The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 06, 1873, Image 4

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    Farm, Warden and Hontokold,
To DBSTEOT RATS,-These JHSU CAN W
pot rid of by mixing live plaster of Paris
with flour, ilry, in equalpari*. Sprinkle
a little sugar on it to make it more
sought after. Lay in dry places and
about their haunts. They eat ravenous
ly, drink, aud die sure.—Cbr. HYsfmi
Jtural,
SxrsAOß MEAT.—If you want it extra
. nice, take two nice fresh hama aud one
ahoiilder; take off the skin snd have it
chopped nioely; season it with salt,
pepper, sage, and a very little sugar.
If yon like spiced meats, use with that
a few cloves, some mace, and nutmeg.
Keep it in a drv, eool place, and fry it
in balls, or stuff the skins when, you
iirst make it for dried sausages.
FOB DRITTNO STEERS. —A subscriber
asks: "Which is the best a whip or a
goad for driving steers or oxen ; also,
will someone givedir.-ct.ionsfor making
or fitting a voke?" We would prefer u
whip, any* AttiMsf Xrtr Yorhrr. a goad
is simply a brutal instrument of torture
and, it cannot bo used without indicting
torture. A whip may, if the driver i*
fit to drive steers or ocen, be used with
out inflicting pain; but both the driver
and oxen need to lie well trained in such
•axes.
Minx.—Milk of average quality has'in
every 100 part* about the following com
position: Water, 87.40; butter, 3.43;
casein, 3.12; milk sugar, 5.12; mineral
matter (ash), .93. Milk varies in com
position from a variety of causes, some
times having less wrsteram! more butter.
Very rich milk contains from 7 to 8 per
cent of butter, ami will not unfrequeut
ly show a percentage of more than 16
part* of dry matter, while that which
mav be called of a fair avenge quality
will yield no mora than 12 to 13 per
cent of such matter*
STEAWTNO FOOD roa MILCH COWS.—
Leo writes to the Tribune that he feeds
all cooked food to fifty cows, sells his
milk at twenty-five cents a gallon, ami
that steamed fodder will produce as
much milk ns the best clover hay. He
soils his cows in summer, tieginniug the
season with winter rye, thou oat*, clover,
Is pern, millet, Indian corn sown in drills,
turnip tops. He say* he has got some
millet thst will grow fourteen feet high,
with a head nearly eighteen inches long,
which on highly manured soil he expects
to cut three times. He has a specimen
•f the long heads to prove hie veracity.
NEW METHOD or Bronnra GRAIN. — A
plan haa been submitted to the French
Academy for storing wheat in portable
sheet-iron granaries, in which a vacuum
is maintained equal to at least three or
four inches of mercury, this being suffi
cient to destroy all insect life, (although
more vacuum is preferred), aid to in
sure the evaporation of any niqistnre in
the grain. Tlje apparatus is of cylin
drical form, placed vertically, and with
convex top and bottom, the top pro
vided with an opening through wludK
the inlet of grain is led, with a waive
pipe through which the air is exhausted,
and with a gauge bv which the degree
of exhaustion is indicated. "The grata
is removed through an opening in the
bottom. In an experiment where TTvia#
insects where introduced m large quan
tities with the grain, it waa f.uma that
they were all ki led without doing any
mischief, and at the end of six month*
the wheat waa found to be in as gixxfl
condition as at the outset—JiVic York
Daily Bulletin,
SHEEP.—A farmee put into hi* van!
300 sheep that weighed an average of
99 pounds each; he fed them 120 days,
ana they gained in that time 120 pounds
each—in all 8,700 pounds for the flock.
He fed them for sixty days all the straw
thev would cat, and one pound of corn
each per day; for the next sixtv days he
fed them all the hay they would eat and
the pound of corn each. This gives, in
all, two bushels of corn (120 pounds'! for
each sheep, and probably two pounds,
or 2 1-2 lbs. of hay for each sheen for
60 days—say 2 1-2 lias, of hay each—in
all 250 pounds per day—or 150 pounds
for each sheep. Then we have, com at
one cent per pound and hay at sls per
ton, jast eight rents per pound for the
29 pounds of mutton and wool produced.
If the manure made, paid for the trouble
and straw consumed. Then he had, in
addition to his gain of twenty-nine
pounds, each sheep (which, as has been
stated, was paid for in hay and corn at
eight cents per pound t.'the increased
price per pound that the sheep would
bring on the first day of February, when
fat. over their price on the first day of
Decemlier, when they went into the
yards—and generally this would be from
50 to 100 per cent advance.
STIC* TO THE FARM.— Miss Marv A.
E. Wager of Moore's Rural says she is
quite sure that the more a person knows
of life in great cities the greater empha
sis will he or she giTe to the adrice con
tained in the head line, and for these
reasons: The majority of country boys
are in no sense of the word fitted or
prepared for participations ia thw rival
ry and competition of business in the
city. They would find themselves as
much out of their sphere or groove for
usefulness as a statesman would to'be
placed in command of a ship. Or to
make the illustration more pertinent,
they would succeed in the city in sbout
equal measure with the citr men who
go to the country to get rich farming,
and yon know how that is. Hundreds of
young men come from the country to
the city weekly in search of work. I
see them anxiously walking the streets,
or standing at the street corners
in a brown study. Often times
they are robbed of their little store of
money; decoyed into hells where in a
single hour they learn more of the ways
of death than would have come to them
in an entire life time elsewhere. Ah!
but yon wouldn't be seduced from truth
and virtue! Perhaps not; bnt granting
you to be firm as the everlasting hills in
righteousness, what could yon do to in
sure success? Can von set type? Can
you keep books ? Do you understand
commercial business ? Can yon write a
booh review worthy of the book? What
do you know of art, or science, or of
any one branch of either? Have you a
well defined idea, or a half defined idea
of just what you wish to do? If so,
what qualification do you carry with it?
To leave the farm for the city is as fool
ish and dangerous, in most cases, as to
jump overboard far from shore, when
;ou are morally certain you do not know
tow to swim.
Shakespere's Handwriting.
It is nothing lew than marTelons that
a man who wrote as he wrote—and alto
gether, no man ever wrote like him—
that a poet, the anthor of such plays
and such poems; that a man possessing
so many friends and admirers, with
whom his correspondence must have
been extensive, should not have left a
single line behind him traced by his
own hand. Of all his poems and plays
here does not exist a page, a line a sin
tie word, in manuscript. Ail Shakes
peare's manuscript plays could not have
perished in the fire that destroyed the
Glebe Theatre. The author must have
made little account of them himself; but
how great would our estimation be of a
single act of [any one of Shakespeare's
plays, in his own handwriting! We
nave just now among us a parallel to the
tulip mania. Thousands of dollars are
willingly paid for a picture which the
same number of dimes would once have
purchased. Rather, let us say that the
dimes were given for the picture, and
that the dollars by thousands are given
for the painter's name. Well, wliat
would not be willingly paid (for the sake
of Shakespeare's name) for the original
manuscript say of " Hamlet"? There
would be a fierce fight among competi
tors for even a single passage. We fancy
the lines beginning with " The quality
of mercy is not stained," or those that
open with " She never told her love,"
and hundreds of others, could not be
had for dollars covering each letter.
What a contention there would be for
the first love letter, addressed to any
one. A costly holograph! Alas ! there
are neither lines nor letters. All that
has been saved of Shakespeare's hand
writing is confined to a couple of signa
tures of his name to certain deeds, and in
tliose superscriptions the name is spell
ed differestly. Even the forgers have
not dared to produce a letter by Shakes
peare.
Rreaiing np a Waterspout.
The ship Rhine, a sailing vessel from
London, encountered an immense water
spout alxuit 1,200 miles out. One of
the seamen, describing the phenomenon
snys the wer.ther had Ixxui squally but ,
the wind had calmed, and the sea was
going down. The watch below, tired
out had jnst turned in when the officer
of the deck yelled, "all hands on deck
turn out quickly." The sailor who
tells the story continues :
I jumped up as quickly as I could,
hastened aft to the mainmast. The
crew turned off in different directions
like madmen. 1 noticed that the faces
of most of tliem wtre white as chalk,
and that ths captain's was as red as
blood. Mia hi* always got thst way
w hen he was excited in a gale. 1 didu t
know what was tlie matter, and as 1
looked around me at the eonfuaion, the
cause for which I fouldn't see, 1 felt
my heart do what it hadn't done fi*
seventy years beat against my rib*. j
1 saw the stHsiiid mate and naked him i
what was the matter. He answered me
by tolling n# to go to the main brace,
or he would pitch me overboard. 1
went there pretty quick ; ' Ixvauge 1
was afraid of going overboard, but lx
cause 1 felt that aoinethiiig terntile was j
going to happen, and that even mi
weight might save the ship. When 1
got to the rope a fellow standing near
me said, " A<// old man ; don't you
see the waturspout ?" 1 followed the I
direction of his eyes, and there, sure
enough, uot more thau half a mile from
us, was the biggest waterspout that 1
had ever seen in all my life. It towered
above the ship at least two hundred feel,
aud seemed to lx> the breadth of half
the oqean. It was corning toward us
like a steam engiue, and the water for
hundreds of yards ahead of it was boil
iug like water in a kettle. We bracts 1
the yards around, put the wheel hard
a-port, and did everything that lay iu
our power to get out of the way of the |
terrible destruction that was rushing
upon us. There wasn't a breath of
wind stirring, and there we lay right in
the path of the waterspout, unable to
do the toast ibis* t*> save ourselves
frmu ths death tint we felt sun- aust (
coine iu a few moments.
There were about seventy steerage
passengers with us the most of whom
were women and children, ami the wav
they aoreamed and went on was enough !
to take the heart out of any man. One
old woman caught me 'round the legs
aud begged of me for God's sake to ;
save list, while every one was rushing f
around trying to find some shield !
from the approaching crash. The cap
taiu swore and went on terriblv because )
we couldn't move an inch, and seemed
to be going out o? his mtud. for I saw ■
him deliberately knock a man down who
waa standing near him. iJoßie of the
men ran down the forecastle ladder that :
thev might not see themselves die.
