Farm, Garden and Household. The Oreat PrsiWHliw of InnMrtUslu A man who once kept several cow* in this village and sold their milk once asked me as I was receiving a load of hay ; " Eow come yon to bo so lucky as ho get such a capital load of hay ? It is the best I have yet seen, except that I out and cared myself." The farmer from whom I got it' brought in, like all the rest of the hay sellers, a load of late ent timothy and clover, full of dock/and thistles. T asked him if he had no early cut clover, lie replied : " I have some timothy, out green and cured thirty-six hours in etxdi, but I have reserved it for my own use." I paid him $lO a ton for a* load of it, the present rate being SB, and this was the hay referred to. Our best farmers cut clover in bloom for hay and get seed from the second crop, but thev feed all their hay to their farm stock. Onee, after wheat harvest, I saw a farmer ou Buffalo Creek cutting a Urge field of dead, ripe timothy and clover with a machine ; it was HO drv it ueeded no curing, but was put directly in stack. I asked tlie farmer if he let "all his hay crop thus lose its juices before he cut it. He replied, "It will sell iust as well in Buffalo." But this man uid not do like another farmer who sold his hay in Buffalo, haul Ivack to his farm a load of cattle-yard dung for every load of hay thus sold, thereby keeping up the productiveness of his farm, which enabled him to buy a large tract iu Michigan, where he hail settled his children, and was then on the way to visit them.—RrehoHpe, IIMS) *S Sar*. As a general thiug, say* the Tribune, farmers need no quality more than stability. Even some of tlie most in tellectual farmers get discouraged, ov we may say upset, by low prices, and they change to something that sella higher. This has been illustrated for the last 30years with reference to sheep, for so soon a* tlie price of wool declined great numbers who hat! large and good flocks sold every head for what they could get, and turned their attention to something else. Quite likely they take np slice* again iu five or six* yeara, and then sell them all off as prices decline, but as they were never ready when prices were high they made no" money. On the contrary, these men who have stuck to sheep, year after year, uncon cerned whether prices werehigh or low, have become independent because when prices were high thev made large sums, and when low they did not lose, beside their land all the while grew richer. The same is to ho said of general crops providing the soil is suitable ; and one is certain to make money in the long run by being steady. Another great advantage to b named by sticking to one thing arises from the skill that is gained, and without it uo progress can be made. It is certainly the truth that the sturdy farmers have the best sheep and cattle, the best wheat, corn, oats, and potatoes, because he has learned by long experieneo exactly how to go to work, and he has risen to the dignity of applying science to his profession. How to Cook Boon*. This is the way the down East lum bermen cook their beans, who eat them twice a day for four or five months each year: Take one quart of beans; first soak, if pea beans, until they are sweMed full; it will take one night cer tain ; if yellow-eyes, parboil until the skins crack open when blown upon with the breath; drain off the water, put about two-thirds the beans in the pot, put in one to one and a half pounds fat salt pork, then the rest of the beans ; bake not less than twelve hours, first covering the beans with hot water. These are genuine Yankee pork and beans. The way thev are cooked in tlie woods is this: A bole is dug in the ground, filled with hot coals, the beau pot pnt on. filled around with coals, and covered with hut ashes, where it remains from about 3 r. u. until break fast the following morning—about four th nor fifteen hours. There are prob ably more beans eaten in Maine than in the whole State of New York. Prevention of Hog Cholera The Rural World says that one of the largest hog breeders in Missouri, who frequently has several hundred head at once, never has any sick. He gives them salt, just as he" does other stock. In cooking food for hogs— which be does in a large wooden boiler holding thirty or fort} bushels—he has the coals and ashes thrown in the boiler and boiled with the food. He also some times puts in salt and sulphur. His hogs eat bunt charcoal as freely as they do corn. They are sheltered from the cold and storms by movable sheds. Occasionally, ho dissolves copperas (sulphate of iron) in water, and mixes it with their food. This destroys in ternal worms and is also a tonic. Hogs are as subject to colds and pneumonia as human beings. The internal organs of the hog more closely resembles those of man than any other" animaL How to Make Cheap Fnnei. Cnt strips of stiff pasteboard about an inch wide the desired length, clip the ends to a point, and cover with any nice black cloth, like broadcloth or fin's cassimere; lap the ends at the corners of the frame, and fasten with a white or gilt button. Bind your picture and glass together with strips of gummed paper and glue, on to the frame. Hang against a white wall. Bronzed paper, which can be bought for eight cents a sheet, may be used instead of cloth, in which case a short strip across the cor ners of the frame is a great addition to its comeliness. Heroine* and Heroines. We read of the golden deeds of thoee noble women \bose names are known in the uttermost parts of the earth, and feel proud of them, and do them hom age. These high, heroic minds—these self-appointed martyrs—claim our high est respect. But there is another hero ism than that which is seen of all the world—a heroism rare among men, common among women—women of whom the world never hears; who, if the world discovered them, would only draw the veil more closely over their faces and their hearts, and entreat to be left alone with God. How many thous and true heroines may exist "now of whom we shall never hear f But still they are there. They sow in secret the seed of which we pluck the flower and eat the fruit; and know not that we pass the sower daily in the street—per haps some humble, ill-dressed woman, earning painfully her own small suste nance. She who nurses a l>edridden mother instead of sending her to the work-house. She who spends her heart and her money on a drunken father, a reckless brother, or the orphans of a kinsman or a friend. She who—but why go on with the long list of great little heroism, save to commemorate one more form of great little heroism—the commonest, and yet the least remem bered of all—namely, the heroism of an average mother ? Ah ! when I think of this last broad fact, I gather hope again for poor humanity; and this dark world looks bright, this diseased world looks wholesome to me once more—be cause whatever else it is or is not full of, it is at least full of mothers. No Union of the Churches. A number of private letters which have been received at Baltimore from leading members of the Southern Pres byterian Assembly lately in session at Little Bock, indicates that the Southern Assembly was almost unanimously averse to a union with the Northern Church. They received the overtures of the Northern Assembly with coldness, and, while they considered the subject of union with some other body, their general impression was toward a con solidation with the Dutch Reformed ChuTch. Some of the leading men were inclined to accept the overtures of the Northern Assembly, but they were so overruled that they were obliged to abandon their own ideas in favor of re union. An awkward man, attempting to carve a gsose, d ropped it on the floor. ' 'There, now," exclaimed his wife, "we've lost our dinner." Oh, no, my dear," answer ed he, "it's safe—l have my foot on it." Slanghter-House Butter. j Drang* Conn*>r Hullai (hat fames IMreel nsm the fit) Slanghlvr Houses. A company haa been organised iu tliis city, the New York Awn tells us, with a capital of #500,000, for the man ufacture of butter. It is claimed that the hotter is geuuiuc, the means of pro ducing it being alone artificial; in other words, the discoverer affirms that the article is not merely butyrous, but in | every respect the coin plat* and perfect ; thing, aa agreeable, uutritious, and usable as the best Orange county but ter. A gentleman of recognised ability as a chemist is the fortunate introducer of this new wonder. Several persons of wealth hare bought sltn-k, and in aw eek i or two the manufacture will lie couduct : e<l on a very large scale. The temporary I offices of the Oleo-Margarme Manufac ! Turing Company, as the corporation is 1 called, are at 40 Broadway and their