative. This wholesome regeuhle preparation combine* the three. While It Increase* the digestive rapacity of the stomach, and change* aud regulates the condition of the liver end th* bowels, It gives an agreeable tmpula to the mental farulttea and ateadiea the nerves, rnmedlcated stimulant* are never advisable ; they are too exciting, and often re-act disastrously. On th* other hand, the sham tonic* which contain no diffusive stimulant, and are sur-charged with dra stic avacuanta that almost torn a man Inside oat, are dangerous Th* system needs mors vitality, and they prostrate It entirely Hoatetter's Bitter* hat no affinity either with th* dangerous excitant or srtth the still more dangerous dspletunt. It simply strengthens ar.d regulates th* body and clears the mtnd. This ts th* whole secret of its cures. Editorial notice* arc ao common that : it ia aim oat impoaaible for an editor to •xpraaa bia honct opinion of the marita of any Article without Win* suspected of interested motives. Thia fact, how nyer, ahall not deter na from saying) what we think of a now midition to* the , Malaria Medina to which onr attention haa bpeu recently directed. We refer to I>r. J. WttlkcV'a California Vinegar j Hitters, a remedy which ia making ita wy into more fainiliea jnat now than all tltc other advertised medicine* put together, It* popularity, aa far aa wa cuui judge, ia not baaed on empty pro* huiuoti. There acetua to la* ito question almiit the potency of ita Unite initial-1 terntivc properties, while it |mmummi*h tin* (trciflc for Indi-1 pcation, ililiountieaa, Constipation, and ntany coinplainta of nervoua origin, we hare n-aaon to know ; and we are aa spiud on good authority that aa a gen end invigomut, regulating and purifying raclioine it haa no equal. It ia stated tuat ita ingreiHent* (obtained from the wihla of California) are new to the medical world; and ita vitraordinasy ef fect* certainly warrant the ootid union that it ia a compound of agent* hitherto unknown. If )>opidarity ia any criterion, t here can be no doubt of the eficieocy of the Vinegar Bitten, for the ami* of the urttde is immense and eoutinually ■ uer.ai.nig. (torn. AI•VICE. There ia a great good aenee in the advice Henry Ward Beecher give* to tlioae who write letter* to buay peo ple : 1. Don't write at all. 2. When yon can't help it, be sharp, • her!. and legible. 3. When you write on your buaineaa, pay for the anawer. 4. When you want mouey, don't begin with piety or flattery ; beg ft rat and be jnoiiM afterward. * - —*m*m*fe—^Br4e*er? ii e"w-** l| e* pMM Mem!eww la .■(•n4a4 In lb. worM in ahwa hdn. thr aakh' . <-•. f ttuok of tea * Bawdtr (haa AlXum 1.1 KM a* LI AM vuilt IT Rm o lea romcarTirii, atam .U t* ran lhaj ai.lrMata* Cm**a, aa4 Vti.a Url thai kMllkf "an. till iai.l? .a.M la ?naw*.., t( will W (aelat* AlXE*'* LCXO B.LCAM I. .