What 1 have been telling you uow all
occurred in a moment, but the water- 1
Spout had come muck nearer to us, ami
wc could hear the fearful hiss and splash
dfthc water as it came whirling on.
NjlMt then 1 heard a young gentleman in
the" cabin a*k the captain whether he
gun on hoard. The captain snid (
hgyio," and the youug man's face turned
i as white as snow, and 1 saw him shake
all over, He put his baud to his head
(find staggered toward the main hatch,
and in aaothar moment he would have
fallen dowu " tueen" decks, whim sud
denly there was a cry from above that
: sounded like the roar of a mailman. It
waa l.eard above the loud roar of the
surging water, and every eye was turn
ed in the direction thai it came from.
It came from a " shipmate" that we
called "Jack." He was a smart fellow
on his feet, and was a regular monkey
among the rope when he got aloft in a
storm. There he waa with a heavy block
of wood in his hands that he held above
his head, and was shouting for us to
" stand from under !" He was on the
main-yard-arm, the yard that 'carries
the *'storm sail," you know. We all
ran forward, and then the coast waa
clear. "Jack"gave the block a swing
and sent it dowu on deck as quick as a
flash. It struck a piece of sheet-iron
that lay near the main hatch, and made
a terrific report that sounded like a
cannon. We kept our eyes on him. for
he seemed about to fall, but he caught
hold of the "port bowlines" and re
gained his balance. Just then the ship
careened over on her beam ends, lurched
hack again, and then stood steady as
before. Nearly every one was thrown
down, and some of the passengers were
badlr hurt. As soon as we got upon
oar feet we saw no more of the water
spout, but in its stead the whole sea was
just as white as though it was composed
of soad-suds.
We felt that it was over, and that the
noble "Jack" had saved us by his
cool-headedness, but it was some time
before we could recover from the par
alysis that seemed to kavo stridor us
all.
When we did ruror.w, w b it as on! v
men can feel who knv been matched
from the jaws of dentil, Wo A seemed
a pleasure after that, fur it reminded us
that we had life fn its.' Jri
There were on board, counting officers
crew, and all, about 150 persons, and if
that spout had struck us it would have
sent us, ship and all, to the bottom of j
the sea, and no one would have known
what sank us. Ever since that day I
have been convinced thst the City" of
Boston waa lost in this manner.
I suppose the water that was in the
air would have weighed 10,000 tons ; it
couldn't liave been he* ; and as there
was a brig sailing ten miles from ns in
the direction of the waterspout 's course,
and no oue on board saw it, it must
have formed between us, two, and
reached its immense proportions in
sbout half an hour.
What Tilt on Says.
Theodore Tilton writes as follows to
a friend relative to late scandals:
Mr COlTPL\ rvivn FRIEND: Thanks
for yeur good letter of bad advice. You
say, how easy to give the lie to the
wicked story, and thus end it forever.
But stop and consider. The story i*
a whole library of statements -a hun
dred or more— Slß! jt would be strange
if some of there are not correct, though
I doubt if any are. To give a general
denial to suck an encyclopedia (fl asser
tions would lie as vague and irrelevant
as to take up the Police Gazette, with
its twenty-four pages of items, and say,
" This is all a lie. * Bo extensivo a libel
requires (if at all) a special
denial of its several parts; and further
more, it requires, m this particular
case, not only a denial of things mis
stated, but a truthful pianation of
other things that remain unstated artd
in mystery. In other words, the false
story (if met at all) should be confront
ed and confounded by the true one.
Now, my friend, you urge me to speak,
but when the truth is a sword, God's
mercy sometimes commands it sheathed.
If you think f do not burn to defend
my wife and little ones, yon know not
the fiery spirit within me. Bnt my
wife's heart is more a fountain of char
ity, and onehcheaall resentments. She
say*: " Let there lie no suffering, save
to ourselves alone," and forbids a vindi
cation to the injun- of others. From
the beginning she fias stood with lier
hand* on my lips, saying, " Hush." So
when you prompt me to speak for her
you counteract her more Christian man
date of silence.
Moreover, after all, the chief victim
of the public displeasnro ia myself
alone r and so long as this is happilvtlie
case I shall try, with patience, to keep
my answer within my own breast, lest
it shoot forth like athunderboltthrongh
other hearts. Yours truly,
THEODORE TILTON.
How HE DIED. —The Emperor Na
poleon died almost alone. His vital
torces failed him at once, and there was
no time to recall the friends who had
but just loft him. The Prince had gone
back to Woolwich to school; Dr. Gull
and Father Goddard wore in London.
The Prince saw his father no more alive,
and the others reached the gates of
Chiselhurst Park just as the Emperor
breathed his last. The Empress was at
the bedside, and so were four physicians.
The medical men declare that the Em
peror's death is dne toother causes thau
the recent surgical operations.
It is a sign of a narrow mind to be
always in a quiver.
A Terrible Story.
An old proverb hath it, that "murder
will out. There are many curious
things in this line wrapped up in a story
! published bv the Racnunciito f iiion—a
i story as full of horrors as any which
: owii a Mrs. Wood could frame. The
story is in the form of an affidavit made
before a justice of the jxiaee in Sacra
mento City. Annie Lohrv testifies that j
on the llHli of February, lK<tt, she left
home to gather some early soring flow
era, and after a time found herself in
the vicinity of what was known as the
Corliss Ranch. Sitting down to rest,
she waa ma.le the involuntary witness
of a terrible struggle bet worn two
brothers, resulting seemingly from n
quitmd over the distribution of seicrsl
thousand dollars. She saw Uie death
blow struck, and screamed, which at
tracted the murderer's attention. The
latter, smitten with a terrible retuome,
prayed bv all thing* *he loved on earth,
I to go to the aid of his brother. She was
j almost paralyzed with horror and fear,
but managed to reach the side of the
dying man. She held hi* head and tried
! to hind up the wound, but the man died
iin s few minutes. The murderer wept
such tear* as only a murderer, and a
j fratricide at that, can w<en, and then
tke matter of hi* own safety came u>.
He urged the girl to lake his brother's I
share of the money and keep silence,
hut she refused, lie seemed half miud
j ed to kill her, but finally, with revolver
' at her head, made her swear a dreadful
oath that she would uot reveal the se
cret of the murder for four Tears, that
term being uaxued txvauac his mother j
could uot leave the State until the end
!of such period. The murderer went to
a place near by, where were two horses,
ami took a blanket from one of them
and pre parts! to cover the laxly of his
1 |HK>r brother, Imt waa too overcome to
do it; so the girl covered up the Ixxly.
Then they left the spot. Several times
| he put the revolver to her head on the
i fearful journey; but finally she saved
j her life.
The murderer had promised to release
her from the keeping of the Secret, if
possible, iu less than four years. So she
met him several times in the Cuiontown
graveyard. Finally he released her
from what she had considered binding,
' and so she just now makes this affida
vit.
To think of that deed! To think of
the scene st the brook, w hen the mar
dcrer made her wash her apron of the
blood, while he washed his hands and ,
j was deathly sick! To think of that
young girl carrying Unit terrible secret
lor four years, Ix-cause she thought it
binding!—no words can set it forth. We
once beard Heeclier say that he would
• like to know, for one half-minute the
feelings of a murderer. For one lialf
minute, and no tuor>; that would ho an
age. Rut who could stand tho ordeal of
a half-minute of the life of the man of
Cot Us* Ranch? Reason would totter.
iXai ' .fc . - .- -
A Man With 8 Mania.
Another curious man is backwards and
forwards here—a Lord Vernon, who is
well informed, a great Italian scholar
deep in Dante, and a verv good humor
ed gentleman, but who Las fallen into
the strange infatuation of attending
every rifle match that takes place iu
Switzerland, accompanied by two men
who load rifles for him, one after an
other, which lie haa been frequently
known to fire off, two a minute, for four-]
teen hours at a stretch, without once
changing his |x>sition or leaving the
ground. He wins all kinds of prizes;
gold watches, flags, teaspoons, tea
board* etc., and is constantly travelling
about with them, from place to place hi
an extraordinary carriage, where yon
touch a spring and a chair fliea out,
touch another spring and a lx-d appear*
touch another spnug and a closet of
pickles opens, touch another spring and
disclose a pantry. While Lady Vernon
—said to lie handsome and accomplish
ed—is continually cutting acrons tins >r
that Alphie pass in the night, to meet
him on the road, for a minute or two,
on one of his excursions, these being
the only times at which she can catch
j him. The last time he saw her was five
or six mouths ago, when they met and
supped together on the St. Gotliard !
It is a monomania with him, of course.
He is a man of some note; secumb-doue
Lord Melbourne's addresses, anil had
forty thousand a year, now reduced to
ten, but uursing and improving every
day. He was with ns last Monday, aud
' comes back from some out of the way
place to join another pic-nic next Fri
day. As I have said, he is the very soul
of good nature smi cheerfulness, but
one can't help Ix-ing melancholy to sec
a man wasting his life in such a singular
delusion. Isn't it odd ? lie knows my
books very well, ami seem* interested
in everything concerning them. 7'Ae
. Life of i'harbt IHckcna.
)A Shocking Tragedy.
Ilugh Barr, occupying a basement at
Ho. A Front street, Brooklyn, who hail
lieen in prison since 25th of November
last, for an assault committed upon
Margaret Bradley, was released a few
days sgo. He took home a half gallon
of whisky, and his wife, acting under
his instructions, invited several neigh
i bors to partake of his hospital it v. The
party became quite drunk, am! subse
quently a general row ensued. Barr
declared he would make the place too
hot for his guests, and seizing a lamp
fall of keroseue oil, poured its content*
over the red-hot stove. A portion of
the fluid was dashed over Alice Barker,
and the room was instantly filled with
flames that communicated with the
dress of the woman Barker. Burr had
told them at first that tliev must get out
as heat thev could, or take the conse
quences. Alice's screams brought as
sistance, but too late to save her from
injuries of a most horrible character.
