Farm, harden and Household. TrsMattal ot M Orrhtrd> L. 0. Layton, Amity, N. Y., writes : "1 have a Henntifnl young orchard of apple-tree#, which appear a# tine and thrifty-looking a# any that I ever RAW. And yet they do not bear (rail to any extent. I ace from the column* of your excellent paper that lime ia recommen ded for the purpose. But my object in this writing i* for information a* to the quantity to be applied, and whether it should lie air-stacked or not Alao, if it would not prevent tiie borers from getting in by applying a quantity around the trunk* of *ani trees. I wnsii rnv tree* every spring with potash, and yet am bothered very much with the borer*. 1 think they would have mined the whole orchard if I had not worked faithfully and energetically in de*tmying them. It ia nuder a beaut i ful sward, at.d I wiah to keep it thu*. The ground ia kept rich by stable manure, but none is allowed against the Hunks of the tree*. Sometimes 1 pot coal ashes and sometimes wood around Uiem. Can see no virtue in <\ al ashes, and no beuefft from them, except aa a mulch," Keply.—The unfrnitfulneas ia doubt less doe to the vigorous growth of wood. There oannot be both wood gTOwth and fruit Lime and ashea are serviceable to induce a grv.wth of wood, but are not of much service to produce fruit. The best plan would be to re frain from any further manuring, and to prune the trees in the spring after they haw leaved, which will have the effect to check the growth of wxxl and to tuns the san to the fruit-buds. The pruning should be either hy piuchiug the ends of the shoots or by cutting away some of the superfluous wood. It lequiree a gx*l deal of judgment to prime successfully, snd some good work, aa Barry's " Fruit Garden," should lie carefiilly studied, so that the finneinlee on which pruuing ia per ormed be thoroughly understood. It is probable, however, that the stoppage of further manuring and a moderate pruning of the yonug growing wood just before blossoming would be suffici ent to induce very early fruiting. The borer must lie guarded against with oonatant watchfulness. Heaps of wornl ashes or coal ashes around the tree will lie of tome good effect, as will alao kill ing the worms by thrusting a sharp wire into the holes they have made. ToOrfuli. a tXraun' Clan. Call together your neighbors at the school-bouse (with the conaeut of the Trustee*! or at your own home. Select a Chairman and Secretary ; propose a topic for consideration and discussion ; let one man talk at a time aud the rest listen ; give each one a chance to talk ; adjourn to meet again on some other farm, after treeing Axed npon a subject for discussion at the next meeting. This ia the simplest, most direct, and quick est waj of organising a club. No by laws or constitution is really necessary. If the club grows and becomes influen tial, as it will, and it is found that the men who say the least do the moat talk ing. and it is therefore desirable to limit them a# to the time consumed and the frequency of their speeches, a mo tion that speeches be limited to ten minutes except by general consent, will usually pass and prove effectual. The least cumbersome you make your or ganization by loading it down with con stitution and rules, the more work will be accomplished Of course start such a club. Induce the wives and boy* and girls to attend by appointment. Meet on some Saturday. Make it a picnic. Don't get up a strife among yourselves about entertainment. Let ail join in being useful; eeek to secure knowledge and elicit facts, and have a good tunc. Let it be remembered that the most ig norant man in any neighborhood pos sesses some wisdom which may be cul tivated and become useful, by just such means for development as farmers' clubs have always proved to be. TSrtt Te of llay par Acre. Mr. George Geddes reports that lie cot and drew eighty loads of timothy and doxer hay from nineteen acres, and that an average load weighed 1,500 pounds: thus the whole held must have yielded three tons per acre. He also reports Mr. Swaby, of Seneca Falls, as having drawn forty loads from twelve acres of clover. These were cer tiinly fine crops, bat it mast be re membered that hay as drawn from the field will shriek from ten to twenty per cent., and that these three tons will not neigh out more than two and one half tons, at most, in winter. Mr. Ged des also cut a second crop of clover seed of three to six bushels an sere. Ha thinks the land can stand this sort of cropping by making clover and timothy the principal crop to be fed ont on the farm or pastured ofT year after vaar. He instances the fact that, probably, this crop on this nineteen acres is the lar gest that has ever been cut on it We doubt the soundness of this the ory, whatever mar be the fact of this particular piece of land. There must, certainly, be carried off in seed and flesh of animals much fertility, and this is not replaced by the manure returned. This land, by good cultivation, may have abundant fertility to supply crops for a life-time, but tne end must come unless the mineral constituents are re turned, in some form, to the soil.— Sural Home. Wbu Making. Grape culture and the manufacture of domestic wines being on the increase in this country, we publish the follow ing directions for making five gallons of grape wine by s correspondent of the German town Telegraph : Express the juice from twenty pounds of grapes ; i rinse the pulp and skins in as much water as will cover them ; mash them i and strain them through a coarse cloth; j add to.this the juice and pnt in two pounds of brown sugar te each gallon. When the sugar is dissolved pour the whole into a keg, having the bung open, and let it stand where the tern perature will be about seventy degrees until fermentation ceases ; then bung up tight and let it rest for a month -to ' settle, when it should be drawn off I quietly, the keg well washed, and the j wine, returned to it, adding one pound of good raisins, and if it does not seem sweet enough two pounds of sugar may be added to the whole. The necessity of doing this depends on the kind and quality of the grapes. The wine should remain undisturbed until the keg is j wanted the next season, when it may be bottled for use. The Hop Trade. Just now, says a hop cijpular, the hop trade is attracting the attention of producers. Hops areheld at 45' to 50 cents in the hop districts. Buyers are offering 40 to 45 cents. 