•<*. hoya It taa Mm inn W iMntufa avh > . )'. wbo ha*, tmmn . rar*4 mvj, (a IhMr rt.ll •n l. t... l.fi (feair !,mh in w. •<(..< ..Crn.a fea mai.lt) ru Ira. IhMr r Mlri ■•• 4 Wtl„, |k*i • ae.rim.nl wiik •..* ao4 *trtm4 *iii>rn- r* ran ant *9> f* II- h*l ir- .( um thia l.ftlwMi •no I. It it TinuM In Vra.l *r t*. awai irtm I'l.whw. C<*rt i* a (.<• Iran if mm*, at M inn. ■i.i.4iaa. |( ia a.rruiwa m .! ..Mr. aatlafew 1 - ii< I. alt rawof l.nf wl Tkraat afenlnn Aa an Ba|iarnr**i, II a*a am •*•*! rvaoLtciTEn evidebck or it* muutv. aaaa nta .rouewiea: WHAT WELL-It MOW K |iEt'oolT* AT ASOCT ALUtx-a lcxo balsam • oiaarnia, T*** . be 11. Ml linilfam - Aioi'itr*. Bar * ai <>*.. Wr hu MM a Imtit. In la ai aura* II Im aura. r.|ntntl (Man mi Co*fe m<4mm m- 1i... r..r m>ld, •u. • h... bra la lb *•* br UH tii)*u. rran. r nm JW.I wfcal • ... tIMI lb Balaam Y*rr r*l. .nam. HI BP 4 TAXXEEjI AvWa rral Ik. (•ifnr.Bna a |)r.ieM*h>*ai ra'M b.mx (fea Balaam. a<*4 or.w a.fla II larerlf 1. C. Cn.ir.ll, Pru.r'.i al Mai in. Cllf. Muaii*. w, Vl.*. be If IT -1 am trail •* AioCi Lr*. Bat -aa aw* mr bill gn at •. aooe a. To* can, I w uia ntbi b ml nf aa. maw i**.irl ia mr iutf. ra* I r*o BAtAAa .T.r faila to 40e004 few ik>*i with a waffe." II la fcarmtrae te the am delicate child, t • It.ontaina Be tMta la arty farm Bit la nld by Meilrtae leaiere geaeratty. T> , CACTIO*.' he tot dee*.red rati far ALL KIT'S LCSO 111 |t and take ao other. liiroettnna moayui aach bottle.* J X HAKKia d CO.. Clnrtnaatt.O, raorataroaa. I TUT DA V|l I Ml, Ooaaral lyrtle riandmw. K. L held by alt Medicine Dealer* rot aaui ay Jt r Jcyar c Eaytcwmi Toa UI alao find It a err lata rare far Cmfbt aad CoMa. R* A T\WW AFLEVTI and other CMecoaera BOW at IlflfßW *>erk. iar. learn k~w to taerecac tkelr * \ I 111 P% Income pte a week lenreiwlibont It t-r --""* faring w*k tkelr regular rwnT.eetng by aidrreeing T X If ED l Etgktk St.. X T ttsuss U/iU A U tDfIV I H I yet. MA per dry ' Aren't nan let • Att eleaara it i'i w <>f working (wcplr of either am. y an* ny nil. make mere money at work far acta tkelr ai.*re nemearaoraS the lime lhaa at anrthlngefae Mel. dare free Addreaa O BTlhaoX d CO.. Dart !*a. he. Schenek's Pulmonic S>Tup. Seaweed Toaic aad Mandrake Pilla. Theae are Ike only medlelnea tkal will rare Pal ntenary roneawiptioa Dt fakeaek nfPklladelpbta. bat t-ren In ronetant praetlee far etker thirty yoare eonlivnatly eyamlaing lango and kaowe kle medt eti ra If propeilT taken, will rare Conenmptioa- Hie Mandrake fa lit rHtnee Ike I leer aad ttewaeh lot hewweel Tonir aiMTleea Ike kind, t* I tna It *"t the ooaiing of the elomark.aad