Her clothing was burned from herlmdy,
which was blackened and blistered. Her
hair was entirely burned off, her hands
and legs were almost A crisp, and her
face was unrecognizable. On the arri
val of the police a shocking scene was
presented. The oil had burned itself
out without setting fire to the bnilding,
but the unfortunate woman was lying
on the floor, having the appearsnec, at
first sight, of a mere cinder. When
was found that she was still alive, she
was wrapped in a blanket ami taken to
the City Hospital. The physicians
there pronounced her injuries inevitably
fatal. Burr was arrested and locked tip
to await the result.
Fjrthqnake Fan.
The Oregon papers are making fun
of the last earthquake in that region,
for it affected persona in quite differ
ent ways. A young gentleman and
lady were out walking at the time.
About half an hour after, they returned
from tlieir promenade and then learned,
for the firHt time, that anything unusual
hail oocured. People rushed into the
street scan'ly clad. One loving hus
band, who had " just stepped out to see
a man on business," rushed home wfth
a billiard cue that he had forgotten to
replace, in his hand. His wife has ve
toed all business engagements after 8
o'clock, P. M. The next little item wo
take as we find it. One irascible gen
tleman jumped from bed scantily attir
ed, possessed himself of the cowhide,
and made for the room of his boys up
stairs, and rushed into it, exclaiming,
" I'll show you how to be fighting at
this time of night."
Newspaper Decisions.
I.—Any person who takes a paper re
gularly from the post-office—whether
directed to his name or another, or
whether he has subscribed or not—is
responsible for the payment.
2. —lf a person orders his paper dis
continued, he must pay all arrearages,
or the publisher may continue to send
it until payment is made, ami collect
the whole amount, whether the paper
is taken from the office or not.
3.—The courts have decided that re
fusing to take newspapers And periodi
cals from the post-office, or removing
and leaving them uncalled for, is prima
aeie evidence of intentional fraud.
A Western paper affirms that among
the unfortunate women lost by the Fifth
Avenue Hotel fire was a near relative of
ex-Collector Tom Murphy, who had
voluntarily chosen to work in a menial
capacity.
b'sacs of Spontaneous Coiuhmdlon.
The first case of alleged spontaneous
combustion which attracted general no
tiee hsp|M-ne<l in 17*25, and was pel on
record by the celebrated lie Oat. lie i
Oat, liappcuing to be at Hhcims in the
above-mentioned year, lodged in the
house of a man named Millet. One
morning in February, tho body of Ma
dame Millet, a woman well along in
venrs, and addicted to drink, was found
Wing almost entirely consumed upon
the kitchen floor, near the hearth. Only
the head, part of the legs, ami a few of
the vertebra*, bad <-Hca|cd combustion. ,
The ft*H>r beneath the body was also
slightly burnt. Millet himself was at
once arrested on a charge of murder, a
supposed intrigue with a servant-woman
furnishing the motive for the eriuie. In
defence, he stated that he ami his wife
had retired to rest as uausl, alien she,
being tillable to sleep, went out to the
Wit<\)icu, as he thought, to warm herself.
He was subsequently awakened by a
smell of burning, ami, going to investi
gate, found the body of his wife lying
in Uie manner deaorilied. In spite of
this story, Millet was convicted of mur
der; but, appealing to a higher court,
was saved bv the pies of s|HJUt<Mieou*
combustion. Ami, certainly, whatever
may have caused the death of the de
ceased, there wus uo evidence of crime
on the part of lbs husband.
The ease of Urace Pitt, in England,
ia 1714, was, in some resjiects, like that
of Madame Millet, except that there was
uo suspicion of minder. Three separ
ate accounts of this case nearly coincide.
The victim wan alsmt sixty years of age;
ami, it is said, had recently drunk large
quantities of spirits. It was her custom
to descend every night, half droas.nl, to
the kitchen, to #m k • her pijm before
the kitchen-fire. The night of her death
she arose aa usual, and was missed by
her daughter in the inoruiiig. The lat
ter, going in search of her mother,
found her stretched out u|Hn the right
side, the head near the grate, the t>ody
extended on the hearth, ami the legs on
the floor, resembling a log of wood con
sumed without flame The Are being
quenched by pouring ou water, the re
mains were fouud to resemble S heap of
coals covered with white ashes. And,
near the liody, were found s child's
clothes and paper screen, both quite
uuiniured, showing that the combustion
could not have been particularly vi
olent.
A Tallej of Mastodons.
If M. Octave I'avy does uot IUWIHHI
iu finding the North Pole, or even tlx*
Polar Hon, we can ntill have the conso
lation that he has, iu a very early stage
of the voyage, made a mot 1 tit* noting
( discovery. The expedition left San
Fmm*M"o in June, UM late advice*aUte
i that iu the latter |>art of July the ex
plorer* reached the aliorea of Wratigcl
Land, near the tuouth of a great titer,
mnuitig from the northeast, and which
ia not set down on any chart. Thia \l.
Pavy considered aa confirming another
of hia theories that there exists a great
Polar continent, and of which the Urn
|M-rature ia sufficiently warm to melt the
snow. The current of thia hitherto uu
ktiown atream flowa in an easterly di
rection along the coaat, with a rapidity
of six knots an hour. M. Pavy and
party followed the plain of this river
towards the uortii for about 250 milea.
The plain ia uniformly level, its width
1 varies from fifty to sixty milea, and it ia
< 1-ordered by mountains of great height,
with iuauy pcrjM udicnlar peaks. Almut
eighty miles from the mouth of the
river the traveller* found upon the
plain the remains of wuatodoua, and on
clearing away the snow iu a place where
tusks were visible, they brought to
light the enormous IHKIV of one of the
i animals of au extinct race, in a jierfect
state of preservation. The skin was
covered with black and atreaked hair.
f varv long and thick on the liack. The
tuska measured eleven feet eight inches
in length, and were curved up to a level
wish the monster's eyea. The annual
' was in a kneeling posture, the front
legs being bent, while the hind parts
we/e deeply imliedded in the snow, in
dicating that the mastodon had js-rish
ed in struggling to get out of a mire
hole or snow drift. Professor Neweomb
could not find anv special characteris
tic* distinguishing the extinct masto
don from the elephant of to-day. He
took from the stomach some specimen*
of bark and herbs, the nature of which
lie could not analyse <iu the spot For
the space of many miles the plain was
covered with the remains of maatdon*,
indicating that a numerous drove of
these gigantic animals had there perish
ed, owing hi some sudden change or
convulsion of nature. Tha region
alionuds in Polar bear*, wluch devour
the remains of the mastodons.
A Horrible <hit rare in Rn>*la.
New* han reached the Jewish Chroni
cle of the commiftfliou of a fearful vut
rage upon a Jewish family, in the I>is
tnet of Michaelow. A Jew was landlord
of an inn, which was olitarilr situated
on the border of a WOIKI. Tfie family
consisted of husband, wife, brother and
fonr children. On the 15th inataut,
at about six in the evening, two labor
er* came into the inn ami called for
some brandy, for which thejr refused to
pay, aud jeeringly asked, in addition,
for the loan of live roubles. As the
landlord refused to lend theui any money
anl (lemauded payment for the brandy,
the laliorers became abusive, and ulti
mately were tnrned out the h<>nse, the
landlord detaining the capa of the men,
no that they might be afterwards iden
tified when he complained of their con
duct. The hilsirers went awnr, mutter
ing ominous threuts. When the inn
keeper and Ilia family had leen asleep
hut a short time, they were awoko by
haul cries of "Fire," and on rushing
out of the house thev were attacked by
eight men, among whom were the two
luhorcrs who had come to the inn in
the early part of the evening. The
landlord aud his family were thrown to
the ground and l>ound, The men then
set to plundering the house. When
they bad ransacked the place, they
caught hold of the poor landlord, his
wife, brother and their younger chil
dren and threw them into the midst of
the burning building. One, the eldest
son of the landlord, about twelve years
<>f age, managed to escape into the
neighboring wood. The ethers perished
in tiie Homes. One of the laborers has
Nen arrested, and the police are in
ruStivo pursuit of the other murderers.
Where They (Jot Their Sheila,
Tliere is not much liiue in the era—
probably not more than there WM in
Falstiift H "sack"—but there is enough.
And the use it in put to is cue of the
curiosities of natural history.
Every inhabitant of tho x*ean which
has a shell derives the materials of
which that hard covering ia composed
from the water. Besides, the lime ia
accreted or rather separated from its
food, aa birds do it for making a cover
ing for tkeir eggs, roolluska take up the
largest amount directly out of the water
they breathe. Every time an oyster
draws water through its gills, some of
its lime, which ia held in solution, ia
taken possession of by appropriate
vessels and goes directly to the living
membrane which deposits it, and thus
the shell grows. It is assured that a
single drop of sea water contains only
about the ten thousand six hundredth
part fa grain of lime. But the in
cessant respiration of the dweller in one
or two years makes a house weighing in
some enses many pounds. When the
animal dies most of the shells gravitate
and aggregate to the bottom, where,
becoming broken ami impacted into
solid mases, mixed in fino earthy de
pmits under immense hydrostatic pres
sure and chemical forces, they become
marble. All maiblo quarries are sup
posed to have thus originated in the
abysses of primitive sens, and were
afterwards elevated to where they are
found by upheaval.
The women of the Attak&nas pari shed
and St. Landry, Lonisiana, nave sent to
market yearly since the war not less than
51, 000,000 worth of chickens and eggs,
besides supplying home demands and
the villagers and those who do not raise
chickens in those parishes.
A French physician has published a
pamphlet proving that cigarette con
sumers invariably die of consumption
before they are fifty years old.
Kicr; lie) Ills Own (las-Maker.
(las, which supplies the artificial illu
minating |>owcr, which has almost
wholly superseded that obtained froiu
the animal ami vegetable fat and oil,
resin, Wax, paratttue, and sundry other
materials, was not introduced Ulto Lon
don until the summer of I8i5, and did
not count into general use there until
INI4.