1 The foreign prospects have im- E roved, and the crop abroad ia much : etter than it was supposed it would be ' a month ago. California hops have ■old in this market at 60 cents per pound, bnt the quality was superb. Foreign hops are being imported, and domestic buyeis are only taking, at the present prices of holders, just what they are compelled to to keep things moving, j The maxim among shrewd farmers is to I ■ell their produce whenever they can | make a good profit on the capital and lalior invested in a crop by aoing so. We have known quite as much money lost in the aggregate by " holding on after a fair offer had been made as by "letting go." Hops at 45to50cents per pound ongbt to yield the farmer profit enougb, and the wise man will not hold them long after receiving an offer of such prices. Corm-Foddcr. Persons who condemn corn-fodder as " innutritions" are invited by Pasohal Morris, of the Practical Farmer, to oonsider the way of a practical dairy mall, whose butter is exoelled by no other in Philadelphia market," and who "pretty much sustained fifty-eight eows on sowed corn from the middle of last July to the middle of October, and that, too, the product of three acres." He estimated that he took ninety tons of this " innutritious" substance from the space indicated', and he knows that his eows did not fall off in their milk during these three months of dronth, but that some increased the flow, and that tha buttar was fully up to the stan dard, 1 A Hold Robber) . Nearly four miles below the village of Catakill, on the west haul of tha Hud son, resides Abraham r*t, worthy, well-to do farmer. At about 6:30 v. m., a few days siuce, Mr. Post, hi* wife and daughter (the latter about twenty-two years of age), his son Edward, and their hired man, an Irishman, were quietly citing their supper, when the door loading from the inaiu hall to lite dining-room was abruptly pushed open and six men entered and rushed up to i the table. Each one of the aoouudrel* drew a lrrolvcr, and lev# 1 Uig the we*# ] pons at tlx* head of each mcinlx-r of I the family, warned all to keep quiet or ' they would blow their brains out. I Wlille five of the robber* thus held the } tlve itun* tc of the house quiet, the ' sixth one drew four pair* of new hand cuff* from undemeatu his coat and in regular order snapped the bracelets I upou every person at the table exoept j the daughter. The latter showed no fear, but while the tymde# thug was pro ' greasiug gave tire thioViv* each a sivere talking" to, tliat flnally, lieoouiing • exasperated, one of Urn rubber* stepped np'to her and aaid : " Well, you are so sassy, I gueea we'll handcuff you, too," ! and the scoundrels handcuffed the whole family together, including a colored girl, alio entered the dining-room at l the time. Not feeling perffotly safe even then, the fhfoeM ffraottfed a led eord ami firmly tied that aronud the entire family, and theii one of tlieui stood guard over the captured group while the others commenced to ransack 1 the howie. They entered every room iu the building, tore open bureau drawers, broke open ttnuke, ftueakod look# o# closet*, ami ored about 82 000 iu money and valuable#. For twer one hour the thieves re mained in the house, stealing whatever tliey eouhl lay tln-ir hands on in the way of valuable*. They even approached i their bound victim* laughingly, and Uxxk rings from B:#ir ting, ra and put them on Uxtr own. Tba the Grand" Park at Windsor Castle, I witnessed. The ruei tortures to which the beautiful ponies were snb jected would; not be permitted in the United States. Not only would ladies and respectable men refuse to look on and approve, but the authorities would be compelled to interfere. Still, in some of the highest ladies' schools in England grown women are whipped, and in the colleges the beat ing of the younger boys by the older would not be snbmitted to by American savages. It is not matched by anything in history. Destitution Amid Splendor. Doubtless there are MANY persons BO situated, say the New York charitable societies, in their appeals for aid, as not to appreciate the fact that to a large class of other persons the coming of winter is a ilrcad calamity. Yet it is a terrible fact that the season of operas, and theatres, and balls, and sleighing Earties— of warm and cheerful palace alls in the city, and honses glowing with great wood fires in the country— is the season of distress to many thou sands, the season to which thay look forward with serions apprehension. Darkness and despair appear to sur round them wherever they look. It is estimated that six hundred thousand people in New York city make their homes in tenement houses. Of these, one hundred thousand are women who live by manual labor, of whom the greater part are unmarried. W HOI.BBALF. ARREST or ESS.— /The United States Government Marshals in East Tennessee and west ern North Carolina made simultaneous arrest of a large number of persons* en gaged in the sale and passing of ooun terfeit money. The secret service de tectives have been on the trail of their victims for the last five months. The East Tennessee prisoners were token to | Knoxville. Ex-President Jolirfson appeared be fore a notary public recently and made affidavit to his claim for $73,000 against tks First Natiwud Bank f Washington, A itlrect Vole for President, WIMI tl Is l*i-n|tnsrn great, composed of contiguous territory, | and as nearly equal iu imputation a* mav be, and Uie person having the highest number of vote* for President iu each district will be considered to have one district vote for President. Each State will nlat> have two vote# at large. The person who shall hav. the highest number of district and Btate rates sled) le President. A majority of all the votes, a# iu the Electoral College, is not required, and the contingency of au election by the House of He presentstivea is thus avoid ed. Iu practice this plait would work as follows : The State of New fork, willt it* present population, would be divided iuto thirty-two district*. Dis trict number one would probably be composed of Quncus, Richmond aud Sufl'olk countiee, as at presvut, and on the day appointed for the electiou the peoph' Of the district would assemble at their respective polling place* and vote directly for any persons whom they pleased for President and Vice Presi dent. At the close of the poll the re turns might stand thus : Hendricks, 6,000; Grant, 5,000; Batiks, 4,000 ; Morton, 3,000 ; scattering, '2,000. In thia ca#e Hendricks would have the " Presidentii-d vote" of the district, . wtuoh wonld count "one" for him iu ! the general count. The same process would obtain in each of the other thirty one districts. Thu* in the general count the State of New York might cast for Heudrica 18 district vote#. Grant 10, Banks 4, Morton 3, scattering •2, and Hendricks having the largest pop ular vote in the State, would havo two additional Presidential votes added to the number given above. On a stated day Congress