manufactory in Forty-fifth street. Ar rangement* have boon made for seenr* | lag better accommodations in Fiftieth street, and very soon tlie market will bo supplied with the new product. At present the demand for the article is so great that it is beyond the capacity of j the company to supply it. The profit* are expected to lie over one hundred ' per cent. As this city-made Orange county but ter is used in many of the mqat fashion able hotels and restaurant*. Unit for cooking and for the table, it mar be interesting to our readers to learn some thing of the method in which it is made, i In the first place agent* are employed ■ to visit the slaughter houses and to buy | up all the beef fat usually styled suet, j This suet is cartel to the butter factory j aad cleansed. Then it i* put into ordi nary meat choppers aud minced fine. It is afterword placed in a boiler with a* much water iu bulk as itself. A steam pipe is introduced among the < particle* of the snet and they are melted. The refuse or membrane goes to the bottom of the water, the oily substance floats and is removed. This latter con sists of butter matter and stearine. A temperature of 80 degrees melts the for mer and leaves the stearine at the botr torn. The butter matter, or cream, is | drawn off; then about thirteeu per oeut. of fresh milk is added and the necessary salt, and the whole is churned for ten for fifteen minutes. The result is Orange county butter at about one-half the usual cost. The steariue is sold at twelve cents a pound to the candle maker, aud the refuse at seven cents a pouud to the manufacturer of food for cattle. All the leading steamship liues be tween here and Europe are to bo sup plied this summer with the newly in vented butter. Iu taste aud appearance it is precisely similar to the finest coun try butter, made from the milk of live cows. Several of the leading men iu the butter trade have purchased stock, as have also many of the presidents of the steamship lines and the proprietors of the leading city hotels. Prof. R Ogden Doremns has testified to the suc cess of the new method of butter manu facture, and prophesies great prosperity for the new corporation. Prof. Parai, the discoverer, expects that tlie new product will drive live cow butter out of the market altogether. The few mi scientific outsiders who are acquainted with the facts now first made public, regard Uie whole thing with amazement. It seems extremely odd to them that the same carcass which furnishes a fresh steak for breakfast should also supply the Oraugs county butter which they spread upon their accompanying hot rolls. The Capture of Capt. Jack. The story of the capture of Jack, the Modoc chief, is told as fallows by an army correspondent : A series of pro longed yells and cheers aroused the camp from a pleasant siesta. Generals Davis aud Wheaton and the other officers and all the men rushed from the house and tents to find the cause of the nprear, and at once the whole camp was in commotion. Down the level plain north of the house was a grand caval cade of mounted horsemen. The steeds rushed forward at once at a furious rate, and soon neared the groups of spectators scattered about the premises. " Captain Jack is captured," shouted a sturdy sergeant. Again the valley echoed with cheers and yells. The mounted command was that of Perry. He had returned from a scout of twenty three hours, three miles above the mouth of Willow Creek. At half-past ten o'clock in the morning the Warm Spring scouts struck a trail, and after a brief search the Modocs were discover ed. Colonel Perry surrounded the In dian retreat. His men were bound to fight Suddenly a Modoc shot out from the rocks with a white flag. He met a Warm Spring Indian, and said Captain Jack wanted to surrender. Three scant* were sent to meet Captain Jack. He came out cautiously, glanced about him a moment, and then, as if giving np all hopes, came forward, and held out his hsnd to his visitors. Then two of his warriors, five squaws, and seven ehil ren, darted forth and joined him in the surrender. The command that made this famous scout was the first aq uadron af the First Cavalry. Captain Jack is about forty years old. He is five feet eight inches"high and compactly bnilt. He has a large and well-formed face, full of individuality. Although dressed in old clothes, he looks every inch s chief. He does not speak to any one. The Modocs are grauped in the field near the honse, and snrronnded by a guard. Spectators peer into Captain Jack's face with eager interest, bnt he heeds them not. He is still as a statue. The Hat Swindle. The Chicago Tribune gives an account of s confidence game that is Wing prac ticed in that city at present. An old hat worth fifty cent* is carefully done up in a box and taken to the residence of some gentleman whose name is in the directory, always at an hour when the gentleman is not at home. The messenger presents the hat to the lady of the honse, and says Mr. ha* purchased the hat and paid one dollar on it, giving orders to present the bill for the balanc# when the hat in sent up. The lady look* at the bill, pay* it, and the messenger depart* with the money. The wrath of the gentleman on coming home and finding a beaTer which would disgrace a third-rate pawn-shop can W imagined. Tlie trick has been minsu ally successful. At one house where the messenger arrived with hia hat, the lady surveyed tho bill, but having no ready money to squander on plug hats for her husband, gave the mnu an order on the grocery for $4.50. The Wautv took the order, changed it to $14.5 d, took it to the grocery store and bad it cashed. The Farmers' National Congress. In the National Agricultural Congress of the United States at Indianapolis, the Committee on Agricultural College* reported for adoption a resolution ap- K roving and endorsing the efforts now eing made to secure additional aid from Congress for colleges established under the land grant of 1862. An adverse minority report being of fered the report was tabled. The Committee on Miscellaneous Business reported a seriesof resolutions declaring the efforts of any class to in crease or decrease the value of labor, or the product of labor, as pernicious in their influence and against the interests of farmers ; that the eight-hour law is unwise, unjust, and a disturbing ele ment in the business of the whole coun try, and ought to be repealed. The resolutions were rejected by a large majority. A lengthy report from the Committee on Transportation was referred back for modification, and the Congress then ad journed. WHAT THOSE GRANGERS MEAN.— George Kimball, of Kansas, has been sick and unable to do his farm work this spring. Seventeen of the Burroak Grangers rigged their teams on Mon day and broke up twenty-seven acres of ground and left it ready for planting. There is .'something practical in that kind of Grange-work, and it has a smack of brotherly kindness in it that would make almost any half-decent man want to be a farmer and a Granger. The Devil Fish. 1 What an Kngluh I'rnfVaaor M)I OL Hl* Affair. Professor Lee Mrs of the Devil Ash; The arms of the octopus are not ned a* weapon* of constriction, compression, or Suffocation. They are eight tapering thong*, in ordinary specimen* about eighteen inches long, on each of which arc mounted, iu a double row, numer ous sucking disks, which decrease hi site toward tlie tin of the bintis, and act as so many dry cupping-glasses. There are normally about 240 of these suckers on each arui, making a total of about 1,920, 1 have counted more in some individuals. The cups themselves, by tlieir lutcrual mechanism for air nhaustiou, aud couaequont pressure of ! the outer atmosphere, adhere firmly to I any substance to wlueli they are ap plied, whether stone, fi*h, crustacean, I or flesh of man ; but iu tlie octopus ■ they have no power to puueture or j lacerate the skm, or to cause blood to flow. They are merely pneumatically prehensile organs, by" which tlie ani mal's prey is caught and held, by their | atmospheric adhesion to the surface of it* body. When experimenting ou tlie holding force of an octopus I have al , lowed it to tlx it* suckers firmly on my ; arm and the back of my hand, and bv pretending to try to pull them awav from ita grasp have caused it to exert it* utmost power of remittance aud reten tion, The only effect of this has been j that the vacuum produced an almost in distinguishable circular mark, corre sponding with the edge of the larger disks, and not nearly so distinct as would be caused by the application of a glass tube to the akin, ami the partial exhaustion of tlie air in it by drawing {it from the other end by the uioutli ami ! tongue. Iu some of the