As far hack as the year 1730, Doctor
Clayton, an English chemist, re|sirted
I tliat from the combuntionof bituminous
j coal | w Inch at annuls in England, ami is
to be found ill great (lUslltlllea ill the
ticighborluaal of t'lttaburgh and other
junta of Western Pennsylvania) could
lie obtained the iufiaiinnnble leriform
fluid, now called carbureted hydrogen
which ia the ordinary gaa now almost
; tuuvcraallv in use.
I 'layton had not (fisooreral gas. It
wan known, centuries ago, that fossil
coals vu-lded s combustible vapor, and
that large ouaiititiea of coiuounlible ,
gases were often evolved from cool and
other iniiieral seams, and also from salt
mines. In souie place* this gas is so
abundant that, simply by boring a hole
in the ground, sufficient gas flows out
capable of being utilised for the pur
poKca of illumination.
At Fredoina, New York, a mill had to
In* pulled down, and a large quantity of
gun evaporated from the broken soil, on ,
the bank* of Uie river t'ansdaway. A
digging was made into Uie bituminous
limestone, and a gasometer was erected
to receive this gas, which now serves
for tlie purjHihe of illuminating the lo- '
cality. J
Ah early as the year 1770 gSH wua ob-1
served to issue from U salt tabic IU Hun
gary, and Una gu is now collected ami
used to light up the mine. Ho in China ;
aud other places. In Central Asia and (
near the Caspian Sea there are fires ;
continually burning at a great depth in
the earth—Urn result of gas issuing
from the soil and accidentally set ou
fire.
Mr. Murdoch, a Hcotchman, after .
having lighted his work-shop in Corn
wall, with gas, in 1714*2, partially iutro- j
dllced it into the steam-engine factory
of Houltuii A Watt, at Hoho, near Bir
mingham, in 1718. HUUit was not gen
erally known, and indeed was looked
upon as only an experiment. Hut in
IBb2, ou the" occasion of the Peace of 1
Amiens, which put an end to the ten
years' war of Europe against France,
ihe general joy of the British people
was expressed "in a variety of ways. Mr.
Murdoch covered the entire front of the
Soho works with little burners, at
tached to small metallic tubes or pipes,
mid almost in oue moment, as if bv
magic, the flame rapidly ran, in jets, all
ivlong the tubing, making an illumina
tion at once the nu>st novel aud bril-
Unlit imaginable. The fact was ascer
tained, but, as usual, people were slow
jto act upon it. Moreover, people were
alarmed at the idea of explosions, aud
feared that the new process, however
brilliant, might be unmanageable, if
not dangerous.
In 1803 one of the London theatres
was gas-lighted, for a few mghU, aa n
experiment; and in 181*2 the flrwt gas
making company in London was duly
chartered.
tins was introduced into New York
eit* in 1823. It had been partially used
in Yhibliu Ave years earlier, but wasnot
j used m the street lamps until 1825.
The first gas-meter was made in Ixin
dou in 1820. Before it came into use
gas was paii for, not by the quantity
: consumed, which it was then imjviaaible
to ascertain accurately, but at so much
per hoar for each burner.
It was ascertained that, ill 18(19, the
gas-pqies iu and around Ixindon exU-nd
-1 ed upward of two thousand miles, anJ
are daily increasing. It was stated, at
the same time, that there is a leakage of
nine per cent., through the faulty joints
of the pifM-s, iu the gas supply of Lon
don.
To make coal-gas is very easy. Most
school-bovw, I suppose, know how to do
it, at a few minutes' notice. Here ia
the process, which 1 tried a hundred
' times or more liefore 1 was ten years
! old:
Get a little hit of bituminous coal—
as much a* the awe of a walnut will an
swer. Pound it small, almost into dust,
with a hammer or a cobble-atone. Take
an ordinary tobacco-pipe (one with a
long stem is preferable), and fill it with
the |Miuudcd coal, iireasmg it in im tty
closely with your thumb I should have
said, iiearly fill it. On the top press
down some tough clay, reilucinl hi the
consistency of putty bv lieing teuip'rvd
with a littf** water. Then put the pipe,
filled with coal, and rludclv covered
with the tenacious clay, ant) insert it
carefully Wtweeu Uie bars of the grnte,
so that the clay on the top of the howl
may not t>e disturbed. Iu a minute or
two, the heat of the fire orulves carbu
reted hydrogen gas from tho cool in the
pioe.
If the top-covering of clar i imper
fect, this volatile gaa will rind its way
through the clay, and burn very bright
ly for a few minutes; but if the covering
IK- compact and complete, the gas flows
out of the long stem of the pipe, which
projects out of the fire, and you con im
mediately see and smell it. The smell
is that of escaped gaa —which ia an un
pleasant and unwholesome when per
ceived and swallowed in a room—and
the ap]M'urance is that of a thick smoke.
Then apply a lighted match to tin* va
por, which, lieing inflammable, instant IT
IS all aflame—burning brightly until all
tbe coal in the bowl of the pipe has
parted with its gas. When this is done,
there is an end of the flame.
Take the pipe out of the fire, remove
the clay cover of the bowl, and the res
iduum remaining there is coke!
Now, this ia the distillation of gas
from coal, which light* our bosses aud
streets—onlv at the gas-works the vapor
is submitted to processes which purify
it, thereby producing a clearer and
brighter light when burning.
What is left after making the gas has
a commercial value. Of these products,
however, there is not apaoe to aav any
thing now and here.
Ilreners in England.
A London correspondent of the St.
lemis Hi publican savn it i surprising
how manv brewers there are in Parlia
ment, and what a degree of respecta
bility attaches to their calling.
The wine trade and brewing stand at
the very head of reputable money inn
king callings in this country. The wine
merchant gets access to society where
the dry goods man would not be ad
mitted, wliero even the exclusive silk
dealer < mid not enter. A lower class
of people wears silk than drinks wine.
Brewing is as much a staple product
here as wheat growing with tts, and the
brewer is above the wino morchaijt, lie
may not at present servo stately boards,
but he got his position in a time when
he filled a jovial bowl for the nobles ;
and n position nnco gained is never
lost in this land of precedent. Besides,
lie is a man of wealth, his product is
always in demand. The brewer that
represents Great Marlow has inherited
his business from several generations.
All the wealthy families of tho place
are his kinsmen, and they come op in a
right royal wav to put htm into Parlia
ment. They all go and come at " the
member's" beck, for on him rests tho
honorable fame of the house. The
tradesmen follow suit from other mo
tives. When one comes to know the
servility and venality of English shoi>-
keeper*, he is not surprised at the con
tempt that attaches to them in the gen
eral estimation. They are tho most
dishonest and servile class in the coun
try, and notoriously open to political
b ibery.
CLBANSINO FEATHKB-BEDB. - When
feather-bed* become ssiled anil heavy,
they may be mado clean and light an
follows : Rub them over with a stiff
brush or broom, dipped in hot soap
suds. When clean, lay them on some
clean boards where the rain will fall on
them. When thoroughly soaked, let
them dry in a hot ssn for* six or seven
successive days, shaking them each day.
They should should be covered with a
thick cloth during the night. If ex
posed to the niglit-air, they will become
damp and mildew. This way of wash
ing the bed-ticking and feathers makes
them very fresh aud light, and is much
easier than the old-fashioned method of
emptying tha beds, while it answers
quite as well.
An Arab Wedding Hall.
A curtain drawn across tliedoorof the
tent (write# a traveller in Algeria) con
oca led the bride, who, closely veiled,
sat within, surrounded by women. On
the outside between four and five hun
dred people were collected, and a clear
space was kept in the middle for tin*
dancers by twotuen withdrawn swords,
who vigorously applied, right and left,
the flat of the blade to all who pressed
too forward, (hi ouo side of the ring
sipiattcd the baud, consisting of two
men with instruments like flageolets
sud a drummer who occasionally accom
panied the music willi his voice
lu the centre was a middle-aged wo
man, dreused in the usual dark blue
cotton gnrmeuts, but decked with all
her ornaments -ear-rings, bracelets and
a necklace -to which sundry charms ami
amulets, teeth of wild bessts, verses of
the Koran sown up in little bags, and
various other odds Mid ends, considered
as protections from the evil eye, were
suspended; u large circular brooch of
silver or white wets! (the saute in form
as those used by the Hootch Highland
crsi confined the loose folds across her
t *>nom. and a small looking-glass set in
metal dangled conveniently at the end
of a string of anflleieut length to allow
of her admiriug her charms in detail.
Her face was uncovered, and her fea
tures were harsh and disagreeable, ex
cept the eyea, which were large and ex
pressive, with that peculiar lustrous
Hpjtearnnre given by the use of a min
eral paint. Her feet were liardly visible
from the length of her dress, and her
linger nails, together with the palius of
bar bauds, were stained with henna. As
soon as we had taken our stand in the
front row, the musie, which had ceased
for a few minutes, struck up, and the
lady in the midst commenced her per
formance.
Inclining her head languishiugly from
side to aide, she bent time with lierfeet,
raising each foot alternately from tlie
ground with a jerking action, aa if she
, had been standing 011 s hot floor, at the
same time twisting alxmt her body wiUi
a slow movement of the bauds and
arms. Bev.-rol others succeeded her,
and danced in the same style, with an
.-quid want of grace. A powerful in
ducement to exert themselves was not
wanting, for oue of them more than once
! received some tolerably severe blows
both from a aUck and Uie flat of the
sword; wliat the reason was I do not
know, but suppose that either she was
' laxv or dsliced badly.
While the dancing was going on, Uie
. spectator* were not idle; armed with
i guns, pistols, and blunderbusses with
enormous bell mouths, an irregular Are
' was kept up. Advancing a step or two
! into Uie circle, so aa to show off before
the whole party, an Arab would present
hi weapon at a friend opposite, throw
ing himself into a graceful attitude;
then auddcnlv dropping the niuxxlc at
Uie instant of pulling Uo* trigger, the
charge struck the ground close to Uie
feet of Uie person aimed at. After each
' report the women set up a long-eon-
Uuued shrill cry of "lu-lu, lu-lu,'" and
Uie musicians redoubled their efforts.