would collect all the dis trict Presidential vote* and the State Presidential votes, and the person hav ing the largest number of such rates would be declared to be President ; the same provision being applied to the choice for Vice President," Winter and ths Poor. j There are signs already abroad of a harvl winter for the poor, and for a por tion of the laboring class. The busi -1 nesa panic and the shrinkage of values are causing considerable numbers of manufacturers and employers of lalxir '' to discharge their workmen, especially in the trades directly or indirectly con nected With railroads. Other brauchea of production, that have no immediate connection with railroads, are cutting down expenditures and reducing their laboring force, partly beouuso they are not making their own collection* easily, and partly because they wi*h to be ready for the new sta'e of price# soon to commence. The recent dead-lock in moving products will bring back us re action for months to come. The West ern dealer* who were indebted to East ern merchant# and forwarders have been unable to meet their obligations, aud delay and caution have (.Instructed the links of oommerce and exchange all the way through. The final loss will come on labor at both end* of the chain. This can last but a abort time. Busi ness will soon recorer. The poor will be ultimately better off, aa ther will en joy " hard-money " prices and a stable currency. All that ther buy will cost leas, though their own labor may com m.uid apparently lower wages. Specie currency ia the blessing of the laboring class. But during the transition, and in recovering from this temporary stop page of business, our benevolent com nimiity must expect to assist the poor est of the working classes. Children must not be left houseless, or to suffer for broad, or to grow up exposed to temptation and crime. Let each be nevolent person resolve that his own misfortntu-s shall not dry np bis little benefactions, but that something shall go still from his superfluities for the aid of the hungry, naked, houseless, and neglected. The Kelsey Ca*e. The Ceroner's inquest on the remains found floating in Oyster Bay Harbor, Long Island, on the 29th of August last, and supposed to be those of Charles O. Kelsej, who was tarred and feathered on the night of the itli of November lost, culminated in a verdict, after the jury had been out about ten hoars, ••that the said Charles O. Kelsey came to his death by reason of brutal treat ment received at the hands of certain parties to this jury unknown, on the night of Nov. 4, 1872; and the jury also find that the fallowing named person* aided and abetted by their presence the eommittal of outrage and violence upon the person of Charles G. Kelsey, which resulted in his death on the night of NOT. 4, 1872: George 15. Banks, Royal Sammia, A. T. Hard, William J. Wood, John McKay, and Henry It. Prime, and that Arthur M. Prime, Claudius B. Prime, S. 11. Burgess, Rudolph Sam mis, and James McKay were aoeetmori-a before the fact." The verdict is signed by Valentine Bay lias, Coroner, and James M. Burtis, foreman. About "Betsey and I," Petroleum V. Nasby tells how Mr. Will Carleton's most famous poem came Mr being lost in the waste-barrel. " Betsey and I are Out " was first sent to the Toledo Blade in Mr. Locke's ab sence, and his partner looked at the verses and threw them in the waste basket, which, as Nasby says, "hap pened to ha a barrel." When he came home Mr. Locke went fishing in the barrel, and the first thing he pulled out was this poem, which happened to catch his eve. Whereupon the senior partner mildly inquired, in tones of thunder, " Dock, don't yon know any better than to throw away snch stuff as that ? We'd better print it" The last verse waa lost in the fragments, aud the editor wrote to Mr. Carleton, asking him to com plete it But he ke|>t no copy, and had to compose an ending which don't leave mnch doubt in the minds of the Toledo Blade people who is the real author of the balJad. Strong Description, The following strong figure of speech was used to illustrate the great size of America to a foreigner by his brother, who could not make up his mind about emigrating; "Where did the baccy come from ! why, from 'Meriky, where else ? that sent us the finest petaty. Long life to it for both, says 11" •• What sort of a place is that, I won der ?" •' 'Meriky 1 They tell me it's mighty sisable. I'm tould that you might roll England through it, an' it would hard ly make a dint in the ground. There's a fresh-water ocean. inside of it that von might dhrown Ireland in, and save Father Mathew a wonderful sight of thronble; and' as for Scotland, yon might stick it in a corner of one of their forests, an' you'd never be able to find it, except it might be by the smell of the whisky 1" Four-fifths of the saw-mill machinery in use in the Michigan pineries was mads in Erin, Pa. A'ew York llldo Market. The business for the i>mt week hue been on a scale suftEucutlv large to in mosto verv strong confluence itt Ihe future or the trade. Price# are some what irregular, large discounts being tu aonie caKoa made for on#li, and the market generally living weak. The receipt# for the jurat week have been 5,904 from Rio Grande, per Nel lie Antrim ; 5,75'2 from Havantlla, per Angelta ; 2.848 from Vera Crux, jmr Oitjr of Mexico; 5,051 froju Itraao# Santiago, par Clai* Wood house; 32,747 (MM dome*tie porta. Total, 52,002 ludea, aiul lid bale# from Calcutta, |>cr Philosopher. The aale# for the anmc period were 4.000 Dry lluenoa Ayrea 22} lb#,, at "2t>}e., gold, 4 months, leaa 2 per cent, for cut# ; 18,775 dry Montevideo#, '2l to '2'J lb#,, at 25j0. to 'Jtle. gold, 4 montha to cash, leaa 4 per cent,, and lea# 'J per cent for cut# ; '2,540 dry itio Grande, #ent to taa ; 4,100 dry California, '23 lb#., at 28Jc. to 24c. gold, 00 day# to 4 month# ; 5,15 dry Central American, '2O to'2'2 Hi#., at 21|o. to '22a. gold, cash to lea* '2J per cent, discount ; 6,600 dry Bogota, '2l to '22 Iba., part at 21}a., go'd ; 055 dry Tampico, 22 lb#., ou private term# , 5,100 dry Mataiuor##, 23 H#., juurt at 20c., gold, caali ; 5,170 dry Corpu# Ohristi, 23 lb#., part at 20c. currency, ca#h ; 3,275 dry TCIHH, 18 to 22 Iba., part at 10c. currency, 30 day#; 1,340 dry Baited Matamora*. 30 Iba., on private term# ; 1,625 W. S. Rio Grande Cow, 51 lb#., at 13c., gold, 00 day# ; 6,440 W. H. Texas, 40 to 50 lb#., ou pri vate term# ; 1,000 City Slaughter, 70 lb#., at 9}u., eurreucy. Total, 61,120 hide#. The stock on hand consists of : 68,- 000 Dry Bunoa Ayr.