cephalopoda tlie outer circle of the cup* is a horuv ring, sharply serrated or dentaied around ita edge; and in other*, the ceutre of each cup ia provided with a sharp, strong hook, wlueh ia plunged deeply into the flesh of slippery prey for the better security of its hold ; but the cnttle-tUhcs thus furnished an*, un like the octopus, habitually swimmers, instead of rock-crawler*. The sessile arms of the octo|*Hls are considerably longer than those of the decapod*, or ten-armed cuttle-fishes, but the latter have, in addition to the eight oorre sjHiudmg limbs, two long tentacular arms, which, in some genera, are mar velous iu the perfection of their com pound apparatus for securing and hold ing a struggling captive. This arrange ment i* well suited to tlieir habit* and mode wf life. Animals purely swim mers, and which hunt and overtake their prey by speed, would be impeded by haviug to drag afttw them a bundle of leugtkv appendages trading heavily astern. But a long reach of arm is an advantage, instead of a hindrance, to tlie octopus ; for, although it can swim on occasion, it* ordinary habit is to re main lurking in some favorite cranny— its body thrust for protection well back in the interior of tho recess—its bright eyes keenly on tlie watch ; three or four of its arms firmly attached to the walls j of its hiding-place, the others gently waving, gliding, and feeling about iu the water, a* if to maintain ita vigilance aud keep itself always on the alert, and in readiness to pounce on any unfortu nate wayfarer that may pass near its den. To small fish, crustacean or mol lusk, the slightest contact with even j one of those little arms is fatal, lu i stantaueously a* pull of trigger bring* down a bird, or touch of electric wire explode* * torpedo or mining ftiae, the , pistons of the series of suckers are sim ultaneously drawn inward, the air is re moved from the pneumatic holders, and a vacuum created in each ; th* vic tim strives to escape ; a further retrac tion of the central part of the disk mattes all secure ; and, as arm after arm, containing a perfect mitrailleuse of inverted air-guns, takes horrid hold, battery after battery of them is brought ; to bear, aud tlie pressure of the air is great that nothing can effect the re laxation of their retentive power but | the destruction of the air-pump that works them, or the closing of the throt tle-valve by which they are connected with it. M. Hugo gives us the means of estimating the size of the body of the octopus which attacked Gilhatt. He tells us that its arms were ' nearly a metre (39 inchest long.' None of so great dimensions have, I believe, been lound in the English Channel, but it is not impossible that such exist. Grant ing this, tlie body of such an octopus would not be innch larger than a soda water bottle or a Florence flask, such as olive-oil is sold in ; and so the ' horri ble hag, which is a monster,' and into which you are to be inhaled aud drawn alive, "is but a small affair after all. The sucker, also, which the novelist savs ranged from the size of a five-franc fneoe (which I find to lie one and a talf inches in diameter ) to that of a split pea, would, commencing at the largest of them at the bases of the arms, lie f ram the size of a sixpence to that of the hem! of the smallest of pins. The plain truth is that the octopus and other cephalopoda obtain and eat their food very much like the rapacious birds. They are the falcons of the sea. Some of them, like the Onyclioteuthis, strike their prey with talons* and suckers also ; others, like the octopus, lay hold of it with suckers alone ; but they all tear the flesh with their beaks, "and swallow and digest their food in as un romantic a fashion as does hawk or vul ture. The Death of Dead-Headlsm. The Springfield Republican says : The widely-extended prevalence aad gross abnses of " dead-headism" in thia country are producing the natural re sult of a grand reaction, and the whole system ia being fast swept away. The last Congress ent it wholly out of the post-office. From and after the Ist of July, neither paper nor letter nor pack age of any kind ta to tie carried in the mails without pay. Thia abolition of the free privileges of the newspapers ia not a very great thing in itself. At the outside it will not bring a-lialf million dollars into tlie public treasury, but it enforces a principle which is altogether right, and we regret to see any portion of the press deprecating and denounc ing it. The free circulation in the conn ties was an especial demand of and boon to the country press ; but we do not believe its loss will be found to harm any real good local paper. No man will give up his county paper, if it is made of any value to him for the matter of 20 cents postage. If it is not worth thatsnm additional to the old price, it is not worth an existence. The payment of postage on their exchanges will generally lie regarded at first a greater bnrden to the newspapers; bnt in the end it will prove greatly econom ical to the press, by reducing the num ber of exchanges which they send and receive. Nearly evarv paper has twice or thrice as many exchanges aa it really needs. The Art of Scalping. The troops in the Modoc region are adopting th# savage mode of warfare to some extent. They even scalp their victims on the field, as the account of the late fighting informs us. Binoe scalps are to be among tho trophies of modern warfare it is well to know how they are taken, cured and preserved. General Custer introduces the subject. He says; "These scalps, according to the bar barons custom, were not composed of the entire covering of the head, but of a small surface surrounding the crown, and usually from three to four inches in diameter, constituting what is termed the scalp lock. To preserve the scalp from decay, a small lioop of about dou ble the diameter of the scalp is pre pared from a small withe, which grows on tlie banks of some of the streams of the West. The scalp is placed inside the hoop and properly stretched by a net hoop. "After being" properly cured, tha dried fleshy portion of the scalp is orna mented in bright colors, according to the taste of the captor, sometimes the ■addition of beads of bright and varied colars being made to heighten the ef fect. In other instances tho hair is dyed, either to a beautiful yellow or golden or to crimson." A Scene In lloxtou. Recently a young man, imorly but neatly clad, applied for lodgiug* at a police station, wtatiug that he had iust arrived in tho city, and wa* )H<uuile* and heart-broken. ll* was slow ly d.iing with consumption, and, alone in tho cold world be sought only a place to re main until he died. Ilia cheek* were sunken, and hi* hollow voice Urn plainly proved the truth of hi* atory. " I can do nothing but put you in a warm eel)," said the kind-heai ted lieutenant; "nothing but that, and von could scarcely breathe there. If f **ml you to the t'ity Hospital, you will be turned away, for thev receive no incurable eases there. ltaveuT you relative* who will take care of you? ' " Not one, air. I haven't a relative tu the world who knows of my existence. I can't stay long here, ir. It won't be only a little while tliat 1 shall eumlwr you with my presence. Can't 1 And somewhere some corner where 1 can lay down and wait? Fr humanity's sake, air, don't tell me that a dying man must go into the street." And here the poor fellow broke down, and the tear* which ran dowu hi* cheeks and the aob* of agony which convulsed his frame shewed the bitterness which he suffered. The lieu tenant sadly shook las head, and, after a small collection had l>eeu made in hi* behalf, the poor boy sought refuge clue where. Hi* future is unknown. The statement, however, shows the neces sity of some sort of au institution w here the sick and homeless pool can be shel tered. At present the authorities can do nothing with application* like the above, except to tender the cheerless shelter of a prison cell. A Gas-Propelled Host. Mr. William A. Leggo, of Montreal, Canada, is the author of a novel method of propelling >rßM'li, dooiglud especi ally for canal boats, to overcome the difficulties of horse towage. He dis card# steam wheels, rope-, and other common contrivance*. All that Mr. Leggo uses is a large leut pipe which is attached to the atom of the vessel, the mouth of the pipe being placed un der water, pointing stern-wise. The pipe rises to the deck, and at the npper end of the pipe is a gas light and valves that open inwardly for the admission of hydrogen gas and atmospheric air. As ooou us enough hydrogen and air have entered, to wit, two parts of hydrogen to one of oxygen, the mixture takes tire from the gas light, an explusiou en