The advance of one man is usually the
t signal for oUiers to ouose forward at the
same tune, all anxious to suqiaaa their
friends and neighbors in dexterity and
grace. Ten or a down men being
crowded into a small space, sometimes
not more than six feet wide, brandish
ing their arms and excited by the mimic
combat, firing often at random, it is not
to be wondered st if accidents happen
occasionally to the actors or the by
stauders.
THE WEEKLY SEN,
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HAS Au mi NEWS rTU# W**kJy New Tork
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Tat BEST CATTLE RETOBI* in the Weekly X T.
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| Tit* Hwt I'D is in Kten lteeped. The Woeky
X Y. Hun. 8 pagee. Il a year. Head your
] Dollar
Adtlreaa. THE'RCN. Saw York CUy.
Fiks'a Toc-tkMhr Dn-y rata ta 1 areata.
Wanted a farmer in every town aa agent for
the t'>lAJ* Htiil l'U>a> I'oc terma, etc.,
aldrrae l uixuiA Co., 212 W'ater M. New
York. -Corn.
'The Queen's Toilet." for the oomplealon. te
i prejiaml from the juvwcnpuoti of a well-known
i pbywtcieii.—Com.
A stilish ('Hilar is the Warwick. It ie made
like the Kim wood, but has dorj-er potnu.
! Nobby young men should try it.— Com.
I)a. lMaaca'a lioLUE* Mchk AI DISCOVEBT
will cureT Cough iu one-half the tune iifocsearv
1 to cure it with any other medicine, owf u dmt
if, ev by drytny U wp. Imt by mnoriaj tKr catut
-sahdwmy iSr irnM/icii ow l hdiiM ih afrttni
i*lrti. For all MM of I-aryngiti*. lloareeueaa.
Supjireaeion or I/M of Voice, lironchitia. Ho
iatr (lironic or langeriug Coughs, it will he
' found to euqaww ant medicme that hae ever
I-a fore been offered to the public. Hold by
i IVwggleta.— Com.
Have you a Cough. Cold. Tain in the Clieet,
or ltronchile? In fad. have you the (itwnutu
tory eyniptome of the "insatiate arrber," <**•
' eUiii|*loti! If eo, know that relief ie within
j your reach in theshat* of Da. Wmtab'b IUIAAM
or WlLn Cm ilbkt, which in many caee* where
hope had fled, has snatched the victim frwm the
j yawning grave. - Com.
CAS'T OO ro rnrarw Why nott oh 'my rr-agk
scull diMul b lb* i* dir(*ti<'n. Csi* II tkrn with
liii * ■ Hi-war <>r Bosauorsn A*D TAS. a pura
v<a|rl*Vli remedy, in.filling ta tha Sun and mild
and tinmleaa aa the laasnt air, Crlttculoa'a, T
! As quick aa a flash of lightning does Canrra
; Doao's Kxixieioa HAIB Dra act upon the hair,
i w luakera and monstacbee; no chameleon tint*.
but the purest haven or the most ei |Uiail
I lirovns will be evolved.
In one to Ave minntee, Headache. F.arache,
Neuralgia. Karon Hack. DiarHxva. Croupe.
and all similar complaint*, orv rHn-rest
liy FI.KHI'S IHBTAKT IlEuar. or money refunded.
I —Com,
I<ncsa' NirtoUL Mo* TII I T for February
will contain a aplemhit store, •" Two Criminal*, '
two ekruhos lor Naebjr, and a Met amount of
other matter. Ask votir newsdealer for it or
send 10 cents to lewike and J one*. Toledo.Ohm,
#l.oe i-er vear. It is the !<ent magazine for the
money published bend for circular to agents.
—Com.
" A Slight Ookl." Opttghs.—Fsw hro aware of
tlic importaticc of checking a cough or "WJOUT
cotj>." which would yield to b mild reroodv. if
neglected, often attack* the lungs, " flrtwn'r
/fnwwVlMti Trvchri" give surd and almost im
mediate relief. — Com.
VTe have often wonilered whether there ins
person in all New England, who does not know
and wppreoiate the value of Johnson't .1 nodyror
f.iniriicnr an a family medicine? It in adapted
to most all purjsmee. and ta Uie I met pain killer
that con be BAdd. —Cum.
Fsrmerw and stock raisers have frequently
told tin that tlier have seen very gisd results
from giving wnduni Carairy Condition
I'oinlni to cows and swine before and after
tlier drop their young. Tle powders put tliem
in good condition, and give tliem strength to
core and provide for the sucklings. —Corn
What tho Season Snirgont*.
T" iinmi sirm rtnthlng t U*
of the re Id SSMOII la only an act or common pru
tfanrr. liut em thing mora than thia I* rrqulrud
toputtha body in a atata of dafrnaa hgulnd tha
aaarrhtns atmoaphcra of winter. Damp hai a da
prrMlng affect on the vital orgutu and the animal
aptrtta. The an.onnt of life power taken out oI tha
atrontirat of u by he chllllnff vapnrt which fre
quently lad tha air at Ihla period ef the year la
vary conalderahle, and to tha weak and languid
they are ratremely dalcterlou*. To protect tha
ayatam againet thatr affaota. It muat be inwardly
touad reguleted and ralnforcad, aa well aa ehleldrd
outwardly by appropriate garments. Tbtaaaaauttal
■arvlee la mora aafcly and aatlafhctorily accom
plished by the dally use of Hosteller's Stomach Blt
tara than by any othar maana within tha province
of medical science. Tha faet bare atatad la as In
controvertible aa a demonstration In mathematics.
Nobody dlaputaa tl. It la a matter of common belief
and of general record. Tiara tha ease might be rest
ed i but the publlr, naturally enough, wants to know
why this famous vegetable sperifle Is so far ahead
of all other medicines of Ua class. This reasonable
curiosity can be readily graliffed. Tha Bitters com
prise five Important via: a stimulant, a
tonic, an aperient, and n blood depureut. Bach of
these eumponenta, aa well aa each of tha othar sub
ordinate Ingredients, la the purest and beat of Its
ktud. They are proportioned in accordance with n
formula that baa been in use for twenty years, and
operate harmoniously and simultaneously. Hence
|ka uniform euvvt•• of the medicine.
Thi Buccawrri. Pmrwnx*.—Dr. J.
Walker in achieving an eminent distinc
tion m i benefactor of kii sjieoiva. Mom
stigmatise nil patent medicine# with tha
odious epithet of quackery. Hut Da.
Wai.kkh'* CAUroHMU ViMwiAa Um-Kwi
have the endorsement of the medical
profession. The editor ran conscien
tiously and cordially rMXNNMnd the
mmlirioit, because ho knows ha has
found groat lieueflt from its uao. For
nearly twenty years ha haa suffered
from derangement of the stomach. And
though the disease haa become chronic,
he haa already obtained great relir f from
thia remedy, A physician left at death a
large volume, rarefully st aled, and auj>-
iMjat-d to ooutaiu a fund of medical
knowledge. On being ojieued, it -was
found to contain only this simpla ad
vioe: " Keep your head cool, your feet
warm and your Imwels open." Hut
there is a whole volume in Uiis I Aaxiui.
Videoa* HtTraaaact aa a mild oatiiarUe,
leaving the system in a healthy oondi
tiou. ft. H. McDonald, an experienced
druggist, associated with Dr. Walker,
is a man of thorough integrity and
practical knowledge of the art of oom
pouuding inedictue. They have a val
uable medicine, and they luwiw how to
bring it to the knowledge of the public
by judicious advertising. We are hap
py to give them our hearty endorse
ment, and bid tlieui God-speed in re
lieving the ills to which flesh is heir.—
jMckwood l'uumiot, /Mattftier JO, 1870.
A Free Prrw.
Imagine says Hudson in his address
ou Jhe press, ii Free Prima repeating Hie
burning Philippics from Amphipolis to
Arcadia, arousing the farthest states
and cities of the -Egeau isles and by
the Hellespont, as the few hundreds
listening in Athens' market place were
aroused. Imagine the defeat at the
Gulf of Pegasm telegraphed all over
Greece by night, and liefore the people
were sandalled for the day, learning
that Philip was master of ITieaaaly.
Imagine then that the voice of Demos
theuea, the clarion voice, had cried to
Gorintb and Arcadia, to HjiaikA and to
Thebes to come; that the Preae, mvriad
tongued, had sent his trumpet calls to
every state where the art of Athena had
won her honor, and te every eoaat where
her triremes had won power; think you
that it would have lief alien Greece as it
dio; that her shining hair, would have
swept the dust of Cheronjna; and Crsai
phon needed the eublimeet defence of
all history for proposing a Crown to De
mos thenrs, because with integrity, vir
tue, and good will he had been xeolous
to secure honor and benefit to the no
tion ? No!—the Peninsula would have
risen to arms as Athens rose, and the
voung man of Maoedon would have
been stopped at the threshold of his
career—perchance driven beyond the
Danube; and perchance Egypt, Babylon
Peraepoiis and the Puujaub might never
have known the conquering footsteps
of Alexander.
Csimrn FOB Puvnsa— The dried
chestnut* in the market cannot be re
lied upon for seed. They should hare
been packad in moist sand or earth aa
soon aa gathered, and kept coo) and
moist until cold weather, when they
should have been exposed to frost dur
ing the winter and planted in spring.
la tiic-lO to (k* world to plarwtof-r* tfc* Mbls
■ Mil' Coagk sr Lu| Bamadf Ikss ALLBE'B
LI'XG BALSAM
TTIAI IT HAT* HO SOFAS.
contirriTii, inci
Waste ras'rsr* Ikst liilmMa* Cases. B* I
lima Ml tbat k milky fie>r UU latilr el** I*4 is
rosr ckrA * If y> a • .-old. d> sol d*Uy, tur, t.-r
JOB sit sears, II will to toe Ist*.