aidt digwatlon H t I'nliaonir * Trap rtpena Ike mailer, aad natane throwa II oK without nay rsertion Pur irk ky all ittnggta'a. ABC 0M r a: tl . l KITI. Mi 1 3.00 Pei-YEAR 4#> . V'-##';* t'" ♦*.' ♦*< a {Jiff *+' .fa. £' t4l VBIICTS WmW n> .mtbr all. ruber a#*, al *Na rt br u Write and * Pmrttrw- Urofrre WorthtnatiMi. Dualle dCo . Hartford. Ct wrttf for Cere* niuefated Descriptive Trice Hat PITTSBURGH IV oble Sind# Monte. IrrKk lMllaf tllra Shot rtnna. Revolvers. Pist.la. ate; of every hind for ae or bora al rrry low prices. Oaos $> to pane, Flat ola • !*•* 263 Receipts $135 Ml *n rer#it of K* rests Address HT 11* J AMI*. it. bomf. lis Cheap Farms! Free Homes! On the line of tbe CFTOF FArtFTC RAILROAD r.'.wraw Acres of the beat Farming and Mineral Lands In America, s.aan.tm Acres In Frbraska. to tka Flatte Valley. now for aale Kild Climite, Fertile Soil, For Ormtn ftrowinp and Stork Ratline naanrpaaaod by any tn the rotted states raurtt i* Fntca. mora favorable term* el van. and more coorealent to market that* ca* he hut elsewhere. FREE HtuneftDwdn for Actual S*Qrr%. The beat location hr rolonlea - Soldiers entitled to a Hotneataad of Acres Send ht tbe Few Descriptive Pamphlet. with new maps. pnbliahed In Knytlah. flermaa. Swedish mad Danish, mailed free everywhere. aid i add, O. f DAVTR. Land Oom*r V P. R R On.. Omaha. Meh SThea-Nectar BI4K>U TILA. With the firren Tbe beat Tea Imported For aale everywhere. And for aale wholesale onlv bv tbe ORRAT atlaftic a Pacific tra co Jto mi Fulton 11. A d Chnrrh Rt . Few Torh. F. O Ron. &MS Read Ibr Thaa Fectar Ctrmlor. QOOP FAT FOR MRS AFP WOMXF. Subscriber* wanted for THE CHRISTIAN INTELLIGENCER. THE CHRISTIAN INTELLIGENCER R3.00 par Annnm tn Advance, tarludlny " Taa Oi.aaaaaa," a beautiful Chromo,(l ItxJS l-L) Send for Circular sad Specimen Copy. JAMBS AWTHOWY FTIOCDE. Rev. Win Ormtaton, D. P., Rev. Joha Rail, P. P., T. Adolphna Trollopa, And othar eminent persona write for rrtlJ CHRIBTI AW Pi xiJiLIQiIWCBr. • Raw rbarrh St., cor. Fulton, Haw Tor*. THE CHRISTIAN INTELLIGENCER IOTOESIMRS! MOTHERS! Donl tail to procure MBS WINBLOWS SOOTHING STROP FOR CHILDREN TEETH INO. Thla rain.Ma preparation" hat baan used wttb SEVER FAILING 81CCEBS 1H THOCBANDB BP CARER It not only relteres tba child from pat ~but tort*, nralaa tba atnmarb and bowels, corracta vtdlty,and Aires tone and energy to tba wbola ayah *v It will alao Inalbntly rail are Griping of tba Bowala and Wind C'aßo.