-#, Ac.; 22,500 Dry Montevideo ; 14,500 Dry Grande ; 7,500 Dry Central American; 5,600 l >rv Bogota; 800 Dry West India; I.HOO l>ry and Salted California; 10,000 Dry and Halted Mexican ; 16,000 Dry and Salted Texas and Southern. Total, 131,700 Hide#, and 350 Bales Calcutta Cow; 245 Bales Calcutta Buffalo. Same time last year 195,000 Hide# and 1,465 Bale# East In dia. Goatakiu*. Receipts: 45 bales llra r.o, 11 bales Santa Martha and Havaml la, 12 bales Corona Chriuti and 5 bale* Galveston. Market continue* dull. Saint are reported ol 50 Curasao and lit lmlea Uto llaclo l on private term*. IWrwkiu*.—it .-ceipt*: "J bale*Tuxpsn, 18 bale* Matamoroa, 8 bale* oorpus Christt aud 3d bale* Galveston. Sales are 15.000 ft.*. Para, ld.ooo It.*. Central American, 8,000 tb*. Sisal, 1.500 !t>a. Puerto (Vibelloand 8,000 lt>*. Matamoro* general!j at couocsaiou* from the asking rate* represented by quotations.—-VAoe and Leather Chronicle, Pay a* you (*, John Randolph once ejaculated, tu his shrill tones, while a member of the Houoe of Representatives : " Mr. Speaker, 1 can cry Eureka, for I have found the philosopher's stone. It is— fay at you go The example ot the French is given as a case in point. The French, "who never go iu debt, and who hsva been saving money since the days of the first Napoleon, have become the richest people in the world, whieh seems proved by the fact that the Ger man indemnity of a thousand millions of dollars, which thev were obliged to pay, has been all discharged in two yernra, while we have been struggling for eight year* with twice as umch. Perhaps the wealth of the French far mer* arises as much from the small farm system and the high cultivation they give the soil. There ia a vast dif ference between farming in a loose way and having all work done iu the best manner. Wood Carpeting! The .Si'imti/tc American describe# the new wood carpeting which ia com ing into extensive use. aa follows: "The fabric is made of slats or more orna mental shapes, glued or cemented up on a cloth harking. The slats or strips of wood arc ef different colors, and are arranged to produce all the effects of tesselated floors, mosaic work, etc., and being about a quarter of an inch in thickness, thev will wear many years. They are finished in oil aud fit together an tightly that the joints are as jn-rfect aa inlaid work. The surface thus pro dnoed can therefore be scrubbed, wash ed and niM when needed, precisely like other floor* made of ornamental woods, which floors they rase cable in all respects when laid." Swindling AdterUsementi. Th oditor of Ilia Franklin Jferriiftr, in giving km reason* for rejecting ■ certain class of advertisements, *aya : " Yearn ago we were a pout-office detec tive, anl in that position we learned a thousand thing* l*>ut swindling adver tin-merit* that the confiding public do not and cannot understand. \\ a learned that the old ' sand* of life * clergyman ia a btirly, red-headed Englishman, who is proltablr good for forty year* more ; that all the gift scheme* are the vilest swindle*; that one auiai t rascal riuia a dozen companies, and nearly all are located on Broadway, New York," etc. This knowledge we make tise of for the benefit of our readers. A DRE*r>rt L Sronr.—A small boy has sent as the following information : "A fa dais ago we lost oar cat. Bhe got drowned in Mr. 'a well; bat no body knowd she got drownded in the well and so Mr. 'a fokee and Mr. 'a fokes, and all the ualrors besides, drinked outen the well justjthe saim. Tha drinked morc'n tha ovir did afore I gees—eaaae the water tastid so swote. I went 2 the well fur water tother da an I seed the eat in 2 the well. She was ded. She was nflnatin a ronnd drown ded. Me and Billy flsht her not with a hook and line. Blie smelt orfnl. But tha nahars doant drink enny more watir outen the well now. Wat I cant nodirstaud is wlii tha dnnnt. Tha outghen B raoar willin 2 drink the wntir wen the cat is oat than wen she is in. I think so. urea trooly. N. B. this ia A tru fackt." A SAD HTORT.—The pathetic story contained in the old ballad " The Mis tletoe Bough "had something of u paral lel at Cedar Rapids, Mich. A Mrs. Smith while visiting her mother in that city missed her infant son, about eigh teen months old, when she prepared to depart. They nearched the house and nt last found the child dead in a trunk. Like the hapless bride in the old song the child hod entered the trunk only to meet its death. The heavy lid had fallen upon its neck and had broken the spinal Tertebn. The unfortunate mother Wcame almost insane over the event, and her condition nt last accounts was precarious owing to the excess of her grief. A GOOD BEPI.T.—It is related that up on one ooouiin, when Commodore Jndkinn was in command of the Scotia, a fussy little gentleman nunc to liim just as the steamer was leaving Liver pool, and oaked him if he thought the Scotia would arrive in New York upon a certain day in time for him to catch the noon train for Philadelphia. Jud kiuii looked at him a moment in eilenee, ami then, taking out hia watch, replied: " I fear, air, we will be Ave miuntea too late 1" WBT A WEDDINU WAR POSTPONED. Miss Ingram, ot Brooklyn, prepared n valuable outfit, and was about to be married, wlien Rose Bagley, a domes tin, stole it all, and the young lady was compelled to postpone the nuptials for a month. Rose sold the goods, bat was arrested and sent to the Peniten tiary for a year. THE SKWINO MACHINE SWINDLE.— The Nashua (N. H.) Telegraph says, "The manufacturers who have recently been on gaged in the manufaotnre of sewing machines in Nashua affirm that the ac tual cost of the liest $T>5 machines is n little less than 813. The way people have been swindled is about tho sarno as robbery." INDIANS KILLED IN BATTLE.—The fight between the Brule Sioux and Pones Indians, Oct. 15, resulted, ac cording to the latent reports, in the kill ing of 20 warriors, The Burning of Children by a Prairie Fire In Nebraska. ®ur reader*, says an Omaha paper, are unfortunately somewhat familiar with account# of prairie 6rea, but one occurred at Wilbur, on the Month Platte Division of tha Omaha and South wcßt. ru Railroad, whieh aurjia#es ia it# tcsrible results any we have ever known. It was indeed a prairie Are on a large scale. It atartcd somewhere near the Otoe Ituliau reservation, southeast of Beatrice, and traveled at least twenty-five uiile#. The lung dry gra#a waa fitting food fur It, and the flame# ticrecly licked it up and swept on sere## the prairie at an ap|>a)liug rate of wtieed, It# route lay en#t at llcar Creek, and ail mile# east of Beat rice. Near Wilbur, and ten miles south of Crete, thia advancing avalanche of Aame approached a ahool-houae Ailed with children. The teacher knew that the house had been provided with the usual safeguard, that it had been jdowed around, and endeavored to keep the children