sue#, the valves are closed, and the great pressure produced tiuila vent at the moutli of the pipe, acting against the water and driving the boat idiead. The volvea then close again, the gases dow in, a new explosion takes place, and so on. These explosions follow with as much rapidity us the motions of a steam engine piston, and thus the boat soon acquires a regular velocity. Whether the manufacture, coat, atid storage of the gas, and the working of the gaseous motor will equal the economies and conveniences of steam power and its propel hug appur tenances remains for Mr. Leggo to ascertain by trial. But we think he will find that steam is the cheapest and simplest motor, take it all in ail. The same amount of fuel that he requires to produce the gaa and work the gas en ?;iue will yield a greater amount of use ul motive power if used in cwunectiou with a proper boiler, engine and pro peller. Australian Method of Cooling Water. Largo buckets of canvas, says the liulletin du A/user, are made about 4 feet high and 15 inches in diameter. A bag of linen or flannel stretched across the top serves as a sieve ami a siphon ; a wooden cork and a canvas tulte inserted l>elow the level of the water are used to draw off the content*. These reservoir* are suspended to brunches of troea in aliadv place# and exposed to the light breexes which in summer always exist in Australia. JFmni the damp snrfuce of the vessels a rapid evaporation takes place, wliich keep# the water within at a temperature much lower than that of the surrounding air. This arrangement is on the same principle as the water jsra, or "mon key*," used in tropical countries and the east of Europe. The lntter are merely nnglazed earthenware jnga, hav ing a Very small neck anil a spout. We have never seen them used in the United State*, but should imagine that during the summer months, and particularly in event of ice famines, such as we have been threatened with daring the past two years, they might be advantageous ly employed. The jars may be made by any potter from ordinary clay st a very small expense. Bv suspending them in a current of air, the water with in is kept daring the hottest weather at a delicious coolness, and at a tempera ture much more healthful than that produced by the copious use of iee. The vessels may be molded in fancy shapes, so as to 1m? ornamental for table nse. Tunnelling the Rocky Mountain*. Hays the Denver, Col., Xrtrt .- A scheme is now on foot for rnuning a tunnel through the Rocky Mountains. This may aecm a prodigious enterprise at first t the casual reader, but the parties who have the matter in hand are sanguine of the moat complete auccesa. For some time paat gentlemen have been investigating the matter, and they have arrived at the concluaion that the ' project ia feasible in every particular. The idea ia to tunnel the mountains from a point about one mile below Black Hawk to the Middle Park, running in i the northwesterlv direction. The tnn -1 nel to be run will, it is presumed, cut many rich veins of gold and silver, and thns a great mining interest be devel oped. Money for the prosecution of the work is furnished by English capi talists, who are sanguine of the ultimate success of the enterprise. Home idea of the magnitude of the task may lw> gathered from the fact tkat the tunnel, if completed, will be twelve miles in length. It ia intended to make it large enough to be used for railway purjwses, | and so, if a read is ever to he construct ed to the Middle Park, it will find its eonvenient route through the tunnel. It will he called the Hierra Madre Tun nel Company, and the incorporation papers for its" organization have already been filed. A New Idea In Building Wire netting for plastering is being rapidly introduced to take the place of laths. It taken less lsbor to place on the walls, ia more continuous, aud will | not bum. Coarse netting, with one inch mesh, and made of strong wire, is found to answer best For ornamental cornice work it is especially valuable, for it ran he lient into any tleaired form. Secured to iron studding in a brick building, our greatest danger on ac count of fire would he removed. A still further application of this plan is to make round bags of wire, resembling barrels, and to coat them inside ami out with cement. When it hardens thev resemble stone barrels. Filled t with sand and sunk in rows RUII masses, they make excellent building material for break-watera. Another extension of the idea has been tried with success in England. It consists is making iron framed buildings, covering them with the wire netting, and spending concrete on both sides. It is claimed that a bouse—walls, floors, roofs, doors, par titions and all—has been built, that is strong, firm, and absolutely incombus tible. Various applications of the use I of wire netting, and plaster or cement, I readily suggest themselves, and the matter is worthy of the attention of me i chanica and builders. UNAPFiutciATm. "Well, Father Brown, how did yon like my sermon yesterday?" asked a young preacher. "Ye aee, parson," was the reply, "I haven't a fair chanco at them sermons of ysurn. I'm an old man now, and have to set putty well back by the stove; and thcre'a old Miss Bmith, n' Widder Taff, n'Mrs. Rylan's darters, and Naliby Birt, n' all the rest, settling in front of me, with their mouths wide open, a swallerin' down all th# best of the ser mon ; n' what gits down to me is putty poor stuff, parson, putty poor stuff Mermaids—Their Appearenee Hi £ea- In 1737, according to a HootUah mnga tine, the crew of a ship newly arrived in th Thame* river from the F-ast Indies, rejiorted that ill Urn ialaiul of Mauritius they had partaken of a tuer maiit, the flout of which #iw a great deal like veal. The qiormaid weighed three or f<nr hundred weight—rather a buxom specimen ! The head ** par ticularly large, and aowere the feature*, which differed hut little from tho* of a mau or woman. The story telle of two of them, one with a hoard four or tive inches long, the other much morn femi nine. " When they are llr*t takeu," the narrator proceeds to say, "which is often on the ground, they cry and grieve with great scusibilitv." Alaiut Uie same time a atory came worn Vigo, in Spain, to the effect that aomc fisher uieu on that coast had caught a aort of a merman, live feet and a half from hand to foot. The head wax like that of a goat, with a long beard and will- I ache, a black akin, aomewhat hairy, a very long neck, abort arm*, baud* longer and larger than they ought to l>e in proportion, and long linger*, with nail* like claw*; webbed toe*, and a flu -at the lower part of the back. The magazine* for 1775 gave au ac count of a mermaid which was captured in the Ijcvant and brought to lxuulon. One of the learued periodical* gravely told its reader* that the mermaid had the complexion and feature* of a Euro pmut, like thoae of a young wouiau; that the eye* were light blue, the nose amall and elegantly formed, the mouth Kiuall, the lip* thin, "but the edge* of them round like thoae of * codflah that the U-eth were small, regular, and white ; that the neck was well rounded, and that the ears were like those of the eel, "but placed like those of the human species, with gills for respiration, which appear like curls." There was uo hair on the head, but "rolls, which, at a dis tance, might be taken for curia." There was a flu rising pyramidally from the temples, "forming a foretop, like that of a lady's head-dress." The bust was nearly like that of a young damsel, a proper orthodox uierniaideu, but, alas 1 all below the waist was exactly like a fish. Three set* of flits below the waist, one sltove the other, enabled her to swim. Finally, "It is said to have ail enchanting voice, which it never ex erts except before a storm." The writer in the Annua/ JtcaUUr probably did not see this mermaid, which the frVn- Stayasin* described as being only three feet high. It was afterward proved to be a cheat, made from the skull of the angle shark. A Welsh farmer named Reynolds, living at IVa-v-hold in 17M2, saw a something which he appears to have believed to be a mermaid ; he told the story to Dr. George Phillips, who told it to* Mr*. Moore, who told it to a young lady pupil of hers, who wrote out an account ef it for Mrs. Morgan, who in serted it in her " Tour to Milford Haven." How much the story gained on ita trav els—like the Three Black Crows, or the parlor game of Russian Scandal—we arc left to find out for ourselves ; but its ultimate form was nearly as follow* : One morning, iust outside the cliff, Reynolds saw what seemed to him to In a person bathing in the sea, with the upper part of the bodv out of the water. On nearer view, it looked like the upper part of a person iu a tub, a youth, say, of sixteeu or eighteen years of age, with nice white skin ; a sort of brown ish I Holy and a toil were under the water. The head and laxly were human in form, but the arms and hands thick in proportion to length, while the nose, running up high between the eyes, ter minated rather sharply. The mysterious being looked attentively at Reynolds, and at the cliffs, and at tlie birds flying in the air, with a wild gaze, but uttered no cry. Reynolds went to bring some companions to see tlie merman or mer maid, but when he returned it had dis appeared. If we like to snppoee that Reynolds had seen some kind of seal, and thst the narration had grown to something else by repeating from mouth to mouth, perhntm we shall not be very far wrong.