* Wa ballr-ra tt tba BEST and SCRERT EE fEDTTK THE WORLD In all <-*aa of DTBERTEI T AED MARBHCEA IR CHILDREN, whether arttti from tee thing or any other oauae. Depend upon tt, mothers, It will ftaa raat to your eelres and Relief and Heabh to Tour Infanta Be sure and call for MRS. WINSLBW'S" SOOTHING EYRtXP." Harms the fbo-stmlie of ".CCRTIB * FBftKIK'B," on the outside wrapper. rd Sold by Druggists throughout Jtke.W orid. MM fm Warsaw tmm tab* thaa* M*aea *r. illi urtinni. mm! phmnNl lonf mwkilt Umm. am * **">* "iSytCTtto meaos ml Um nul Wyf*fl lm pMI Py.i|iiU ar la* la .aOmm. Hwdachs W U ,Z ttlm, a# w ttailOw- V.i'f EiivWWM alia Stomal*. M W ITZ uLS. BJ-m. A~t* lino ifca liae, F—s l".I** 1 ** "t Dmw la lh* const...** a ha aa vI. aid— Uwto will IfilUlW (*' ti! txzz fWir.trar 'X'eX•"•*(* '"'Oj i idnturt jtytl • ■Mtrtwwi tmnwtßmM •••• pnotf ' 'gar Inaraaa*larjr aw* Cfcrawt* Mw mail,M .Ml flm*. BtHmm, lawiei *ad law*. .4 H UaUe. N* ■ . 1U Tmtum •(.. >.*■>- O- na Mh Mr a niwiltt -tad Unmm Maer h* SSO ITi uTi * o * Ma> ' ,4, * u * errrvrawtwrWeewTr. ■ mail a. m v . tw uiWMi" .new fat coy AWT WTATS IW WWaLAWD. nah.4 Ir.iM-a W.li.F T a.rlT cadtctad *r attareay X tw. Catoah(*, taawa(ar Ca, IW. $75 to ®SO per Month, 3 SS7A2?L?SBi^ ,7 I- Thi* Mark.*, will aouW. beat. Ml. (aak. aalH, ae wd, hma. hw4 an •**•'•**• a ataet *: • ...r auae Wrta. ad • e.lly MM ui artaa(*4 M 4 r-*a.. Wa wll par MWM * uy urtiM < will aM-N wntta uf*jmt wn .Imoc at* Uum iH .* th* r* eiMtw u>r* .iok-K..rr aaaaM wiybaaa ha auu Um clath aaaaat W eaUf ¥Ol -T wnsoai lianas W. ear A#(a •(a,*"* nl |. . Mumih aa4 •ttmwaaa.ar a wxaartaaiaa/row 19 huW tk.tn (luH wj.ai -aa ha nuUa Mow 4 VBTOMS a co . Maaa. rittahafgh. Fa, rwiwe,ni.ah twa TXUZ J' • " , Dr> Caurrk W " HRII knaAc mafia, by " ' TdSiaferSLJf If -■ a f / ywMa. ka ilk (yum* ha* f T*VX a' Mi Mta fatm order with I*' \ Br. Wrr* *M*a | Mfdlral Dlworrrf, M AooU bo uira csramly. ( l correct to* Uoo4 and i ¥f—. •Wh ate always at look. aire to met epi-itAaUly. a* u data. upon the dwawnd gUndread tiataf " KK otniK ei tbr near and in MmManud ektabot. TSr Catarrh KI—JJI IIIIMM bo afa pU-d woh Dr. rirrco-% Kaahl Vovi hr, i ati.'ioit ibe only fonr. at bmmcM i-tt ■>■ Kij Mk aha* Itud onbrwru bo earned * t* Xf aad frrA.t;* ayy-iied to oil partref the aSermd artel piM| aad daabrn ta wktch Mm aad ULCER* CM*, aad bmawbichth* dmdhaeg* C*aor- ha* llw ahee* eeem of ireaow* ■raaoa, that the Braoncanr udiri $ &OO Bf< war* far a caot of "Codd • AW" t?a* or Cemrrd obdk ho cauwo mat Tha two mad ictaoa oath minoaria, for jp, by ail dngpq/. 3OSV7STROF Dr. ("*• Mir a (Craßf Ifjrapin bora loota aad nod by the ardirai prdiaint o*or ho r.ert. and at a mndf far t odd* aad Coagha haa an older and fatter n-patatfaa tfcao aar other C ti.-h Ran triaa ever odoted to tha WMh. It U karma at theCntjpnaad htntpof wjalUa. atal a tmrmJA (hay bo lixa.4 in faery ui dk al dfafirnratirv. Br. Uaatom'a i:tre Syray tad Talk, in aadttx-n to t*i aernlMifa Kir Cos "a tike buna, routine link- m4Ttdv ditorthmoC Hhanfcl'abheee It.