there as the safest place. But they saw tha Are eomtitg and sprang out in a panic to run front it. Ten were overtaken, three were tmrued to death on the spot, three others so se verely that tbey cannot live, and four more tcrriblv maiemd by the Are, but it ia IM- lie veil they will recover. Moat of the children were (title girl# about seven and eight years of age, but there waa certainly one boy among the suf ferer#, and jterhajMi more. Mr#. Morey ia the name ut the mother who saw three of her children tu tue appalling situation we have de scribed. She ran to their rescue, and was herself enveloped in the Aatnes, and so terribly burned that she will not recover. Several lions. # and large quantities of grain were destroyed by this Ore. It spread terror throughout that secttou of the country, ami the inhabitants turned out eu masse to subdue it Dr. Do Bar, of Crete, hastened to the spot where the children were burn ed, and, with the people uf that vicin ity, did all that was possible to relieve them. He said that he had been through the war, and had seen men utaiuied and suffering in aJrnoat every form, hut had never witnessed a sight which so completely unnerved him a* tills. The school-bouse from which the children fled is still standing, and the teacher escajied by remaining iu and about it. Dreadful Fall Down a Shaft. The Rockville JtoituUiem relsu-a su escape (rout death that is almost incred ible: Nelson Whitemarah and Patrick Con don an- employed in the *h*ft of the Union Coal Company, of La Salle, 111. A fear morning* aiuce, having stepped upon the cage to descend, a'ter having the signal all right, the drum around which the cable ruu*, and which at the time was aomehown disconnected from the other machinery, began to revolve rapidly, and they knew that they were ruling to perhaps a horrible death. They atruck the bwttoin, a distance of 258 feet, and breaking through the three-iucli planking, were plunged into the sump, which coutained about ten fort of water. Wonderful to relate, neither of them were killed, but coin ing to the surface they clambered upon the board*. The car which wa* ascend ing at the aaiue time they were gutug down, reached the aurfaoe with awful momentum, and tore through the upper work* and w recked nearly everything in the immediate vicinity. Assist anew waa sent below, and the injured men brought to the unrfaee, wh.-ie a raat crowd of people had assembled. They were earned home and medical aid summoned. Whitemarsli sustained a fearful concussion on the hip, and is bruised in several place*. Coudwn was not so senonslv injured. No bones were broken, atui hope* are entertained that with proper treatment they may recover. , The Torment of flame. Some weeks ago, at tha village of Kcnil, France, celebrated for the burial Sdace of Queen Hortense and Empress 'usepbine, a terrible accident aectirred. A grocer's shop took fire, which waa soon extinguished ; a crowd collected, of course ; one of the firemen had the imprudence to descend into the cellar with a lighted candle to see if there were any spirits on fire ; in the counu of a few seconds a terrific detonation waa heard and the shop and for yards atound it were enveloped in a sheet of (lame. Several casks of petroleum had exploded, fifty persona in the crowd were injured, and eight subsequently died. The doctor who attended the in jured has read a curious paper on their burns, all more or le*a deep. The ex posed surface of the body waa most severely attacked, the nana of the bauda," hair, eyebrows, and whiskers were singed away ; the skin peeled off the hands like gloves, and in that state was picked up in a basin of water. For three hour* after the accident the in jured experienced no pain ; then set in the moat atrocious suffering*, violent shiveriugs, and tetanic spasms, and in extinguishable thirst and delirium ; everything they ate or drank appeared to tliem to be tainted with petroleum ; if they closed their eyes for a moment they were haunted with petroleum, and so continued until death relieved their torture. Affairs In Khiva. A telegram from St. reterabnrg re ports that the Russian government ha* been specially informed by dispatches from Central Asia of the inception and contined existence of a frightful nondi tion of affairs in Khiva since the retire ment of the imperialist Muscovite troops from the Khanste territory. The city of Khiva was captured, plundered ami razed by a force of revolted Y'ou meds after the departure of General Kaufmann and his army. Sixteen hun dred Persiana, just emancipated from slavery, have been slaughtered by the (.'sinks—a very sad and exceedingly serious affair. *Hia FTighneas the Kliau is, it ia alleged,calling out for the Rus sians hi retnm, so ns to enable him to restore order. Much is the imperialist account of the present fruits of the Czar's military mission to Khiva. * Never kick a man when he's down, unless you are sure he can't get up. A WVKKKIAZ BALM Can be found In that Breal and ranabla tunllj modtcln* iLLIfI LP NO BALSAM, By th* at* of which IMIII and lepynwn la restored to Hit. afflicted with any Lang or Piroul due***, such u : IXtugkt, AH Awn, BrnacAilu, Cvlirumf tioH PBSOLICITBD KVIDBNCB OF ITS MBRITB ■ BAD TUB roLuowtao: f. A. L. SCOVILL li the Inventor of several medioal preparation* which bav* bacma very popular. aud have barn liberally u*d. AM..n bii Invantmn* era" Hall'* 11.1.tm far the Luiiß*."*"d •• LI verworlb and Tar " For lb# pail tan year* a latter remedy hai been offered to the public. Bead tbe fallowing letter from Da. SCOVILL referring to it : Mi-em. J. N. Haaaiid Co.: Ornf. l mebe the following Itatnnent Coma pirfert crinvlotlon and knowledge of tbe beneSU of * Lima's Lrao S AIAAM In curing tbe mm aeep •eatod rulmi mir y amtumpt fan ; I have wttneiied lie effect! on tbe young and tbe old.and I can truly •ay tbat It II by far th* trail latrertorant remedy witb which lam acquainted For Cough*, and all Iheearlv ilagei of Lung Complelnti. 1 believe It to be a certain care, and If every family would keep It by thorn, ready to admluteter upon the Aril an pearanre of dlieeie about the Lung*, there would be very fewcaieiof fata couaumptlon. it camel th# phlegm and matter to rata# without Irritating thoee delicate urgent (tha Lungil. and without producing conatlpatlon of tbe bitwela. It alao givei ■ trengtb to tbe ayatem. atopa tha nttfhl-*w**t*. and cbangea all the morbid aecretlona U> a healthy * late Youri, raapictfully, A. L. BCOVILL. "IT SAVED MT LIPS." COLUMBIA, ANA., March 8, JOTS 4. n. HARRIS a Co.: Dtar .Sire- 1 nm Uktnu Atxitu'a l.reo Sat.BM fer R dieaaee of the Limfff of tntrteen ye*riet*ndln. I h* uad every remedy offered, end hl le the only remedy that hat irn me toy relief. 