— All (fit Year Hound. Philosophical IVdestrianlim. Walking, says a writer in the June number of the Galaxy, brings out the true character of a man. The devil nev er yet asked ht# victims to take a walk with him. Yon will not lie long iu find ing your companion out All dtaguu ea will fall away from him. As his pores open bis character is laid bare. His dceitost ai d most private self will come to the top. It matters little whom you ride with, so he be not a pickpocket; far toth of you will, very likely, settle down closer and firmer in your reserve, shaken down like a measure of corn by the jolting, as the journey proceeds. But walking ia a mora vita) copartner ship ; the relation is a closer and svin patl ictic one, and you do not feel like walking ten paces'with a stranger with out speaking to him. Hence the fastid iousness of the professional walker in choosing or admitting s companion, and hence the troth of a remark of Emer son, that yon will generally faro 1 tetter to take your dog than to invite your neighftor. Your cur-dog is a true pedes trian, and your neighbor it very likely a small politician. The dog enters thor oughly into the spirit of the enterprise; he is hot indifferent or preoccupied; he is constantly sniffing adventure, lap# at everv spring, looks upon every field and wooii as a new world to be explored, is ever on some fresh trail, knows some thing important will happen a little further on, gaxes with the true wonder seeing eye* whatever the spot or what ever the*rood, finds it good to lie there —in short, is just that happy, delicious, excursive vagabond that touches one at so many points, and whose human pro totype 'in a companion robs miles and leagues of half their fatigue. " They Say." "They nay" often tell* tbnt which ia not true" Ha ia about the worat author ity TOU can piodnco to snpjwrt the credibility of your statement. Scarce ly ever is'a suspicious report put in cir culati >a, but thia Mr. " They Say," ia the author of it; aud ho always escapes responsibility and detection, because, living nowhere, he cannot bo tonnd. Who said that Mr. , the merchant, was in a failing condition ? " Why, "They Say" so. On what authority do von affirm that neighbor J. lias been in had company ? Why. " They Say" so. Is it a fact tiiat Miss V. ia not so cir cumspect as she should be ? WIIT, "They Say" so. Have nothing to do with that "Mr. "They Hay;" he ia a half-brother to Mr. Nobody, who always does all the mischief, and lives nowhere but in the inventive brain of those who, undeserving respect, themselves, are desirous to pull down to their own level. We always suspect the truth of a report which comes from the authority of "They Hay." Will Not Leave Home. Mr. Bailey, of the Panbury News, in reply to an urgent call, backed ly offers of manr ducats, to go to New York, says: •' Vour bigcity likes fresh oranges; but it very quickly sucks them dry, and throws them away. I don't want to be ■ticked dry right off; so I think I'll re main where 1 am. I've Been from my country home ho* - clever fellows turn out who go to New York with grand ex pectations. They gave up something, and in the end found nothing. I am glad you want to have me come, and I'm gladder that I don't want to go. Panbury, insignificant village as it is, in good enough for me ; and as I don't want to steal anything, or get mnrdered, or get up a reputation for genius, I re spectfully but firmly decline to pitch my tent in Ootharn.' 0 ritT - Pi.art* it.— To make court plaster, take half an ounce of benzine and six ounces of rectified spirits ; dis solve and strain. Then take one our ce of isinglass and half a pint of hot water ; dissolve, and strain separately from the former. Mix the two, at d then set them aside to 0001, when a jel'v will be formed; warm this, and bru> h it ten or twelve times over a piece t f black silk stretched smooth. When dry, brush it with a solution made from four ounces of Chian turpentine and six onnoes of tincture of benzine. F.qual to lite Situation. A rich broker in Han Francisco lately made a desperate effort to prevent hi* pretty daughter from marrying a man who mended harness for #OS a month. The girl loved the man, and seemed de termined to go ahead with tho business iif true love. The broker offered the haruosa-memler ll.fiUO to deoert his daughter forever. The young man re fused the bribe as uo equivalent for his claim. He then went to the young man's employer* to got thorn to discharge him. They could not think of doing this, as he was a good, faithful fellow, and gave entire satisfaction—no the old broker didn't know what to de next. His daughter helped him out of his un certainty, but plunged him iuto deeper trouble than he hod ever known before. Hhe disappeared one day, and search for her proved unavailing. In two or three day* traces of the missing girl were found in the office of • Justice of the I'eace. There was a record there of her marriage with the faithful harness mender. Ihe broker drsfied his house iu mourning according to the custom of his religion, end of course regards his daughter as dead. Hhe immediately found a place a* sale*woman in a mil linery store at #45 a month, and #45 and &tis make #111), which is Hot so bad a flgure after all for s young married couple to cut. lit is just the sort of beginning that founds s happy home, iuto which mothcrw-iii-law are not apt to enter with their disturbing influences, and fathers do uot break through and steal their daughters away. The Fetish of Society. In the A toad tun there are some sharp •bservationa on " the parlor of the period." Among those fetishes which we wor ship with slavish idolatry, noue is more tboronghly our master than the parlor of the jieriod. Coming in from the cheerful glare of daylight, the unhappy caller is blindly nsuered iuto the mys terious chain lK-V of horror*. Groping his way to find a seat, lis hits his knee against the sharp cornered ottoman which lurks in umbnsh on his path, or catches his feet in the sprawliug legs of the large easel on which it is now the fsahion to display engravings and paint ings, or rather the frames which are supposed to set off to advantage these work* of art. As his eyes become ac customed to the dim twilight, he grad ually discerns chairs scattered around at regular distances, more ottomans, a table or two with knick-knacks, and, looming up for away, s grim piano-forte carefully covered with a gloomy pall. It is too dork to read, too dark to exam ine the knick-knacks, too dark to do anything but impatiently await the tardy hostess. Ten minutes "of a life which ought at least to shore at will in God's gifts of light and air, are lost every time we visit a friend and are kept wait ing in the dismal receptacle we eali a parlor. Compulsory Vaccination. The beuighted Asistios, says an ex change, fiutl, to their surprise, that Russia has a very summary method of practically enforcing the behests of European civilisation. Great Britain's temporizing method of dealing with the Orientals finds no favor iu Russian eyes. Recently small-pux made its ap jH-arauce in one of the Asiatic poaae*- sions of the Czar. His officers at the post requested the people to come and be vaccinated. Compliance with tlas invitation being summarily refused, s few medical officers, well supplied with lancets and vaccine virus, were detailed for active service. These surgeons were accompanied bva regiment of Cossacks. The dashing lancers ran down every man, woman. and child in the infected district, and held them each and all until the physicians pronounced them thoroughly vaccinator. This is ad vancing humanity at the point# of the lance and lancet. Th* Congress appointed the time and place of the next meeting of the Ameri can Agricultural Congress at Atlanta on the second Wednesday in May ueai vear. EDITORIAL Mortem are so common that it is almost impossible for au edi tor to express his honest