ALLEVSLt'KO BALSAM
la rosi bop* la haa Mas triad by tkosaasds asrfc
aa roa. ska kaia tors csiad , BAST, tn Itoil |UU
tad*. bars trfl Ikrti BUKI to us. tssl tetanus hu
manity cam rad tkrti ifltoos ssd toltsva Don't
aipanssl silk saw sad salrlsd miliar**-ya
own sat staid it- bat tty at owe* ikls tassiaabl#
aitirl* It ia wsirsutrd to br**k tkr moil trns
blssosia Cosdk Is a Ms koara If awl of loa l<>a>
•landing Uia wsrrsntod to fira aattia astlafsr
ttoa ta all rssra at Las* ssd Throat lltralUM At
•a liyMloiui, It kaa M sgasl.
RA SOLICITED EVUJBKCK or ITS MEEITB.
as A A TMB MUTM
WHAT WELL mow * narooitrt BAT AHOCT
ALI EN # Ll* so BALSAM.
* rational*. Tasa. Srpt. 11. BBS.
OroOomoa - Skis aaaii doaoa lixil'a Leak In
ua si owe* w aa** not s krllk 1-fi la oai stura.
II Sua sua rrpulalion ibur. ssy Cough modi etc*
w* kav* ***r ald. and w# Sara torn It tka draw
suaiaiea twrniyarvrs yrara. a issaa Jnat wkst
at Ml stoat Ik* Balaam. Vrry truly TOUT*.
Brno d TASK an.
Adsla rsad tkr tnlracr Ina a Drsd*tat wk* was
raiad by aar of ifcr Balaam. and BOW *<NT It laiesly.
L C cot Hall, Dtagfiai at Marldr City. Mtrkigan,
wrttra, toyl IX Wl "laa uat ad AUJi't Lcaa
BAI* UB trad tur kalf a yruaa aa aooa at ya ess. I
would laibri to oat of any otkrr wtrdinar la aay
•lor* Tk Lena liuit nrrar luilr it Aa ford tot
ikotr aOUrlod wnk a mask "
It la karntlrta to tkr moat datlcat* child.
It nulust on onium ta any torn.
11 la told try Module* drain* (nmCf,
nrno*.
Ba not dam sad Call for ALL EST LC*O HAL,
BAM. and takr aa otkrr.
I misrUust acooaayaay rarh kottla
J. g BABKII d CO . rinatanaU, a,
raoraiSToat.
raaaT DAVIS d 808. 0rnl A (wall
Fravidaaxa, B L
Bold ky all Hadlrtnr Uralrra
roa SALS ar
JOB* F. HKKHT. KrwTork.
OEO C. OOODWI* A CO.. Boatoa.
JOHNSON, HOLAWAT d CO.. Pktladadykla.
Ir it AtTi-atTHsa W'SOBS I* trifla ATTH a dad
Coogk ar Cold, a kaa tka rlak ia do s'rat sad a ram*
' ady to aara, yruayl and tboroask aa Dr. Juyur't
Xsyactorant ran to raadlly Bond
DO liillTl mint ato lulrly tk toil Silling
took Sand for rimlari of VBBV** Cti
atnlel lllai family BikU Ovr nut |>*c<a.
IS by 11 Inrhc* m yafrt Blt-te Aid*, dr. Arab-
g.S Oil! KJar.l rials, fA-Jk full OUt. t
rlau*, l! W Bi lrrn tkr Wbtti Cblaf," fur
Winirr grrnin** *ih l •• Tb* Amirlraa
farrorr'a Hvrir Book ' Tb* Standard, Nth KMC
roady. Kpltootir Trralaioma.dr C F. VgBT, Kw
Torb sad Ctarlnnatt VENT d OOOPIUCH.CbIrao
TWO GRAND PRIZE BOOKS.
For which • peranum of |I,MD wl I o
en Striking for the R>ghl. fVTE - • Silenl Tom.
II a powerful. fascinating. and dealing with rru
tlral qaretion* of Ike S*)r. they wtU ckaria and
CM AI bit fc old and ynang. Other volume* ol the
fl.onp Pru* series will be iMurd during December.
They trt pronounced by Ike gxaminingCnmroitte*.
Irr Dr* Lincoln. Eauktn and Day, superior to any
• tiallar imri, price (1 90 each Please trud for I*ll
Illustrated Catalogs*.
D LOTH SOP A CO., Psbltaher*
and do Corn hill, Boston
A NEW CARPET.
Thi Oreat Wonder—Thr Nrw Rug land Carpet
Co . ratabltahed over a quarter of arwntury >p>.
harlnc eatrended nark time, talent, and moaey. to
produce a ityliak and Aarakle carpet at a low price,
I after yeais of experimenting with tka twit art!
• ene. hare brought out a carpet which the* have
named and will be known aa TLKHMAX TAPERYRT.
beina exact imitation of s-lid Bruaaels. Ike Arat
ih. aaand no.n of which In order to Introduce
I hero, will he told Sir V 1-J eentk per yard Sample
rent by mall on receipt of 10 rent*, or b different
pattern* * rent* SEW EJ4OLABD CABPKT CO.,
I.) Wnahington Street, Button.
"TEMPUS FUGIT. rrr 'i-;;
ln*l "ST** Sr*saian ******" enter* UP n it*
eleventh year with laTS For TEK year* w# haee
toll you of It* merits tf pott hare parted It by Sir
ten year*. Mt'W. then. I* }o*t the time. Jt I* the
•aroe me tr Ibe " * T Ledger." • laig". *0 coin in a
raper, illuilrated. overflowing with charming
tone*. Talait. kel< he*. Poem*. Wit and Humor,
and laatly lit great speciality. The Eogae * Cor
ner. In which Ike " Triche and trap# of America,"
Rogue*. Rascal* and aaindlnr are rtp'i'd.
PEASO.—A tuperk Prang. ISoolor chromo. ■' A
Bonqurt of Antnmii l.eare*," worth one dollar and
Afly cent* te given KKP.B. and the ****** a whole
year Sir on I y ona dollar. It t* no humbug Ulho-
Sraph. and it I* acnt nt once with Srrt paper The
A*w*a will *ve you moaey. and It be* an word
to offend the rao*t aqtldton*. on* dollar tacaiet It
and chromo Our offer la " Batatfaclloti gnaranteed
or money refunded. '* We refer to " B 7 Tribune,"
• Wood'* Magannt." Dlta-n A Co.. all the great
" Sew a Co'*" and newspapers. Only nae dollar for
elegant chromo and paper a year Specimen*
cent* Agent* wanted, complete outttt free. Ad
dre* (e* f ' neat lea year*) Alar Spangled Banner,
Hinsdale. S H. ______
• I Jkikik I kiWk ACBBS CHOICE PAEHISO,
i)i'"">'"""" grating, anal and other land*,
Is tight of the Eocky Mountain* Pr*t In market
and the mo*t f I Vlt healthSil climate.
In Ike world. Low price*; long
credit: nominal Inlcrr*! —Send stamp Sir pam
phlet to BTEBS 4 PARKER. Deneer, Col
Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup. Seaweed
Tonic and Mandrake Pit!a
Thcee are th* only medicine* that will rare Pul
monary Consumption. Dr. Schenrk of rbiladelphl*.
ha* keen In constant practice Sir other thirty year*
roattnutUy examining lung*, and know* hit moii
rtne*. If properly taken, will cure Consumption.
Hi* Mandrake Pills cleanse the liver and stomach;
hi* Seaweed Tonic tflttylve* the Siod, stimulates
the coating of th* stomach, and aid* digestion. Hit
Pulmonic Syrup ripen* th* matter, and nature
throw* It off without any *a*rlion. Pur **l* by all
druggists* __________
TO
Consumptives!
The ndT*rlt*er. having b**n parmhrsntly cored
of that dread disc***. Consumption, by a simple
remedy, I* anxlou* to mak* known to ht* follow
sufferer* th* mean* to ears. To nil who dealr* It,
he will tend • copy of the prescription used, (free
of charge,) with direction* for preparing aud utiog
the earns, which they will Anda Buna Cras for Cor-
SPMPTIOR. ArritwA, Btoirnrru and all Throat or
Lung Plfflcffllic*.
Parti** withing the prescription.will plots* Ad
dress Bev KDW iAtr A S 11. SON.
194 Penn Al. William*borgh, H. T.
Dr. Whittier,
Longest engaged and moat snocersfni physician
of the age. Contultatlou* or pamphlet free- Call
or write! ________
ma ea ae* AGENTS and other Canvasser* now *t
Tjlllllf work, can learn how to Increase their
111 11 1 A Income AIS a week (sure) without luter-
Uvwll A* ring with their regular can vatelng by
AddrMllsg P, H. UlSi U Eighth ft., X. T.
THE A-NECTAR
M A rckl
rtlanU TUA
til* lltw T Plato. Til*
W euaj.ptMW mr k*t IM IH)lHlt for *la
vv.vynbvr*. AM h>t Ml*
M rh.l,*l. ty by tk* Anal
lw^*i> n. an* fart*. TnC . Ko.
*ll 'JKM < PaMea II .anil* 4 Tkmrfc
■■IV HI. M* folk, r O ■•*. tm
I . Nr. ml fir
Q1 OHO REWARD
VpX.V/Wy rr *"t r*§*at mini,m**-
Rewird gk foWKK
" LW<UU BRUSH* fell* In ear*. lilt
HIHIII •■•tnaly * r *'• tk. lilii iM Mlklni
•t* SOLO IT ALL OKOOOISTS. PKICX SI.
k,
Altera*. al !-•* Celamkt*. LaaoatW* Qo., P*.
AR A -HIHIIILJHII ikm *nt *l*l It*
Sol) jr i • ***■* * c °-
k,
263 Receipt* $135
J A™. wt*.-
Dr. Whittier,
uaMI u< *i wjisnjysi*<
Ik* ■(• Cue.uliaiwu. or k*au|>ki*l AM. Ml e*
•nt* . _ .