1 know II saved my life leal eerier At that time I om mettreil uetng It. and received immeoee relief, tt etoppad On my ln*a In ten h'uire. Too are at Serfert liberty to publieh thte letter. frir tbe bene- I of •ufferlnir humanity, and tetlk reaped, I remain, Toure truly, D. D. POOL. Such, my euffertnf friende, art Ibe !• Here reeelv. Ed dalle, and do eon doubt for a moment the effica cy of tbta valuable medicine. Bain time, and taka to y. or b'' • bottle of AbLßß'a Lena BALAH. Ton villi And In It a glorious ptlae, and a never faUtntr friend In ume of need. CAUTION. Bn not deceived. Call for ALLEN'S LUNO BAL SAM, and take no otbar. Directions accompany each botll*. 4. H. HARRIS A CO , Cincinnati, 0., PiopairTOßi. Por ialt by all Medicine Doalere. ro* aAf.it vrnoLKiAi.l ST JOHN P HENRY, Hew York, turn 0. GOODWIN A CO., Hoeten. JOHHIOH. HOLOWAT A CO , Philadelphia The Mloke* Case. Two years ago Edward R. Btokea shot and killed Janice Fik, Jr., at the Grand Central Hotel, in New York. On the A rat trial the jury disagreed; on the second, Btokea was oonviotod of murder in the Ar#t degree, and at once sen tenced to be hanged. Ilia oouuael made appliestiou for a stay of proceedings, which was granted. Their exception* ott error# were argued before the Court of Appeal*. and a new trial w# granted the prisoner. At this trial Hloke# was found guilty of manslaughter in th# third degree, and at onee sentenced to four year# iu Htale prison. The sen tence waa the highest the verdiot allow ed. _ If Yon Want. If yon want Bill-bead#, If you want Envelope#, If yon waut lloi Label#, If yon waut Statement#, If you want HUow Cards, If you waul Note Heads, If yuu waut Blank Kutea, If you want Bali Tiekets, If yuu want Bank Drafts, If yon want Blank Deeds, If yon want Bottle Imldes, If you want Blank Orders, It you want ('ailing Cards, If you want Blank Checks, If you want Address Tags, If you want Auction Bill#, If yon want Large Posters, If you want Small Posters, If you want Business Cards, If you want Blank Receipts, If yon want Rlank Certificates, If you want a Pamphlet Printed, If yuu waut Wedding invitations, If you want Business Circulars, If you waut Blank BUI of Lading, If you waut Business Wrappers, If yon want Bonds and Mortgage#, If you want Farm or House Leases, If you waut Law Blanks of any kind. If you want Excursion or Picnic Bills, If you want Job Printing of any de scription in a manner as neat as that done at any other Job Printing Es tablishment in the oountry, correctly, promptly, and at very moderate price#, leave your orders at thia office, where we have every facility for doing every description of Job Printing NEATLY, GI K'BLY and . UEAI'LY. What Energy Bid. A correspondent of the New Y'ork sWoy A'ctn, in his sketches of Lud low Street Jail, U-Ua the following inci dent: Three hundred and forty-three thousand seven huudred and Afty--three dollars bail waa asked for Marquis ile Lafayette Bharkt-y, the once relcbrated tobacco merchant of New York citv, who was arrested by his partner for al leging that the assets and stock of the concern hail ended ia smoke; but it waa not given, and Sharkey remained a whole year in Ludlow street jail, when the court of last resort decided he had l>een moat wrongfully imprisoned. In the insauUme lu* husineaa bad been entirely ruined and broken up, his wife sent to an asvlum as a lunatic, and he Auancially sWikrnpt, for all of which he oonld obtain no redreaa except that given by a alow process of law; but being an energetic man, he preferred to start in the world anew, rather than pat up with the chance# of tb# law's •low delay, and without capital, other than his energy, he act to work, and I am credibly informed that he has "struck ile' f literally in the Pennsylva nia region, and is in a fair way to again become a half a millionaire. f.ar tm Cosaipaa. —Since th# intro duction of diaiiUtd opirits in the Six teenth Century, they Itave been habitu ally present**} a# remedina. Wa know that alcohol, in ail its forma, is ptmtci out to health. Knowing throe thing* and that under the system of treatment which includes their use, the mortality among the sick ia, and ever has been, etiormona,iait not worth while to try the effect of a remedy which combine# in their highest excellence the qualities of a Tonic, an Alterative and a Regulator ; contains no mineral bane or murderous alludoid or alcoholic poison ; does ita aurative office without pain and with uniform certainty* Da. WALKKE'E YIWBOAB Brrrait# fulfills ail these con ditions, and ia now affecting the moat extraordinary cures, in cases where every " #peciflc'" of th# faculty has ignonunioualy failed. Consider, in view of these facts, whether anv aick person ia justified bv reason and com mon sens** m declining to test the vir tue# of this undsfileu and irroaiatibU remedy.—(W. A match at chess for SIO,OOO s side hss b.-en msde lietweeu Dick Pesrce sod Mr. Gsllsgher, of Austin. Xev. Five thonssnd dollars s tide forfeit hss been put tip, snd Ut# match will come off six weeks from next Christmas. The Elm wood and Warwich collars will fit better and wear longer than any other collar*. eithr liuou or paper. Try them.—(Wa. A CoNsrwmvx CTXXD. l>r. A, Jam**. whil* espettmenUua. acv-KicoiaJly made * preparation of tVuiuahta Imlioa. which cured hi* only child of (cost! caption. Ttiia remedr w now for *aJ# at flrvt-ctaaa Prugf lata. Try "it; provo II for yvtirwelf. Pries tt. So. Hand stamp for circular* ("raddork 4 00., proprtotor*, 1033ttac St.. PhUsdolphia, Pa.—(Com. Tint BBOWXS AND BLACKS prodnced by thai RlerUng jrcj*rmtni. CRIST Ainao's EICSL MOB litis fir*, cannot l>* #*clkd by Nature; iu tint* challenge ootnpartaon with Nature'a Dit favortsl productions, aud defy deteeuon. —Com. Brat and Oldrrl Kewtlly Srdlrlae—Art /erd'a Lw /errgooofor e purely Vegetable (WfAar io end fuutr far Oyapepaia.Conattpatluei. bebiltt) btrk Headache. Btlloua Attack*, and aU derange menti of Liver, Stomach and Bowela. Alb feu Druggist far It. fir tot re / tauLiffnut. THB Lritii ftri BlrtinM and Rucked by per* •latent Cotigh. Lite ffenera! Rtrrttfh wasted mnd • n ittciiriMf c* mpUii'f Urribf, Dr Jzyne i ripectotitd | an cftwtiYd irwrdy f*r CQh iti4 C Id* and urtu a bn cflclaJ • ffect cm the Pulm< a*i y and Brvnckldl frpan# BROWN S v I till COLD, NORR THROAT HROKt'll 1A I xnamrs Require* Immediate attention, and should be Cbrtked. if allowed to I'lbair. trrilllloa <4 Ibe Lunge. COUdUS Prvmment Tbnmt Affertloa. or eu Al> !•> U ruble i.uug nueier, , Ccu COLDS tbe reeuli BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TBOCHKB J Having • direct InSucncc on the parti, give Imme diate relief For Sroiirhttt*. Avthma, Catßrrh. • c mmpiivc end Throat Disease*, Trotbci art ward vifA t'tal aurrvaa. SINIiEKS ANT> ri BLIC SPKAKKRH WK!IWM clf M, Johnoan't Aiurfynr Limittumi ia • ewaeniW rscaady, usad tutorually, and attar- J lislly.