** nud Irdw-lia. a c*aniw.a!fan that start euwmeiiil it |o ( ut larn euperk* remedy fur I rou y, V liooylat fiaibi Arthaia, Hr>u lil.ta, I outbt aad ( oldt, turbt-d |i ; a lata •**— .■! the Throat aad Lmga hero a • ' ■ " i mcari Tltia Rfrnp U ( rrmtllr i*rryaird enOcrtbe fari-Hial Il<*> tt a nvn,*r Phyai .tan at oyer t.* If prwlv, nbtw blgtr tore it attaefcediott; i,;reetlnr mk bontc. Ida utlr la icrj ylratfistaUclikitta Ue 11. •Curry fa milt ibmM berp il • * ready mil.. . i rui', < old*, ■•.£ hi iut (UMrrA. P lUvtOM. tact & O . r-t-V*. Bfftikv. K. T. DR. J. R. MILLER'S rv OMi. MACNEtIC CALM. It rr*a as If by Tticxrnc INKH'MifE K rsl h > 1 ail |*uu. abd U therefore wry ;*rt...*l " Magnetic Bairn. ' It Ufwiya v> i isWc j irpsralitm. It km no tfni a* ■ rrn>w> (ur Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Diarrhtra. Dysdo un, CtHc and all Bowel Complaints. lulWlf aee wlUctirr tolde.t iwttp, Diph theria. tjatuey. and all 1 troat aderttoae. ttkri iMoyrrlf avd. Foerant Ajai. and other complaints lar'dcsi looui veutrs and eoulhcra aHmalr*. arc easilybroken op. Karroo* rain. Mck-Jlwdache, and Rheu matism am uncd by this aantirine wbrn all otbera hare failed. T.otfc.vhc. af*chc. Bum*. Chil blains and Brmierw ar* relieved al oner by Us oa. The annular ha. D.RaoaoM Ao.a prhite firran Stamp n® the,, outride, and Dr. J. R. Miner's Macnetic BaCot blown to the bot'la. •examine closely, and bay none bat the gmu *ol4 by all Druggists. Price tS eAta par bottle. D. Ranoi, Boa t Co., Propr'a, Buffalo, H. T. MERCHANTS GARBLING OIL 10 OOOU FOR Bar** and IwlK ItkMartaa, rhllßtetm Uiambill* ar Ptlm, •oral*. aad Rr.br* baa* ( lu.M Baada. Brraata, rtrak .<■. rtaeala, Haas*. Fraat Mb* Bparlaa, wr*a*>, rmrwl Nlim. MtolkM • tlrr—+, ftai Vrm+hm. WMctlk ■ ball* at All EM* Faaal.rr 1 r* aitfWat. Blagiiai. CrariM IM* PJI Ball. Faa Sat la War* Aalaal A laaaat Bltaa, Baa* la IMHrj. Tmllil., **, *. I ar Baal. A*, Aa , LargoSuwll.oo; Mediumsoc.; Small2sa TU. Barf Mat OU ha. *mm I* - IMaal U. MA All a* ■*! a */a*r nrI. WWaaat Mia* Ai~rla* jL*y*-ra**rtfWaJw i. Pauat h ra* c* *ar Alai.iW al ral .katW mA •. ikaOa. Tkr Oanllac Ofl b he *o* r all rvryartaU* A*alen tbnnfltu>< b* V%*-4 lrrr. Oar wraaali 4*>* P -I t tar p~fc *>■•! am a. -Val. Cm Ik* MW'' *a Wll jro*Aclibt* • b*l r*Ti II bat Sua*. *a meaofcrhtf* "MBUCHAKTS WORM TABLETS." W*4**> AO i MWral atl *ll. **4 brftt m*u*ftr< *a. M-rar .Ar a* Alaaaa* Maaafactart-4 al LavliM* *. V , K* fIEEIHISrS GARGLING OIL COM"I JOHN HODOC, Sooretary. THE NEW SCALE 225^=5 W jv Wf< 27 Union Bquare, N. Y. Ondoßbledlf tie test Sq&arePiasa mate. Bead for Circular with Illuetrutlotm. Prices mail from 350 te 700 iollars. Zrvry HIM WARRANTED foe Fire Tin