*1 i. fun uri Amy I Aiwlt *IM i ili *iet*n
10 to 910 otMtfco. an. mu
r *44, BIK nor* K- U.JP .1 aurk kit MIA IK*"
El ■*uU*all tk* tlm. Iliu at aartktaaafa*.
inlaia im. iMrai 0 iTlnao* 4 W hrt
_ . B*
l . ■:• "'"flANTlr I
Trans A 1 L -
1 .it i <KJ.P. . YEAH
I I
I I
I <V -.wrak t-; <•
THE NEW SCALE
27 Union Square, N. Y.
DiMteilf the tot Square Piaii taie.
Send tor Circular with IllitatraUmia.
Prices ramiu mo 350 to 700 (oltirs.
Kiarr Itaao UAIUU3TTED far Fir* Taaaa.
MOXOBAN T'l
&ARGLING OIL
LA 0000 FOR
ITEM E til ICArEMIFTLMKA
f'hllklala*. Mi ■■llk.Hi ar Mb*
•rU ' ■■ l—. ear. !.■■
< h*a**4 Ma**a rkM MM*.
PV*k Weeaa*. mala. ■*—*.
Vna MM. Matlm
barHl a*r*l.k*a.ar Mma,
EMM# I'RSMRLM S(/IMFWTL WIMA#J"HIL,A.
..1U mt AU klaki r—illl'.r Fnl,
mum*. m*k*ar. omtu ■■•>■.
Pali evil. rn Km t* akm a.
Aatanl A lan M BHaa. Kaaa la PaaMry.
T.*th..k A*, a* Urn Back. Am. *a.
UrptLwtl.OO; MaAiomMc.; SmUtfe.
TW •<*>■ OU hm..• H mm*U-*"••*
*ll em *■* i. •/'. *♦ W — mm* Hll— *■'' '■■■
*..71. AmoiTld -KM O- rdT* - •
tm u tmmu by • i,, i" —>*■
*1 *■ ■ wl'ial *d o*m 11 '"■.
iJw * *w - iami iI ■■.*■
ur-- ■■■• IwtMwwf—i l
Rmmßm
•' KEXCHAJrTB WOSH TABLET* -
H'*m /W ••
iHillrtanl •> ImliuH. *. T. by
lEECHIfTS GIICLIS6 OIL COITT
JOHM MOPCt. *Wt*n.
i Or. mt 1 * cmrrfc
MB Rrar4f tfcitiOM T<m
jjg* IMI mcictaiAc tmariplet, by ii*
v VjJ vhacfc ibc d-cw gradually
nM IS bee* BUI m perfect aroa mah
\ Dr. Pltrr**6Mfii
qrdlitl Dltrorrrjr, furb Aonld W
uka caraedly. M oarroci the bM sad *v*i en,
wbmch mi* ilnyi mi (auk, mlao to ma ipeahcmDy.
u it don. upon the dmemied (Wad* mod bnu*
m iii v of lb* BOM mad it* icubmbcuioj
dumber*. The tmtarrh Remedy tbould be y
pi.rd.-tth Dr. PI<••••* *•! Di'Bi Ik ,
mi ib., 11 ibc only bra of lauruawß* yd imr.mad
• .ib which lute nrdxiac cms be earned ktg* •/
add mpjibod to mil part* of the minted
amwl pmimadn *ad iluaben ia ebmch Hire* mad
ulom OIM. mad bum which ibc dachmrge few
|. v proceed*.
So oucmaful Kml tiw above cnur** of tredMnai
nun, (Kml the tmfnßi* odbn RSOO Br,
warn in • can of" CU ia Hmd~ iWn or
Cm/orrd wbirb be ounce an Tbe two and
■"■*•"■■• mm m•
MOTHERS! MOTHERS! I
MOTHERS!
Don't fall to procure MM df IHRLOyW
ROOTHIH3 RTEuP TOE CHILDEEH TEETH
mo.
Tbio eahaaMa prepmratloa bmo bjo #jd *tb
XR VERFAILIbO StCCRM IS THOI RAXDt OR
CARER.
II not only retire** lb* <*ll4 rem
ormt** Ibc iiimmrb mad bow*l eorrec** acidity. mad
,T** tone mad eaorgy *• lb* whol* tyMdtß. 11 "■
nl*. laatmotly rlt**
Griping of lb* Bowel* and Wind (Mi*.
W b*li*e* Irtln REFT ma* FI RMT RRIIRDTJR
Ttrt WORLD, la mil r*m* at PimESTESX APR
DIARRHEA IX rHILWRKS. whether ariwaf ba
ttfihiui or ut olher rtf
iKpwl upon it. molbmr*. UertUlT. ml M yewa.
•fie** mad
fmiiaf and Health to Tour InfintE.
R* nn *ad call fer
"Mr*. Winalow'i Soothing tyTßfi"
H.elnßlb* Ar-olWlt* of "CrRTIS 4 IKRKISR"
on lb* out*id* wrapper.
Bold by Drnggtsia throughout th* World.
Cheap Farms! Free Homes!
Ob tb. Il* of tb* CMOS HACIFIC R*JLROAD.
IUOOW Acre* of lb* b**l Kmriß.Bß and Miacrat
' vcri'.ni A *cg* la Xrbr**k*. la lb* Piatt* Tally
ao for •*!*.
Mild Climate. Fertile Soil.
For Oral* Orowina aad Rlorb Emi*t*B aniarpaaa*!
by aay I* lb* CtillmO >l*tu.
Caiari* nr rif, taor* IbeorßM* larn* rjn.
and ifi.T* coaeeaieal Icatiktl Ibaa cam b* Rmad
*l**b*r*.
FREE Horn est o&da for Actual Settlers.
Tb# beat locmlion* for C.4oal**-o4l*r* entitled
to • Hmnrllrtl of !• A*r*
Rend for Ib* S**r Demrtl mtler rapkl*t, wllb men
MM. pebllmbed lu Rnlib, lleramma, **dlmb, Dma
lmb, nmiled free ereryubmre.
Addrea* O. T. BATIR.
Land Co* r C. P. R. *. Co..
R'
Cm EnWri r-v mffrctlen
Tbbcut. LOU,
arnlir cored by lb*
WHnilHr *r of Da WimTma - *
KmLmma or Who
Crrrrt, which dor* not dry P *> *m
leer** the cmom* behind. b*l looectw It. cltwaw*
the luoy* mod mllmr* InitmUo*. lb** rcaiovlttf On
fRBR* of the cosn>lataL
CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED
by a timely rreort t* Ihlm mlmndard remedy, mm la
promt by hundred* of iMtlroontmla tl hmm recetr
ad The ffrnumt I* dared /tutu" oa the wrap,
per. BETH W. FOWLit A BOSS. P*or*i*Tom*,
BoeToe. Mm** Fold by dealer* fenemlly.
FOR FAMILY USE.
TdlE
H ALF 0 RD
LEICESTERSHIRE
TABLE SAUCE,
The Best Sauce & Relish
MADE IK ANT PAST OF THE WORLD
FOB
FAMILY USE.
Pints - - - CO Cen .
Half Pints - -30 Cents.
For sale by all Grocers.
1500,000.00 vS
"How to Make a Fortune!"
Only Lel*ure Hour* Reoalred. R® Id RDO par
week can be made. For foil particular* addret*
O. S BORTOH,
r. e. Bos 249. Omaha, Hob.
Vim* war MM4M an aet l ilt fiait £►**.
aMiTfaFmßm.Wfa.W.rrafaipWnaeißafan
I,<*, ioetorvA, *pw*4. aai MMwl M lkM tk*
r. c1.4 - TMM." ** Apm"*a<s" " JMiaiit,'
iklH U*d .1- - Am mm— **4 ran,
kiMim MuiuM, ami* n Ik* ...... room
aai k*iM *l' '•altlunwa, frnfrmaaß Ak*k* >*!*
TWr a*. <b* OraatlKaaS fWfa* Mi a Uft*MaC
a fntet Raaentar Mi lar.t *4 tk*
SrM'i*. <"<,■ <4T ril |nii.a.iww aunav ami
tk* WW n a Withy nnitlfaa. nfrafatag
mwto. *i* **4 f*fc*H* m • fan**fafamn
■a r.ra— aaua tak* ti.ee* malar* cr4-
i*( ** fanemna, aei "taaia faag a.*.*, pn.ti.i
ttw kaaa* an art imwyvi t<r awati penee aradw
IwLrTS dm vital a,. ***M4 b.rwi tk. Pr
ami. kaar *mfa*M fa tk* ImM M Tan#
n ih. Month. Silt..*, Attack*. P. (pintle* 4 tka
E wt, I eimawetioe a# Uw Lew Sale ie *• nefaM *i
fa* ktfani*. aai a Wt.4,.4 uth*ip*mtt w*SM,
if# ilk# uflwprvrtjf # f9y *£#&*■# 11l ilk#—
b ho* M ** . *ai *w WtUatS mm a kmtat gaar*
Asut fa M* 4MVM. Ik*a a ia*c<kr aiimiiaiaai.
r*r Pratb C**i|hiatk M ar aK
|ar lal.MW*t*rr aawf fkraal. EBaw
natlaMl mat Om.l. Dytfatmaavl IfWlk
B.m.tiaal aai laiaraailaal ftMA O-amaaa #' *•
H .< l.var, KMtoara aai Waiim. tUw Btitara kaaa
krr. mat I. linfal Sack f -an caaaai kf
3C,3rSu-i. *kek m puiacai br
•*<>-. *1 ik* Da*v* <>(***
Tkrr an a Oaalla Nnalln at wall M
• Taaafa. poneau** aha Mm pwaltnaww 4jh|
aa * tartwetai afaat fa nSarma CaiM'i' l " I** - '
nn.ua <4 tk* L-m aai *uca3 Ofaaa, aai at Btmua
D W*Skin rn*aaaaa, (npa l T '", fh-
Sis£Ssii*£
ai p;.*a... at tka Bkfa. Wakatavw aana aatma.
an foatsSr iaa ap aai canni am ai tka iMn bl
.k -i taar Uv tka an af (kaaa Btaark Oaa kactfa at
.ack cn. aitl caavmc. tka matt Mania Inn al tk*M
MHBI ntfMflA
t'laaaa* tk# Vibalri Blaai atkeaaMt m
Waa aapmim-. kanoaf tfcraafb tk# ak M Paaflaa,
k'v —'V * S*vn. etoaaaa a *4MM pa* **4 * *■
*ai ntpak M tk# vaunt MM. a wkaa to #
iaal| far l..lnaa a#taSyaa whatk Kaaptkarfaai
,mt. .*4 <!m kaat'k al tk. .rmaat a*B kin.