—JCota. We often see a large liock of cattle which do not eaam to thrive, and corns out I " aprtrig pour," all for want of suottatbrrm to ; atari. tl.aui Ui tb* right diracUun. Ou# dollar's worth of fthrrulam'* Oaoairy CtmdUvm I'om ilrrt, givau to sacti a stork unsaatunally during lbs winter would I# wurtb mur* Iban au axtra half tun of bar —Cora —„ , , , The Marbrta. ■aw roui MOails-maiwtim 4 41 a 4114 ftrSuuui; II s 41 h Ewwad W a -1% ordinary Una UHia... ,u a .<*# lot or tor ( A .tv > UUs# Cow# 44.00 •40.00 Uses—Li*# .*•• .04-4 Dr###d 04m# Mi atuwy. riHi M Asttaw- Mldditug. H',4 .14" flaar—Kruw #tm,,, too rt Mat# Kurw 4OS Ita Wbtmi —L#d WnHMW 1.44 I l.tt Mo. 1 #t>rtn# 1 M ll# Mr# #a a. MuWy MsH... 1.44 t 1.44 UM#— Hltad ••#*# • 4f!4 Oorw—Misad Wwaara it I 41 Uy—t*r ton 14 80 a* 00 tou—pwton u.a# sitjw Hot* •m.jma .40-ms 4 s 44 Port—'!(#■> 14 00 #14.84 Laid Mi ba JHII fMrolrum -Cnad# '.# JlilSltSf 14 maw-own . St a.a Übtv Vsnuy M A .44 " ToUsw 14 a JM Wnn. Ordinary 14 s 4* Nmeimia 4a# .14 s J# OhaMs-ttau. factory It * 44g - tttunawd .ta • .0# OtO# 4H4 .* Baa att# a • > auaiAisi Bfas*U#. A.l S4JT Mb##* *.* * >4# Untw-Uv* 4.44 ItM flow 43# Hi Wtxwr - Mo. 3 ajwtna IM a 1.44 Oora 44 a 41 BIT 1. M a .44 birwy M 4 144 tard. Mha M tiAun, Wheat 148 4 I.M By#—#€•#*. ■ 4# 4 44 Oorw—SEtaad. M> a M Briny Sua 1.44 a 1 44 us is inn ja a M par.f m . •#%• Yitmxr -!-rti. Xxtiw 144 4 804 Whaat -WmIM-b B#4 UI 4 141 Oars-Tsnaw 41 a 41 Mttad. 41 4 41 NISMB-Orw4* U Hk>w4l4M CbnrlwE Bit a 144 TtmoUty BIS • WW •atmou OotUM-i#>w Sltdas#* 1 4 .1* rikw-xm a. t4 WW I*4 4 I. Oom-#Y*UOW 44 4 44 (Ml. ... 44 s 41 RICH FARMING LANDS! foB IA LB VEBI tXUr THE BET ixmraarri go Floatstloaa! Always Improving ia Talaa Tin Wmlik ff lio f vastnr u ca*o#4 ol s Ior* ill . out Vail portico tor* OVOB. *#w QstSo with saw Msf* smoosfiro, ky •#•'••*> ■ O f-Mfft laid I <—i#>iku—r C f. B- B . on ASA. Vsa. FRFF Capua of *> THE TOLEDO BLADE, •Mil ftn I# •#, MitHi wttb lb# #r#*l Boott OM#r fb wit tiuniiy pap*- ts ta# warla. #•"* *# 4## ! rto-sn. Agost* >uM rr:,bo Littmsl par la Garb. Locaa a JOBB*. ot#4*. oat# ••••ctiiirr or iui t as it wtu air.. Braw B*u #••>• BruSt* oa pals and aalM I emdos Its l# m a*llo4 fr ttam* by V.trioi<* j Tml.e*4oa , SM> *>n.brxk*t. Wll4l 4 Y. j MUNBf M-->4*rmptSo wit* Pkowsil a Bs* Choc# OntSU. C*lAl<*rwoo. soaplak sa# fsli parti# . 1 alia r*w a M *•#><. tit Wanavar #A.>< THIS PRINTING INK M*r|.>"> aa idiu#* at. it w #r •!• by a. r Krwapapat t i taa. lb WorU plraat, >a lb IB and lb. ysrlrsgro. Alao •fWU *aoortsnt of job lab. . 4MYI*-1 J" - • tba A-tdroaon# tan parsono, will ~1,, Iraaatvo /*. n brwattfhl Cbnsn -. w4 in niltifrreiioi b"w bp art ♦. pt'ti4. Oty ONt|.VMWt(V 10-saoikkibii. rbtia. rr Day C aamlM or #SO • waab . W*oß.r It an 4 Will pay it Apply now. 0 iraaaßß LO . Mnnow.O. ' C E T Z E'S New School for tie Parlor Orp, IllkOM IS# Üb*r Ol Toackor ami ilflole To b. h.u >i all took an* Mufa • uirca. Bant bj mttl. Pur*,sSo NEW SCHOOL FOR THE PIANO. I.vnrtarerd by the Profcaaloaa ma *• beat J aeoat thorough, moat ittrarMva, and taachre I th* moat direct meaner .auttad to pupil* of ever y trade of atwoy, preparing th# more advance! far borough baa*, leal by mall Frio*, S J U'lLI. BK ItK AIIV IN KKPTKJtKKH.- SV Th* lateit and heat Choir Book, " THE SABBATH/' Contain* lb* good eld ataadard tnnea far Church Cbolra. i f all dVntouinatloua. and pretty melodie* by eminent author* Price. TIM, bant by mall. Sample Copy, l o# LZ* A WALXRR.W Caaavart Kraut. PhltedelphlA Lea d Walker'* Muiteal Almanac, tree to any addrn*. fiWURDER? ■ ;ji Bui a num ear* wtth thla FILL AUTIFR, il $25 Per DapKhTEa I any aieueed al themW ef Awm *■ 9 t.wda or ten aa I ned uanantid. Alwnyaaue. "3 | leaafal t* qui. keand. I Wet tool I a th* wwtd fa* ...J I y ,|wettng the mad end arm. Farm.Tbwualiif JH I I 4 i ..It rlghii far aula. Bend 10 can and yctar P9 j pTO.CI*. and btale. tad tWdawctptlcabe-k With evplAoaw**. iklnm Aaftr IV. 8L Louie, he ACENT9 WANTED F0 - BEHIND " SCENES IN WASHINGTON* The aiucieet mrna at eelltog ho k ever puhl'lhed It telle all about the great tvvdif If biter IbwadtH, Benatortal B■ iberi-t fongr-eilottnl Ring* l.ohbtet and th# Wonderful B-ghte of the National C*p tal. It tell* quick Fend for apaetmen page* ano #a our term* Agent# n" a full decilnon nt th# Work Addrea* NATIONAL FTBLISHINO CO. I'htladrlpuia, Pa. CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE A ST. PAUL RAILWAY. (XllwaukM A St faal taliway Ob.) Xalending from f'btrago to Mll tvn tt kce.l.a < rwaac. W laona, Ilatlne. *t. Paul and MliiuealHilte. Al*o to Mntliaan, Prulrte rtw ( htm, ~t, (Iwalouaa. ( harlrt City, Vle.on ( itv and tlgnaa t aleo tc Juttc.v illr, Monroe, Berlin and Uahketh. Rmb-ectug more BttaluraaOnlrv-aan i Plena •re llr.orva than anv other Morthweateru line. Cilt( A(H) HKItIT torn. r Canal and Mail (ton Btrrria, iwllh Ptttabuig Fort Wavued Pe-.nelvaot* and rntcetrtt.kU.m d St Lout* R'ta.) Mll.W AI'KKK HPZPtIT-t amer Keetl atiti tooth Water Ntreel*. Connecting In St. Paul wtth all Railway* diverg ing th*. re. Nam Toaa flrvtca—Slk Brcdw*y. Hon OB lirrtv a—l Court Street. OaaaaAL tlartck* Milwaukee Wis. B. S MKSRIt.L, Oen. Manager. JNO. C. OACI.T, Aaa't 0-n, Manager. a V ft PkSpFNTSR, M P end T Agent CANSuin'i&N And Its Cure. WILLNON'N Carbolated Cod Liver Oil I. BMitsntldiborobln.Uoa of two mto*** medb rluee lid the ry I i rat to arrcat th# detvy. theo build mSnrttr*. PhyulcUna Andthedoctrtoeoon racL Thertally etartllngcure* performed Dy BUI tertng into the clreulaUon. It at onoe grapples with corruption, and decay oeaee*. It purtAea the vouree* ° f ciSlr2f#% Oti fa .Vorura r kaaf mutuant In mutiny CouuniPtl'n jr. sc. wxLXJiow, CS John Street, Now York. OR. A. TRABK'B MICKIIC OIITIIT run wt etna or iNFLAWCATOBT DIS2ASIS. r. Truk u t>it*s<"l (or twenty fwr* la a roof** of ruwrlm ui. tb< tml •Itrect. Mm pr at *bkh In rvmovlittf ill# ea*r. I. iiii ( ii#4md la fc* aaaat* at tMWtaa •It* . * ruatrailint i*r* I* abeed mm tb* an.; tnliyn>i>l t< m. at direw. a Web rewind be ulii iin-4 frual any other rrawdy. hurl* I* tt* Piwr Of Iblateablaa* flow, that it i.Bir* to #*cy (Muttua at Uw ham in ftrjin-; i-.ery lwo *n4 mutit#. tota, nai,. umt it-fan**** I* (rnclxd out and mad* •re.ihk at it* : n l i.reliog laftaawa, H*>. it *x- * •• i ai-.ij a lib unreal a* ► I -TU ii gbaa** huarrcut tnatanrr* at* mow (Hi* ret.i-dy b*. r*tor*d Iftlth to fa ll .u tu matt iua *** fftal the Bun* powwfal bib- ,aJ wiedlie faded tu pud* r* ar tdbrL nu< h L. ftfowttiy boo* the r*a la