opinion of the merits of any article without being sus pected of Interested motive#. This fact, however, shall not deter ns from saying what we thiuk of a new addition to* the Materia Medics to which our at tention ha* been recently directed. We refer to I>R. J. WALKER'S CALIFORNIA VINF.fi AII BITTERS, n remedy which is making its way into wore families just now than all tiie other advertised medi cine# put together. Its popularity, as far as we can judge, is not based on empty pretention. There seem# to be no question about the potency of it* tonic and alterative properties, while it possesses the great negative recommen dation of containing neither alcohol nor mineral poison. That it ia a specific for Indigestion, Biliousness, Constipa tion. and many complaints of nervous origin, we have reason to know ; and we are assured on good authority that as a general invigurant, regulating and pnrifying medicine, it lias no eqnal. It is stated that its ingredients, (obtained from tk* wilds of California,) are new to the medical jrorld ; and its extraor dinarv effect# ccrtainlv warrant the con clusion that it is s compound of agents hitherto unknown. If popnlority is any criterion, there can lie no doubt of the efficiency of the VIVEOAB HITTERH, for the sale of the article is immense and continually increasing. Own. A Virginia journal givea notice that if anv of its patrons fail to get the pa lter tWv ahonld call at the office and subscribe. Thia journal " means busi ness. " TAIN! PAIN!!" PAIN 11! WlirßK 19 TUT REIIKVKH t Ittdtn, JOB stu and It tn that farort t Host Remedy. PKIIKY OA VIS" PAIN-KILLER. II km k**n tested tn every variety of climate, and ly almoat every nation known to Ameilran*. It la the ilni>it constant companion and IneaUin. able friend of Ika mtaetonaty and travaler, on tea dnd land, and noon* akeold Impel on our lakts or rtoert trrf haul if. Ira Mia IT* aaa tTswapaassß. If ynn are angering frost IRTKRNAt FAIR, Twenty In Thirty J> in a lA!tit Hater mil al moat tuatantly cure you. Thrrt u notAiny tifttal to it. In a few momenta t cur re CMer, Crompo, Spneeaa, Heart-bum, Piorrh so, Ovmotoru. Phut. N'md I* tAe U uele. ,%<ur Stomach, Itytptpno. .VI Htadorht Cnrea CtIot.FR 4. * hen all other Reratdla* Fall. It cure I not not Stlit/ /ram AAiny TVefA In tawttos* of Ih* country where Pavaa A*t> Auea pieralla, there la no remedy held la greater oat nam Foa Fays* alio AOPS—Take Hire* tableapor-n ftol* of lb* Tain-Ki/ttr In about half a ptnl of hot water, well tweelrncd with m< laeera aa the attack lacnminaon R atblns freely the cheat, bark and bowala with tbe Tain hiUtr at lb* tame time. Re peal Ih* dome in Iwrnly tntnulea If the firel doea not atop iha bill. Should II produce vomiting (and It probably will, if the alomarh it eery f nil. take n little* Tain- Killer tn cold water aweeiened with aittfar after each apaam. Pereavernnc# In Ihe above treatment hae cured many aever* and okettuato caaea oflhl* diaeaae. oar*T " cnon***" ataiM TAIS-KlLLktt. It la an Raternal and internal Sesieily For Sum mer Complaint " *t'F "tker form at U.wel dteeaae tn children t aituita, It le an almoat certain car*, and hae without doubt, keea more anrccaaful in curtna the varlona ktnda ot CHOI.ERA than any other known remedyvr the mott aktllfal phyttetan. In India. Africa and China, where thia dreaofnl dia eaae la more or laea prevalent, the Tain-k'omn eonatdered by the uatlvea aa well aa by Rnmpean rratdenta In th<>ae rltmatea. A Bt'KR RFMRPT ; and while It I* a moat cfflcient remedy for |>a|tt. It la a perfectly aaf* medttlneln the moel uuaktllfnl handa It haa become a h< tiaehold remedy, from the fart that It al*'a immediate and permanent re lief It ta a purely vegetable preparation, made from the beat and pnreat Material*, tafe to keep and ue In every family. It la recommended by phyalctana and peraon* of all claaaea, and to-day, after a public trial of thtrly yeare the average life of man-It atanda unrivalled and unexcelled apreadtng It* uaafulnaa* over Ih* wtd* world. Direction* accompany each Bottle. Fries tScU.,Wcta., and 91 per Bottle. FKRBT DAVIS A SOB. Freprtatora, Providence, It I. J. *. HARRIS d"to . Cincinnati, 0 , Proprietor* for th# Weatars and South Waitarn State*. For aale by all Medlctn* Dealer*. fos uui sgoijuu T JOni* F nr.WBY NawTork. Iltto 0. OOODWIJi, notion. JuHBSOB. HOLOWAT A CO.. Philadelphia. Ural -nit Oldeat F-mllF Nedtrlsr.-lht /bnT* I.trrr Im-igorafor-a purely Vairrtablr Ottkar ii • and J'.itir (i r Pyepepeta.Couettpatton,Debility, Sick Headache, Bllloue Altscka. to I all derange ment* of Llvrt, Slomarh and Rowel*. Atk your DruggHt for It. Htuart nf tmitalKmi. KinsKT DISBARS, DROPSY, and all dtaaataa of tha Kiintya and llladder, can ba cured by th* uaa of llcirT'a Kkhitti*. Thouiand* that bare boon glean up by tboir Phyatclana to die, haee boon tpaodlly cuted by th* ate of !Hr*r' Richidt Bant tnany addrcaa areuroly pitokod on receipt of on# dollar and t cnty •** <sl SM conta. Sand fur illna tratad pamphlet to William R. Ci.aik* Bole Pro prtatnr. Providence, B. I. FOB BbOTCHBI, PfirLlii, TBTTBB, full Rhmini, •nd all bkln Dimaara, Jjyne'a Alterative is a ui remedy. It puTlftrl the blood, and removea all obatrncttuna In tha poraa of the akin. Dm. liuuiaiiisii'i PilU are not a purgattTa. They euro oTery form of Vrr on(t Ague immeni attly, without any >lchnia or diacomfort. French Love and Patriotism. The UauUAt, in announcing thai a young lady of rank reoontlj took the veil m a Parisian nunnery, thinks it proper to " reveal a fact " whick It evi dently thinks too good to be iMt. Hat father'* chateau during the war became the headquarters of some twenty Prus sian oflloer*. One day, -on sitting down to dinner, "one of them forgoi himself s far as to claap the young lady around the waiat. Hhe took up a king knife and stabbed him to the heart Bbe was arretted, but released in a day or two on the order of Prince Frederic Karl." Another atory ia that au officer, who fought moet gallantly at Mate, wae sent a prisoner to Germany, and while there fell in love with ana married a German girl. The other day ha re turned to Pari*, and went to his dub as usual, but to his sttrprioe he was imme diately expelled, on the ground that he had married into a Prussian family. Da J. Hrxiwia organist of Wt Pawl's Cathedral, London, has written s note to the agent for the Manna 6 HXMLIK Cabinet Organs, in London, expressing his great satisfaction with them, and especially commending their tones a* " remarkably pure and free from readi ness."—(Aim. Toothache proceeds from ague in the face, oiwrauug upun the EXPOSED OMVS at a -1 *vj tooth. Huh the gua> thnronabljr with the Roger, wet with Johnmm'i dnedpwr 14*4- mmt heal the face well, and lap a muoel sat with the Unuaetti us the face, Wu gut s kuto of the Uu tinsel into tho cavity of the tooth on oStton. —Com. The system frequently gets out of or dar, ffitid ffih'HlM b* ai ifMty rwfc'uUi'H! tlflft •4JU#t troubles will ensue ; when physic fat needed take farittm't PmryaMm I1U>; they sre a eein, wtji llfMMlltlfl, "Miff* UiiUJll BUhJjuuiA,- (jUIW. CHAPWCP BOM, face, rough skin, ptoiphM. ring-worms. aab-rhotua, and Mhar Utaneiols tJfaeUO(A tfttf *4, KIJ tit# miV soft and smooth, by using ths Jextras T*s H<*r. Ms-la by Csawau* Hmai) A Co , Jtsw York. Bs crism te get the JsMfsr Tar hu*t>. ■nods by us, as that* ars atony imitations mads with common tor which are werthlese.—vm. Ftsoo's IKMTAMT RKUXP has stood twsuty years' teat. Is warranted to give tm mtduur rrfu-f to all Rheumatic, NeersMe. flood. Ear and Back aebaa. or mourn* refunded. CK!STAIK>!U£ Exrvuno* Ham Dn is LBS must sure and eomplMa PRE; oration EL MA kind in the world ; Us SSAETA sis LIE character TISNNLW. its UTTLA natural, lis quali ties enduring. — Com. HEBH*4 of Health. The richest of at L* poor teJeeS, The runner, plestast SAL .)••♦ EE it It, U eery apt U> lav M opes to IS it hied of depfodeuoa. Tse U|T omporatare weskase the Mr ssd Mapetra UA etulilv. osd as th airaatrth and WWTL OF the ijma DACLICS, diaeaee fuUovin# la the trail of de mur, ehtsiae S toothold aonowhstw ta the Irene, is the eioatseh. p*rapa,AF the IIMI.BT tae heed, or the howets, or th* NERVES ta eaauaee, there fore, it It of treat tnportaaae to ineptha hod* etrosp. end ell LU httsm LA healthy MUtlly. To promoten rather to taaarwthte aeadlMOß 01 the ho nan narhias. ROE tetter** SU-neeh Bitter* ihe etaadsrd toMcel the sat. TE the EAO thtaa seed tel. SEE ehotaeoaw tnrtauraatlt ttnsde at the bead of all nsdlotaes AD the etase to whteh H BE tone* Bet tats it EMIR one of Ue away reltoii yropertlee luntldaad paialeoe eatherttoaebue. lie sou btllowe properU*e. aad the certainty with which II eltmtaotea HAW the hi nod end other samel Bali* ell send eutter that wade he produce or footer dieaaes. alnoct eautie thte eeuaderfal preeaauee end ewrsuee, to the north ehaeed sp pelUttoa, E saieereal nedictae It LE so hsrnlrte that ibe Met delicate fensle lovatM way tahe II ntth eetety . yet as poewefal that MferadMhau or aervowe eieww.no PHEEE of Itdie** TWO. no wee of chronic cpnailpstuw, no if pe ID UtHSlttact tower, con reeiet Its ennitnry vporsUoti. The Market*. nrw ton*. Heel Cnttie— TNME to Bun RUIMTAF .Ut*a .IS* First naehtf tig* J4 HNOUNDQ—Btv......... .11 A JAG Unhutrt ttilii 1h11b... .Ha .ltg inferior or lovsslfreds .GE .11 THICK Cows *AJ DTK lluen—lsrr.... g .t Drwne-D Jgd J#6g Itljeep JB4 a .OSR ttiatwa—Mtddime ' N .