Urat.rwl ikaanait pacini* Vtaauaa BlT
mat* tin tamt aomfarfal lav#oraM thai nr awtliaai
ik. amL'W n*M . ~
Pta. Tape, ami aCßar War Mia, MUM M
t|M ayataw al aa mmmr tta.aM, an MmaaaM Jr-
Mnvai a*i lamavai. San a lil as il 11 Hkr*MS>
au TM< ■ *canij> a* fa#kfani pa tkc fan aldn
aank akn. ini? u*.it kkn *a piairti *aai
It „ bet (KM tin l. kr ah Mart* ti tk* kit thai
am cvht. imi •*• tlw A ■ mart Inn aai Mm*
Srptmt. ik*t k>mi ihat kat*s taaafa *M al #MMM
N'< trma *1 llcda.m. aa aa#Mfain
iac. *tß k*a tka aim.*, haai waran lika than Bu>
W.ihialMl Dl.a.a*. PmafaM nppi fa
Jfamu aai Manraia, aach a* to ambar*. T|MjMfaak
i W matt aai Mean, aa d aian fa Mb, a#
I# nkfaft * SBkiraM altk. B.afaa Trnati tfnfa
h 1* a. . 4*n at R'ata a* a VuaaM Brrram mm
m iar * aaakaaa Pn.aau.ra
imiaiaa.'AiMlMinl, aai IntanmttaaMt
PTIM, atick an n T" ■ • kal W tk. va'laf* fa ear
* cat ri van tl*e*ffc.ut SM Uabai Sum IY.n.ll*
kmc *1 tk. Umn m W\ Unaatfa, I TANK Taw
Cmakwiaei. Ail .ma laiCmfaMMh
H.-. <-.■>. PnaI. A'FAIMI. Mini*. Sua.ink. B*aa-
A* Imn**, aai taaof mkara. AUK than **• tnkm*-
iir*. ik.a4 , .mit MI eaOn tiuahj iarfaf Ik* Saanmr
mi A.'am*, aai iiMiihafar aa imfaf .nii.i fa
8M.4 km **i dryuma. an mvanrkiy aacsamaaMi
.if cswaaiaa 4aat*maatafallMfaafaacii aai L**.al
CtMt *kiamuMl*NMß*. Tkan an alaay*taan*rlMa
M.m >4 tk* kvav, a auakaaaa aai *r**kfa Man
■4 tW UA aai ft: tarjM. fa iIM kaacla. kang
i<fim--k ' faai I 'II in 11 ill ii ■a. laSawuaam
*e %a impUM.twu.li I-wfa i.l.iaw mm.
knt IM.I' 11. of***, fa tamut'i) ata*v. Tkan m
t tu the yoim
Viaamia Ltrr—s a* thay wiC ami t Mill a tka
u<% rfamai ami naurn mk afack fa* kaamfa an
rnfai, at tk* MM* mm Itinalaias fa* arcninai fa
:tw Um. aai fei.rSy lafavriag tka kaalthf faaccfaaa
. tlu fitam ■ O't*—
srt if.)., r Ki*f*l Kv, WW Sm*;!.*CA
qnrt'Blipilli Pmrfai Mack. Oika. Swfa'iaa
; tfyflfcA. IvAdll&i ITTRFJUHWM SWTT, MwCWVAi AP
iWik,... 0 4 Smn. Enptraa* fa tU SLM. Son IM.
w II aa mal afam canMrtatiaaal ana.
ant, W* i vaa'a Vintern Btrraa* turn fa.am fafar
,t m maw po em* to ik* maat fanuaaa* aai fauafa
'"ik .'wlk.ifa fttllli ml a Tlaagar Efaiaaa
vrt <■* ail fan* aan* M a mamaramnw. far aanfaMg
tr.nl o*-r miaim fa* caum. mtxA kynmniaf amp
4. afacn fa tin II iuanaan* tka i.luit.lu fapana#
J. 4wml iwnt main health, aai a pamaaaai cma
Tk. imftrtlM fa Da. tifatu
BtTttut. an ApmfaM. Ikntbonuc aai Camfaaan,
S'i'ntoM. Lantn*. btrnfa. Snlatlra. CiaHi lm
tux. fa.ln.Ac Altmativ*, <*4 Aau-Bii *i
Tfa* Apa riant aai mdi Luakn araaartM* fa
Da Write*'* Vtaaa.a Btrraaa aa* atVatfa
gnni mm *1 caaM el anffaaa* ni Mahgaaal fatmc
I) t l ilmnic Wltag, .ml tofaWaa faafMrtM* pnaa
I l m kumn at tka faaca*. Thaw itkrn imratm
atu> pas* ia tk. aarrtm. ayatna, tlnanwrk, aai bataafa
tahef KM iaH.MMl.tnn. anai, B.lic CTSMPC ***■
Tketr Caaartr-lrntaat MH*I.W catmi. tkraagko*t
iIM afataaa TM=. Dhaaaw |eaeMM W M fa* Kfa
arva. miatliq aai ntrafattaf fat Sm fa arm* TMw
Aett Bum*, t qißil nafaa tk#Mr.fa tk# won-
SLl^SttßisafttEST
tl.iu.u. F..*r, Itttf aai Apt. tMC
Pntlfy lfc t* pan
aali aa tuufa *.ik Vid, Brrraa*. !fo rj
aa tab. i .4 >4 a man faai fananaaA TV#
I nt. U IMMU. fa. hnfa, the kfamy*. aai fa*
term an rtaiani di*M*r-prefa by tkngnat tar
' IrtrrrtlnMS. T.U fa fat Warn aa gafaa u M
at aifla from kail ta aa* *ai oarkalf ■ itaMal
Bat ptoi aamrnkfaf fexui nek aa kafa ataak, MM
cW mfaa, amfai ani ***■ aai Mka
out-An carreiaa TWy an Lnapaa.it fa paaj Ufa
aWa npAt.it. aai cam. i* aa faHl
1 WALKKR. Pa|iV *
ihagpM* *ai Gca AgM..Saa Fmu imeaei XnTfl
er s*>Lt> rv ah. r>RUjOisrs A DBAl.ers
H I C-BaTi
C<4 for Mu. lrftamanatlon of i|
kinds, Ptphthcrta, Wn—iliy Bruises, Bunt.,
*T>r*\n*, KarmaaUrra, Sort Iwmt. Swelling at
the Ciand*, '- "• the Km, Broken
Breart, fmi Bitea, ChilNalns, TOe*. Bee Stfojs.
aad aM Sores.
tx>4 Iter BeeM. -Piwk Wound*. G*n,
Toll K*Sprain*, Bruise*. Cracked iim-i*. Rta;
Boil", WW (tall*, Spavin*. Bweroey. Founder,
Likhm, Sand tVack*, fecmtcbcc er Unix,
Biap, Horn l<irtrt&pcr.
Thlu tralr wonrderfal Ltnlneai *••
dtarov.-rrd hp MOM Kit ANDKRSOS, A.M.. tola
Frofo*ergf Cbemtatnr aad Maibcmatic* In lha
Clinton Übrral institute, of OurkiaOcwoty. S T.
I* r(Filmnl)i| lor tba ptirposu of making
Fruaaic Add. Hp uniting the laaepeodcot pMaiu
bodies of which ft > (unman), a residuum wuu
left, which, on betas applied to bniiae* and ia
tinal pan*, by tbc student* of the Institute, was
footid to poaacs* the remarkable property of cool
tag down and carrying off tba inAammitloa and
nmirea at one*. aad reaaortng tba parts to souad
aea* and health in • lew Bourn without pain er
lrrlutlon.
It le wet a heatlac Llntaeal, bet
acta by it* peculiar specific or chemical qualities
In dissolving aad scattering the somes* sad In
aaamatkm of the tajatnd part. By a free an.
plication, the red surface soon become* cool
swiff and natural, and ia restored to natural
health without suppuration or destruction.
An a Liniment for Homo Flesh, for
the Cure of all the ailments natued above, wa
challenge the world to lad it* equal.
Price MAM cents per bnUle.
D, BAH9OM, SON h 00, Propr'i,
I BUFFALO, M. Y.
See actio* la local column.
iti
' vtle for I. are* Ills* Us ted. Deaoripties Prim List
PITTSBU6H,FAj^W
Doubts. Blngls, Hauls,Breach-Loading ItlAea. Shal
Ouaa. BavoWata. Pistols, etcd of avarr kind for ma
or boya at vary low price*. Ouaa S3 to SMA, Plate la
Tf7s UT5250" per month.
® male, to tatroduee lha OKTrrtitK IMPROVED
t £LI COMMON 81NBE FiMILT BSWIBO MAOSINK.
r~ Tbti Machine will atlteh, ham, foil, taek, asIJV,
3E cord, bind; braid aad embroider la a moat aupa-
rlor manner. pTtee only ttA PaUjr lieenaad and
h warranted for Ava years. Wa win pay SMM for
any machine that will aew a strocgar,mor* bean
cn ttfnlor mors elastic seam than our.lt mskea the
r; "Klaatlr Lock Stlteb "Every second atitch can ha
eat. and stiUlhe cloth cannot be pulled apart
without tearing. We pay agents from $n to S2*>
;** par month and expense*, or a commission from
w which thrice that amount can be made. Address
■* ABCOMS A Oft. Br . ton, Mass., Pittsburgh, FA,
3"? 3.00 Snatnaaa legitimate. particular '
Sm. J. WOMB, At. Louis/**. Mam