liUlMinw*- k* ttallrit! ever *"< M* wto tth dlrewe e*>t tits Uiuiauml ere h* oh tstttod- far lat*n**lr| Rhramtlina thf. otauamu I* lit* uwt tm-iri' otamo, •** pi*l*u„A Fur iMpbthrm uc •* ihl W Thrert II u uu#K. d id ninety-a two ***** oat *f a hundred, It alii * d retire relief to th*oeret |M of Merecm* HMMMk* in thirtr mtmmtm. p*r War*una Ularaao* uu* tacdtdn* M at iiiibmiu vain*. •r*cll*t of lk Spin#, Rbaawadaai. r 1"! fiumuml Bon Twi, Braechttt*, rtaari**, Crunp |r ia*. loSaowid Byaa, Fvar Sara*. Ihirn*. rtr . Wiirb* ißtanaWalrly rrUrtad bytltrnarof I*f Traak'* M*s*M*t<; tnotwat |i Baßwmi. S* a OoTrtpr'. iMfbki H V —' I Ill— THE A-NECTAR u a rcss aBnHKKsi OUola. TXA HfvßMßni tta lit Inw Tat nmt.Tkt \JF*r bi T* tmpertad Ear Bat# ,iH| averywbar. Arid tat Ml* only by m (ml ! WM ■■ A >IMTU U* FNITF TM O. JF* IjH IMV m Eylwm *.adl d • Ch*r<* St, *• Tri y. O. insAf* MS) r,uwW Pass This By m m •• w§fc> I*4 Vfttftjfc# IMMMMf * OA* <>■■. iriu* potAt taju Oh lottt LTICA : STEAM ENGINE ca^ (Flosmtr Woo® * MASS 4 STITIORIRT 1 PORTIBIE I Steam Engine?. i The Best A Mwt Complete XimttmttA in th lirkrt. Ttow Sodium b*. alway. mamtaload tha rrry uSmtSSSm* at wOmm. Wt make U UMUatartUf* rug,-iT and IkalcragenacuJ,. W'OMfU, Xra,Olrla and Bjl -anted toaeilour m Eiac A ACid Aw.rlP.il Jewelry loiki.OMn. de. Ko capital *. !, r.t.igi.r, Term#, A* .taut (IH E.O.TtCKKT A CO ■ Augn.ta, Me, SCHENOK 8 MANDRAKI PibliS Tbee Pill* Art com prand * xclutlr.); Itrgredtirnii, And altUoug h they .uiireiy .uperaed. tbr n of m.rrury, do not Imp* AA? of tti tnjanotu *orrrt. Tk*y Art dtrrrtly upoa tb* Urer. and r A ..lu.bl. tui". y tn All ca*** of d.ran|riaAii< r*. (nltioafi-ora *at.ilon, Pick Bandarha, Typh< Id and otkar Er**ra, dc., dc.. all anreomb toika fraa aaaof CHB*CK'I RABOBAKA PIUA. Eur ..)• by all Druiiwia'* and Daalara. CR tn ton par day I Affant. wantad t AU e Urn • 9 to #AU of working people of .ithdr ias, yonuß or old, mako mora mon*]r at work tar • la tkatr •para mumanti or all the time than at any thing alt# Particular* trao. Addraaa G. STIkSON * CX, Portland, M*. Dr. Pierce's Galdoi Medical Dlaocvery, will rare a couih in 0110-hall !*• tl mo naremry lb cure It witta any other Birdlclne,V it d~t it. m*t W

t will be found to iiiraut any micu># that nat ever before been offered to the pjblic. While it cure* us immt Coughi. it urerdihnri the yt tem and purifies the t>A>t*4U By itt great blood p-urifyinr progpSe*. It rares all Humors from thjrtf Scrofula to a common Blotch orjntnple. Four to tlx bottJFt are warranted to cure Sail Rheum (/Teuerand the wcrvt kind of Plmplt son f>e face, elcs, !ores,E|) nlpelasand Blotches among the hair, Hgkt to twelve bo*tic* Arc wur rained to wire RXtinlrt* of tbS Etrt, corrupt or Kiinulkiß ATeerS,Scrofula and the worn form ofWeco adary and Ter tiary Diseases, to ax border f.ltrer ( oihplatuA II.OV* bottUs for S&.OO, by all Druggittu Thjtulauied at thr World's Dispensary, INaK , 4 6 Wart SdJMCk St., BurrAkSi N. VS. * fffar Bitlrin are a porety VtwmaWa road* chlsiy from tb* na ti?c berba found on the fowar nujirre of the g|rra Norada mountains of CaUfor nia, tbe medicinal properties of whkh are extracted tberefiuca wttboot the are of Alcohol. The question Is almost dully asked. ** What is tbe eauss of tlw unparalleled sureess of Vurs®Aß BlT TKstbf" Our answer Is, thst tbojr NMH tbe cause of dlsaass, an#be patient re eoeers bis bealtb. They are tb* great bleed purifier and a Bfe-fivtay prtndple. a psrlket Kenorator and InrlgofUßf of tbe system. New before in tbe Malory of tbe world bae a mdieitie bean compound*! fx>MMto( the mnsriaMe C un.'tuw of Tufmas birrtas ia bealhtf tbe ah* of etery dlkssse maate betr to. Tbey are s fwde PorfMire as mi! ss * Took, refieting Coofmuos or Isdstsmtlno of lbs Liter J fisanl Organs, la Mtous The proprtiiea of !>*- WautMrti TnrsoAßHrrTsas era Apermnt, Dambontie, Qvmuiativs, NaUrluotu. Usslim IMweUe. Budbtivn, Cuturtee irritant, Sodorific, Altars, live. 4 Aui BtiiMA ii rstiHu 11 bttuaandh proclaim Vat. roar Brrrcas tbe most wonderfol In- Tiguraol tbst • wirtslsed tbe slalrißg No Person ran take ikewt Blttrn aocording to dlrectkms, and remain teg unwell, provided their bones are not de sttoyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond Bilkiuft. Remittent and later mitfeat Keren, which are so preva lent in tbe valleys of our great rivers throughout tbe united States, especially those of tbe Mismwrtppi. Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberiaad, Arkan sas. Bed, Colorado, Brutus, Bio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Bo aii'skc, James, and many others, with their vaat tiwutaries, tbroaghoet our ' entire countrv during tbe Summer and Autumn, and remarkably ao during sen sou* of unusual beat and dryness, are i mvariably accompanied by extensive de rangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exciting a pow erful influence upon Owe varioua or ' gans. Ie eaeentuuly nscessaiy. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal tu Da. J. Wauoßk Vwaoa* BnM as tbey will speedily remove tbe dark colored viscid matter with which the . bowels are loaded, at tbe same time : stimulating tbe secret tone of tbe liver, and generally restoring the healthy , functions of tbe digestive organ*. Fortify the bod) against dine*** by puriiym* all its flykl* witb VnrnoAß Bittrrs. No epidemic can take bold at a system thus fare-armed Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Head ache, Paui in the Shoulders, Coughs, : Tightness of the Cbest, Dtaxiwcre. Sour Enic'etioa* of the Stmnadb, Bad Taste in iru nioutb. Bilksts Attacks, Pslpitu taiton of tbe Heart, inflammation of tbu Lungs, Pain in tbe region of tbe Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symp toms, are tbe offspring* of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a belter guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise ment Scrofula, or King** Evil, White ' Swelling*. Ulcer* Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, l fjcrefiakm* InflsiaoMtkitm, hndolsstt IsSsmmetitiß*, Mcrraml Affsctkie*. OM Sonw, Erapkhti* of tbe Skin, Sow Byes. eke. In t hires, ns ia all other t>xiiiHttttxiM>l bit i eaeu, Wauues'S Vixmas Bnrrsas hare ; nbuwa Uir greet cureUve power* la Um matt ob*tin*4# intrnctsMs cess*. For Inflammatory and Chronic Hhenmatism. Gout Bilious, Bemit tent and Intermitteot Fevers, IHoreaesol the Blood, Liver. Kkhwrs and " wider, these Bitter* have no e>..! hack ilueasH are ceuaed by Viueled B!.>od. lerhnnkml Diswwro.—Persons en gaged in Paints and Minerals, such aa Pi amber*, Typwsettcra, Gold beaten, and Muter*, u.tbev advaaee ia life, are sni|oc* to pwralysis of the Bowels. To genzd sgaint this, take s dose of Wamus's Vtx •oak Birrxas