*'g Wait ii Ultra Wmierc............... dso e 4.M PTOTE I. tire. . E T.EO WHWL— Red Wodnm t. A I.St Jto. aspnne I. tUhl LUE . .. H i JH liertey -idijit'.'.V.V.V.V.V.*.V..'"'.V.'.U >4 E L"*> (ME —ML ted WESTERN .41 e .41 F torn - Mind W iwtem MN .T# Hey U# D 1.41 strew 80 a Ll# Hope TF* *4*44-*•* . S .11 IVWH -gee* „T. 14.08 Lard .*• .04 Petroleum—Osdr : h> Itefiraed lg iluUer— Stele M a . • hto, rtac . E ja TrUo* If m W Western ordinary .14 S .18 Pectievlrente Bite.... ..... .24 e . CXnwe Stele T'ectory .14 • ,14K ** TFTJUSTAX&ML . ...... r. .. ,01 § . T Ohte .LA a .LIG KASE—-Mate - OS a. trmiA LLECF Ohttle 4 "4 a• KUEEP ..... 414 a * 24 LLO*. Lite 4.4# A 4.T1 Floor *.# aIo.DO Whewt No. 2 Sprtac .. 1* *1.41 •lorn. .id a ,41 : TNU . a . Ey*> JM M JM Ihrtey H • .A Lard V „.... .udge .H IUUI. Wheel I.ST ALS Rye—mate E..„ .W a LTO Oars— Mixed Sttgd ihrley -tato V M DLH data Mete Jt S 4 H R.N EE.. Flour 1.4* I L.tl Wheal— Wee tern Bod .... L.dt • ITS Oora-TeUvw .44 A.* Itued ...A*:.... . a . PrtrohKint— Crude 13 \ HEFLMD .leg Clover Seed I.oS ■ tS TUuothf RT4 a ATS MUtMOOL OottOh— TlOW tolddllß# .18 a .ILK' Flour— Extra I. U4 a V.TO Wheet LdS AL.fl Com .13 • .-TO Cere. 44 MM WILL VOT' RVRM U() WKBT I A weetern SEWI peper unwlHloyty ffree ttiets forntetimi you TNTTE U tahen reawlerlf. in lit ■ eel will appear bnlh the *-xvO FED had H-etoree at the •neleene. eliew'-. lew*, market*, people.de , which en TMEITPRMFI'**. paper win hoi • The Atehimm (Keneaet MBKMI a weetern eon paper. Try II Snjslre free. •# peer. ll Sß el* NOE . ft to; INTLY. own veer, sWD on* no . IT 0. The** Plllt are coinpoaed ex- tnaivrty nf*a**nbt* Ingredient*. and altk. Utfh they entirely eupeiaed* the ear of merrsry, do not Imm U| of lit taffnoM eßect* Til) act ' trretly up-m tit* lifrt. and ut a valuable r.nol) In all wee* of era*. ernes* re eutti-a from a dianrdared alate of lhat or rati IJrit rnmplatut. Pit aa DlesMere, MUaihaa. Sir* llee-i*. ha, Ti ilslf ana other Fever*. d< Ac all •nnnnl In the frar air of f (unrfk HaMII Fit. i Par talc fey Ml luaffli'i and Oaalrra Br. Parttllr* Pellets* or !-.l**l-1, *; Hoot and He *1 lime, Ami KOOo Oranwlaa 'ha *• Uttlo COM Cathartic, or %•** •* /-TO Pivxe, scarcely larwerlUian war lurd seed, v*t upwuwiuag J* n h aterk. poosraatargarspulrta* pdl*. b*g>* eofee.liv MM.I flcevrrfd, irt frtr/p rfrrmttmf •tfiaitailrvlir mjww ul*r Ctrl ii twn( ihem. For J Tin ltd Ice, Head ac ho* lm|Mtr ill wad. ConaCi put lun* Pain In .shoulders* Wglktnrsa of C hest, Dlxalitraa, a An? Krarttttoaa. Mad WIS: BITVMKS to 111 Mil, IlloaVd stomach* Mich Colored t rlai\lomy lorNl- Intra* taho Dr. Poll eta. i N> or two, totes daiilhiur a tune, sill cur* Pimples* Itloteti'V Rrnpllans, Hollo, Ncrofnlano SMI sad * Ira leal Affections of VUln, Throat and Boites, No thaas w*t or parte h rd Kirn, but frja frotk sod railhlt in mk. 2 6 .] cents, by dii'-siius at ft afdoKit. Msmiftr tnrrd at Ut* World's lli/pensary. New. I *, U. *4 *A Wert Scaoct^St.. Ih. rr AU>, N V. • Honuiiiul ( hronM nuM free for M cte ' i) Agente wanted SOLES * Ot., Madfrd, Mux ; mraeiur tnnm, t !BiUar*i E*rt Bitten *rt*Olt***l? MWMBWI. w I M kltay imo i— - ue (or * at nan, and tana ft— rtfO-MM that hilt ratal m-iti > 11. Marr-aa. M. Ik. l hata. Parti r- Mi ■ Oxg •" 1 BITTERS I tar* natal It la taa yrartic* villi total rtaaita, aad -to 0.1 batata!* la Wta It aa a aalaabla rataady, pat tiaolartr la uMaa •( lb* kMaaya. J. T. Ualway M. I*.. UarakU, Pi.: Pttrini OmmmMl I WMTaTS paoa* Btai-aaafM lataaat eu* *•• an.yalhlt. Wi--*e*dUi and Hrdrnpaibk wiianl bad .'.II. .s I >■ ■lt ibaaaaat aflw-aataat re—ly tat (H*ta4 Ibr IMaaiaaa trlalae tea a Ptwrdtatal S—aafc, 14a*r. Kidaara w Satrala. r Jtt&WUV&Vrim' - -at . h-tarfti! asaMaaUaa at MadMaat llarw ba aw mm tat krtal tar aaa| rtan ftaa aa *C***W afcillia at tha kMatra. •ad bundled# of bl friaad, at Waablnataa and taaaaawt ktonr Uiat ha attribaltal tha prataaaatlaa af bla Ufa la tfeii Croat Muratle. XaUlai ataa rnicrml hla. MUMITM MTTlit, IUIM tint TtAU ttll $i nnn REWARD U>J.#VVV For any eaaa of Blind, Ulead- _ In*, I tolling, or Ulcerated Tt#*Wrfl >'•• that L>S 818 U S I'IU AVCWCUU HKMKBT ladle to car*. It la pratiarad axpieeely to euro thePUee and rothlng Ota.. BOLD IT MX DHtfOOIBTB. PEICK IT wowncuß.r^=iEW&S!L' tote otititut bora*. diat>mimc; docimu! nqeih •d: fait IMnA and waloahleeeeiieeofsaodaaeit ~—TA AOBHTB wanted in town and eoon- T E £ to tell TEA*. or get ur dub order*. tor the largest Tea Company to America, importer!' price* and iuducemeut* to agent*. Bend far circular. Addreta, BOBBET WELLS, *S Vetey Street, Mew York. MOTHERS! MOTHERS. MOTHERS! tOBJtMTfa JSSo.;srassr two fto* ereessi# resrereew Ire trea ass* set* ssvaa-rsu iso scccsa* IS TMCKTSAKM of oasss It art saty rsttsvss ttos stotlS row pale, Sal lav* sretst tssstnire* •"* tarsal* sorfaats aOUUtf,** 0a UHs SO# eimrgf to. (As wksts systaas. ft Wit aire tretautly iua,a _ Orlping ef th* lewala and Vlod Oriw *r fcsiiar# tt ik* nssv *a *mv stwtnr ts ran wet4. is >u ei re otsssrssv are uuaau*# is cniUiass, wkstast aristue fros isatbia# u, any m aasts. bMMuS|pw it, astars,tt wtnmv* rest U fere IsUsf and Baaltfc te Tear lafaata S* set* as* sail ire "Mm. Window* lestbtag ■jnrep," "re*********** " " CD * THI * r>ui " •old hp Dregtrtstt tkreegkret the Wectd. SI. , ' .'aPSf*.-*' J ( ..|jpP<||il|l !h [IEBMADOR^ Weed Ore SUus. - tndremisrkei of *d kisds, Mpfatbcrte. V> outfit, Hatum, Bun* Spmtre.Rli—if. Oaro Tkmre. •writhreaf ths Okiadt. IdSSMUMUOU at ttos fot Mu foot Snre hits*, CUlUains, l*Uc, Set gUogs, sod ail kurre. ,b*d for flea at, -fresh Wreedn OstU. riih mm, Sptelre.Brre-a. Crw-ksd tMr.Vat Boat. AM UaUs. ftysvio*. hvwwy. K-relre. * Ijtmriusw. tred Orects, hcreuhss. ur Oraeat, Wangs, Mow* itrereipsr. This truly wsadarril UDUbmiu <awv..'d ky b wtsi dTnr.tt-saxTA:it. tare profeeterre Cksmtoiry and MuUmmMo* to IS* cuaire Lterei leautum,** OnatoaOwaty, N V hi cspwharettag for ik j v*t of nulrtag IVusai* And. kr natttor ttos yenu, todiusot wtitfi u e ouMtwMxt. * roodauai are toll. k*a. on ketog sredtod te toetoes red to lUMd psfis, ly itih flfßilaoifg fif BNv IWW it iff if, win found to pa—mm lit* ymuwrksUs ut e*i taf Sow red esrr)* eff tk luSsjnustioa red fofktafWS ft * ili-Oti, ruififtM UIMI I dsn# %' t IKMRjMI-- *x:* h**L'± 1b & tww horn wiihooi ptia t* kmtm&m. *= # gt re net a hentlng l lutnuii tou acts by ha (*< iiarreredher ritMßMel eusiithe to dtoretotouc sad seettartog tkererareat and to dacaauuuß at ths put. If • Ore *0 yihciuog , tJb red 99fiit* ioem ■HBIBt firr-4 riwrnral, in 4 tc MHiiimMl lu iMMkUIk wllKtwul fv Qg iitictlytt, AM a Liutnaeut for Horse Wteoto,for tbt cur* of MH fb gflmm< MMMMM! idkeWt <ww teaUobf* the ootid to Sad It* Price MAM cents per hailta. IX RARBOM, BOV k (XX, PrauPa, MOWOUi. . T. fire uottre in local cohaun Dr." W hilllif^SfS® WTX FTQ LIT'I TSRYSFWJTRFTT I Y3LLI|R TRTRI >!■ • t w- Cubtaitatuo.* try yaaytM fie Call rewtMA Si THEA-NECTAR in a rent Bluola VBA etih ths Orrea Taa Havre. Th* hr tea import*#, rot cat* •reryohsre, A4 #* ssto okoMSsis or.ty br ths flnsi Attonttrsad >-• .SrTreCa- ha, t*l Peiiso St., mmi tA 4 Charok nt. saw ISC. „r. o. no*. re . jH ; . 11 ' ' " ' ' 1 asm Br, re* syptlnttaa | " tfOXKV Wo*r rmptrn* olta atsulll a Kay Cbaeh M ttotdta c*uu..*-*, •""P's* a* run asrov ! i*r* fo, * It * a-r. trr Hrew St.. luMa BUSINESS. Zi ■nan uabtuo*. mmahr . nawifal .tart t* bnai uess.are „Wrt. fbrtttttee lorpcenaetn# U' •* iim irucuiAX iwnuf col- LROt. _ * 'hp : *KWiuntM<NlWt m<d V *aAp >m—.* if.Hi Mw—>C*- [THE (IREAT ALTERATIVE AOSDLSI BLOOD PURIFIER. It i* set r qtmck Bfwtnim. The <lMpr*cnle r ptiblikhed en mch bottle of m<Kliaro. It in nol *nd looonuncndod by Pbysiciuui *bew it hu [been introduced. It will powtitcly cur® vrJPO/TXA i in it* rariouA tag<, JiHEU 'MA TTSSf, WHITE SWEL IIXO, GOVT, GOITRE, SEOKCHJTIE, NERVOUS DEBILITY. IN CI PI EN 1 \ CONSUMPTION, RXidalldiß fM arising from sn impnro condition of tli blood, bend for our RosADALia Almanac, in which you will find oertificstcs from reliable and trustworthy physicians, misters of th*e Gorpcl trn others. Dt. B. Wilrea Csrr. of Raitttttoee, r>a he 1 aa r,,,i it lu , area cf hoof ale and mho dmaara wiihinaUteatSalcc. lion. I)r. t.C Pbfh.of ItaMftnore. reeom kt-et.de it to a., pereotia euSrruig ith dtaeaeed Stood, eartry it ie itipetior to an* yrrratntloD 1-e has ever n.ed, lev, rlr,r'T Ball- of the ftatllmere MTK. fewet.Ve honth, eeys he hie been so snie h teneSttad 1 y its me, that he cheerfully reron mtrfie it to all his mends end ecqnefnteiieee. CratWß A Cw, Drureiet % at Oordtme. ktlle. Vs., icy il nercr has failed to give Mtlafartton. Bam'lo. KcTaddcn.Mmfremhwß', Tenmaeee, a;a ft rtirrd htrn of Kheu ai.i .m nheti all also failed. vtoaoßA^^micoKS^no^gg^rß pepela. et*>. We petarastee Roeanai.il euperior to all other Bio,-a pnriAeri. bend for neiortpUxe | Circular or Almanac. Addreat CLXMSSTB * CO., LB. Commerce St., Baltimort, iti. Hem ember to pak year nrngglit for Hotmui. SlQto s2o"h"i , r.*&iv'i,y BLt to £i>tl o*' day l Agenta wanted) Allcleat.a " i v cow u fworklna people uf either aaa, yonng or old, make more money St work for ua In their •pare momentsOrnli the lime than .taaythingel.a, Partlcnlail free. Addreaa O. BTIKBOS d CO. Burt land. Me. •I*7 9 OH SACH WRRK-AGSKTB WASTED / ea.vrvf Baalneae legitimate. ParUonlara Mas. i. WORTH, It. Lonla Mo. Bos Ml. m Dr. J. InSKR SuMti m> ccar Bitter* are a purely Vegetable iriinration, made c hu*tly from the ns uve herb* tout*! on the tower ranges of the Sierra. Nevada mountain* of Callfor •tlo, the medicinal properties of which ire extracted thorefrora without the uie f Alcohol. Tbe question la almost laity asked. " What is tbe cause of the mparalleled success of VIXXOAR Brr rwml" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the {Mutant re rovers his health. They are the great Mood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and inf igorator if the system. Hew before in the history ef ths wmtd has s madirise IMMUI • mt>mndNt porereriiig the remarkable qaabtio* of Visum** BITTSU* is healing tie •kit of sTry diare* men is h< ir to. They i> e gentle Porgativn as well as e Tretis, relieving Cewgreflou or Inflammation of tbe Liver sad Visceral Organs, la BUlou* It 11 sin The propertie* ef Da. Waumte V i seoAsli I rrees ate A prefect, Dtaritowetk, Carminative, Mom Mm*. LSSAUVS, BSuitdk, ftodativa, Counterl mum JSmtartfl®, Alt*** til*, md Aiiii-Bilious. (imtoful ThoniinadK prnelala Vix- BOAB Bittkba the most wonderful In rigreaut that ever sustained tin* stoking ■ream. No Prrnoo enn take these Bittern according to directions, and remain long unwell. provided their bones ere not de stroyed by mineral poison or other means, and ritol organs wasted beyond repair. ItiliouH. Remittent and Inter mittent Fever*, which are no preva tant in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States,especially those of the Miteiesippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois. Tstuureee, Cumberland, Arkan sas, Red. Colorado. Brute, Rio Ormode, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, ftacaaaah, Ro anoke. James, ami man* others, with their east tributaries, throughout our entire country during tbe bummer and Autumn, mud remarkably so duringasa* sons of unusual beat and dryness, are invariably accompanied tor extotwva de rangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, n purgative, exerting a pow erful influence upon these various er-| gam. is eaaeotuOiy neeeseary. There is no cathaitie for the purpose equal to Dr. J. WALTER'S TOMA Rrrntits, as they will speedily remove the dark colored viscid tqatter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring dm healthy fractious of the digestive organs. Fortify the body sealant dinenne by purify lug all its IS unit with Vijumai BITTER*. K epidemta con take hold of a system thus fore-armed. „ llyNpepain or Indigestion. Head, ache, Pato in the Shoulders, Corah*. Tightness of tbe Chest. Dtainees, lour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste In the Mouth. Bilious Attack*. Paipita tntkw of tbe Heart, Inflammation the lamps. Pain In the regwm of the Kid ney*. and a hand red other painful symp toms, are the ndhpriag* of Dyspepsia floe bottle will prove a better guarantee of ua merits than a lengthy advertise ment. Srrofttla, or King's Eiit, White Swelling#, Ulcers, Biydprire, Swelled Suck, Goitre, ScnfsJ.a. fufinmitititi, Indolent Infistnmatlou*. Mercurial Affections, OM Sure#, Krt>pt>< nfth* Ska. Sure Bjr, esc. i la there, M is all other cuaaUtatkiaai Div esara. W ALMS'* Visscas Btrras* hare shown their greet carstire power# la tire wort ohst mare ami intractable ore. For Infiantmittof? and Otronle Rhenmathm. Gouv Bibou*. Remit tent and Intermittent Fever*. Diseases of the Blood, liver, Kaisers awl Bladder, there Biuvrt hare no wind. Such Drees*** are can red by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseawex—Persons en- Bped in Paints and Minerals, aocfa as tubers. Typesetter*, Grid-beater*. and Miner#, a* thev edrsare in lie, are subject to paiaJraM of lbs Bowels. To guard agstast this, take a date of WAULS*'* VIS BOAR Btvrams occastaeslly. For Skin IHMWS Erupt torn. Tet ter. Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Purtnfc*. Bail*. Osibeodes, Ring-warm*. Scald-bead. Sore Epre, Scurfs, l>'#oolor*t)on of the Klin, lltunot* sod Disease* of the Skta of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and retried out of the cyatem in s abort time by tbe tree of there Bitter*. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, larking in the *v*t*m of re many thouaaod*, are efectuaJlr destroyed sad removed. No system ef madwtne. no t muff age*. no an- UxdminitfaM will bee the system from worm* litf there Bitter*. For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or tangle, at tbe dawn of wo manhood, or the turn of fife, there Tonic Bitter* dfeplsr re derided an imAueitre that improvement is are pweptiWe. Cleaaar the V Hinted Blood when ever sou dad its impurities bursting through the akin in Pimplge, Eruption*. or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed sad sluggish in the veins: clean* it when it is foul; TOUT foaling* will tell yon who*. Keep the breed pure, end the health of the system will follow. , t*. MrtlOßAt.l) A CO.. DrereMs rod Ore. Apt*.. Saa rrenotooo. CsHftaniis. aa4 oar. rt Wiuhmgum sad Chsrhre ths. X. V. Sold toy atl Draff le< >ad Ul,r. li t N C-SsflC . WATBRS? 00 W CERTO PARLOR OMUAJTS jaikhk * r * fIMMMt jtolMllftol to fiMLjPfi® fißßrf (MR jdffiHLMßfe. ewmr man*. VBt C O l* iVHi* IKKTtt STOI* u Me Im( **cr pbcwt to ny Jt m jwwfriaad py ■MPtvtPx-- wM ** V ***** p—- ™*2sgyyßffl Hart* dM MOST CMLUUNIIMI ■ RISC!, aMkAW. ■HHHHB HAH vmck * *c —* gMBHBHPF I " :3? '• *• /a** dupea. I<H PIAITO* emd®*®**** **"*" elmmm n&km. tonfatoto * •*- tr* mf u In w fnr mrrll* •*" Pi* \ OttiA, RRmI £25 f, w ygrK .PT T <M>r* IrMHIMi FUSM. • ">?* " ™r ssar^^Vi^tef&jSfc •IIO| *.TOP, BtMß.mmmmrAx. JLLISTMATKO CATALOG VMS MA 11 KDM*— * >*& M * m tmmirn atmrnrt. met MMm. LU*ml aaa. Ai.Km WAOTCT. WHI. far * rrto* LM to A B. WKISTO.X, ggggfti^^ PmlthSeMl BC. FttMrnrah, Rrwn Loa P 111 Ikot Oar*, fS to f RM. DonMe IM I Oni. |8 to MM. Sli.ile Gnnt.fi to- *■ RiSea.et tom Be*<-I*ara. f to . Ptsiola. f1 to . Onn i Material, Fiabu.g Tackle, Sc. lore* AOemMm to denVr. er etnbe. Army Gaits. ReTi-Wrts. etc., bxuaht ar traded f-i. Goods tent by express C. a D to be examined before paid *>r. CHICACO. MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY. (XilvtnkM A St Paul Railway Co.; | Kxteadlof from CM team* to Mttwantoe*. La Croasc. Wliumn. HaOleg., . Paml and 1 AHnneaß4.il*. Al* to Madison, Prairie tw t'hiru. Aoilln. Owatimn*. (karitl CtolTi Mason City and tlona i also e Janes-rills, Monroe, Ripen, Berlin and Olkkaeh. . Km Bracing more Bailor*. Centra# aal Fleas ! tare Ke.orta than any Northweatern line, j CIIICAO4I DKPOT-Comer Canal and Mattlaon ttfreete, (with Timbers. Fort Wayne A ! Per>ns*lvata. and Cat cam. Alton d Bt. LomtiJß ?•-) MILWAt KKK DEPOT - Corner Rent and Month Water afreets. Co nneettng In St. Paul nlth all RaUwaye dleerg ng thence. I Fair Tons Ormt-M Broadway. Botroa Ornoa—l Oonrt strait. Oexxkal Orricni—Milwaukee, Wit. 8. 8. MERRILL. Gen. Manager. JHO. C. OACLT, Aat't Gen. Manager. ! A. V. H. CAEPRXTKR. O F and T. Agant. *n(ITPH Great Oder! Ptetnree ! Pramee! Krar BOYS Jar aorLD. ap Br^ifle'ld*£fßea.''* Me Dr. Whittier, -IWf" Longest aagaged and moat aneceaatu) eSyataiaa Ike ten. Ooaaultatioua or pamphlet free. Can o [■ygtt' .•* _ "... ;-t, Boward Aaaoelntlon, Ptolldlphi. P*- An laattmtloi. kariup a high for honor Mia eendnet end prof rational akllL Aetinf ■ L!K2S2"'A.S-?S'tk jSSSf feSSewSJSKr
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers