The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 23, 1874, Image 4

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    * ffilti a—
Fartt Harden and Household.
llmithaM RtctpM. A
THA-CAK*. —Q#c pound of ffwur, a
quarter pound of butler, a quarter of a
pound of sugar, font ogga, l vety little
sods, AS much milk as will tnnkc a thick
batter. Baku hi a shape, butter and
servo hot. 1 ■
To WAW.-rAWt* Upisten
fresh, dry uakiifiod magnesia with pure
benzole, and cock it for use ; Ptb this
on fresh gruaw-apots, and thsy Mrill flee
at once ; u Hjey are o{ long stwuding,
spread the r*i*tv on the spot, and leave
it till tha be*sole evaporates, then re
move the .mass ewfefnlly with a paper
knife, so Mb nat id scratch tho surface,
and brush tip* magnesia awsy with a
nice dry tirush.
A PoisoAiM. Akti.ivk Owtoß.—The ,
dye-stuff called rerenilin, which give" |
a beautiful carmine color, **> it ** * ,
ted, an arscsufcrv-as production, t"J*
to imsimof Umo, and is soluble to
lactic acid. U is used in J**pby }
and for painting Wi* N dcn e " v
As it is vervjiiiiaonons, it -shoo'd never j
l>e cmpWwed In conleciiMiery, and
bright sugar rtlohs show* bo
given to chili Iron.
Mixer WrtaußT If sat von Partyi:*.—
Orate thefiud of twe or three lemons,
and ald to thrtn ope *nd a half pounds |
of lieef swot, of apples, of raisins, of
currants and of brown sugar, respect-1
ivelv, oee'|uwfter of a pound of candied
peei, a iiMle suit, some mace, nut
meg and qmuantou. Add a small bottle
of any bifid of fruit svrup preferred.
Should be iwixotl only a short time be
fore wanted.
MOTH FtunntYTTne.—The following
recipe for keeping moths out of eloth
ing is a favtuite iu ?oute iamitie*: Mix
half a pint of alcohol, the same quan
tity of spirits of turpeutuiCj sud two
ounces of owmphor. Keep in a stone
bottle, and shako before using. The
clothes ot futs are to bs wrppe<l in
linen, anvl rrntabled-np pieces of blot
ting-{taper iltppvHl m tlte liquid are to
be pla.-tsi in tue box with so that
it smells sbcang. This requires renew
ing a bolt t once a year.
RAISED NCTOAKXS.— Make a sponge
oyer night, with one quart of new milk
.and half a cake ot dry yeast, dissolved
in a gill of water. In the morning, if it
is light, add half a pint of butter, a
pound of sugar, throe eggs, half n nnt
ling, half a teaspoo.iful of soda, a little
salt, And floor enough to make a dough
somewhat Stiff; knead well, and set to
rise ; let it get very light, and then
mold and put it into a pan, thoroughly
bnttered; when very light, again tarn
the pan.
ROLLS.— One quark of flour, one cup
of milk, three rable.-pooufuls of lard or
butter, one fcablaepoonfal of sugar, one
half cup of Put the flour in a
dish, make srholo ht the centre, put the
yeast, milk, lard and sugar in without
stirring, and stand till noon. Then stir
altogether, mold in a little mows flour,
and iet it rise Uil two hours before tea
time. HoU onf a little thicker than pie
crust; cut oat with a pint pail cover ;
after cutting, better very slightly, fold
over, and riae fifteen minutes before
baking.
Ax EXCEM-EXT DOXKSTIO Coxrsc-
TIOX. —Orange-peaJ. preserved in sugar,
is one of the most delightful confec
tions which a family can use, far supe
rior to the extracts sold in the shops.
The peel should, of course, be perfectly
clean, and should be cat in long, thin
strips. Sttw in water till all the bitter
ness is extracted, then throw away the
water, and stew again for half an hour
in a thick syrup made of a pound of
sugar to one of peel, with water just
enough. Pat away in a cool place for
flavoring paddings, pies, etc. For this
purpose it should be chopped.
BraW a ltd (orn .'teal tar Cows.
It is well settled in the opinion of all
oar best dairymen that hnm greatly
promotes the milk secretion* in cows,
and it is fed almost universally. About
equally mixed with corn meal is the
usual proportion. This mixture seems
to promote both quantity and quality
of milk. From several sources we hear
that buck •best bran is a great pro
ducer of mSk. end it is being used con
siderably among dairymen. A farmer
of Chester rtfhaty, by repeated trials
with his owfT"bows, has fully saTisged
himself that they do as well with corn
and cob meal sod bran as with pure
corn meal bran. The amount of
nutriment in corn cobs is ao very-small
that this result w3l have to "be ex-,
plained on the supposition of the
pound cob aciiag to promote digestion i
by distending the stomach. The-pres
ence of bulky material being necsssarv
to promote distention and fill up the
stomach of ruminating animals before
digestion cxd be accomplished, ii fre
quently lost sight of. Hungarian grass
is also found for milch cows to be rath
er superior to the ordinary run at hay.
The test year or two Hungarian pass
has loomed up wonderfully in tbu esti
mation of or dairy farmers, and a vcrv
large scope of lapd will be sowed witL
it the coming season. It matures for
cutting in about sixty days, and pro
duces two to four tons per acre—the
latter of oourse on good soils. Three
pecks to Utoacre is the usual allowance
of seed.
l-tma Beam.
It is strange more Lima beans are
not grown both for market and for do
mestic use, both in summer and winter.
They are now extensively and success
fully caunad with oovu, and make a
most relishable dish for the table as .
well as an exceedingly nutritious one.
James Roberta, Horsham, Fa., is a suc
cessful grower, and is reported as de
scribing his mode of growing the crop
as follows:
" The ground was a low piece, which i
is frequently overflown from s creek
close by. It was manured broadcast
with stable manure, and ploughed in.
No m&nnre of any kiud was used m the
hills. Hills planted four feet apart
each way, with lour beans to each hill;
which were ntada on the level surface,
and covered one inch deep. Planted
May 10, worked and kept eleaa with
horse and cultivator, poles not put in
till runners of beans were 12 to 18
inches long. No pinching process was
practiced, tier being allowed to run at
will, and made , a very large growth,
completely covering poles, and running
from one to another. When the frost
came and killed the vines they were
loaded dowfc with beans quarter grown.
The beans wc not started in a hot-bed
at all. and not soaked previous to plant
ing."
• <• Vwarih|t Hey.
To measure the contents of a stack of
hay proceed aa follows: If it is a round
stack, taping t*> a point from the
ground, mflafure tfct width half way be
tween the flk-pnnd *nd the peak of the
stack; muXtq4j tjbra width by itself,
and divide tfi&nuw.by ?,k r A ; this will
give the avtrugcyea of the surface
covered bv sfahk. Then multiply
that by the ground to
the point where t|Ee width was meas
ured, If ese measurements are feet,
the sum found la cubic feet in the
stask. If iWhttyjia timothy, orchard
grass, millet, or Hungarian, 600 feet
will make a ton, -oafc. a cube eight feet
each way. |lf thefirtackjs very solid,
and was apt whoa dea<rripe, 350 feet
will maktftf ton, OM cube of seven feet
each way£ *Tf thejtay r% mixed with
clover, about 700 feet, or a cube of nine
feet each way, will make a ton. If it is
all clover or light meadow grass, or red
top, 800 feet will be required to weigh
a ton, unless it is pressed very hard,
ready mixed, aud, if oorked tightly, will
keep any length of time.
STXIART OF
! Tho T. P. House Judiciary OoSMM""" <*•"
1 otdwd that no provision should ha in Uts
law dletritailing the (taneva awant for retm
' burning anv insuiwnce oom|a..ies m lowa sus
tained by them Under potass lesartng veesels
which were destroyed by iWodcrate ennaera
A* Martin Mt"e with hi* wife and baby
was driving on board * ""rryboat ai Faugh
' keojisio. N. Y. ttia boat started and the luuwa
i backed until all went orert>oard. Mr*. McCue
! ,unck hy the horae and did not live throe
! minute*. nor dst her body sink, Tha l>at>a waa
! drowned ... Fame and Ward listing l<een
driven from Sew York witli their pigeon shoot,
bad 0 near Stamford. l\wa Hie match was
for ?1 .i** 1 and lite ehatupiousbip of the world.
The enmtiMona of the match were that each
should ah cot at 50 atttgle pigeons, H and 1'
ground traps, at twentv-oue yards , and
aanranVl, at tweuty-five |wura of d.>uble lards
from plunge traps at eighteen yards rise The
one who killed the most in 100 to atn. Paine
killed S3 birds to Ward s 7H. Want is Olt+
arnnsl mm, *lK*tovU las own got* akh! trap*
law owu birxfak
At Jacksonville. Kauvs*. an 01.l matt tuune.l
Ames waa ktlhwl by lu* em in-law. named
Fiartw, the result of a .itiarre! growing out of
family trouble*. Ftetvw w* atrawted atul con
fined in the Calabooee. wheu a mob took turn
out atul httttg turn Ttie Manchester Fruit
Works, iu Manchester. N. H., were <h*l>l at
aucuoit for luwt uulltou d.Ularw. gaiuitel li
IWywen. of lhsitvm, was the ptuvhascr. It t*
understotal the sale will leave l<ul lftlle for the
stockholders after the debt* uf tha corpuratuui
are |ud Ttw Joint fWmiwiUeos on Kuiance
and the Centennial of the Ftala.leli hta Cuy
I'onitrtls agree*! tqtou favorahl* re|vrt;ug an
(trdtnance approprtatmg fI.OW.WW to aid iu
ereclutg
uou m Kairm out Fark-f JiWOW f*w a eor
servaterv. ami fatW.tVAl for k machinery hall
... ..The t*. ft. House approved the Bnutfltaw
Indian treaty, It will jas the Satiate also.
This treaty opeu* to settlement fI.OtW.OCW
acres of rich mining country iu south western
iXtkarado. Thiuua* t"Wlkin, an •x-jasiu-eiuan
of Ttokeburg. Mix>.. attacked J. W. l.aviue.
Keg editor of the lVl*livryvr, cutting lum in
tlte neck with a knife, f.avui# then shot
tWlkut twice, ktUing turn ui*tajtUy . At the
meeting of the t*. S. House Committee on
CtvU Service Uefom. lieu. Poller offerevt a
rveoiutiou proposing to pi.iiuU: the employ
ment of two jerson* t<earing the relation of
htnbtud and trife, parent and child, or brother
and stater, either bycoosauciuaitr or marriage,
in any tioverument Ivpertment at the same
time Several jvar*v*n in Wtlltaat Strang's
family. Stapleton. V Y.. have Iweu p>oi*onevl
in .>tne anknown manner.
Tba Mewagrrtee Maritime* tanißhi|> Nile
was loot on her last von age from Hong Kong to
Yokohama, auj sight* persona wens ilrowaedL
Among them ware the Japanese t'ommmaionera
to the \ nu.ca axluhinoti The liomaii
l aihoV Archbishop of CotogQ was arrested
for violating the Ecclesiastical la*. The
arrest was atade without an; deiiKuistration
received from a friend the generous gift of
f .V.flOO. to he made immediate)* available for
educational porpoee The wife of John
banning, of Kew York, died last August. The
husband was stronglv attached to hie wife and
when she died be neglected his business and
frequently visited her grave in the cemetery of
' the Evergreens. He prostrated huneelf on the
ground and, seemingly deranged, ate the
phosphorus from a bunch of matches, and
died in great agony.... Mrs. Enul* S. Parker,
of Brooklyn, hanged hexwelf in her cellar with
a skipping rope. Orief at the lose of a child
made her insane James Kelly and John
Halloran of Harlem, were arrested on a charge
of assaulting Walter Gibson, formerly editor of
the Baritm Local, with a slung shot. Subse
quent to the assault charged against Kelly and
HaUoran. one of Mr. Giheou's eyee was burned
out by nitric acid, which some one threw into
his face in the street An inquest wae held
in the rase of Joseph Grant Wheeler, ui Sew
York. One of eome hoys who were playing
threw a stone, which put out ores uf his eyee.
Lockjaw set in. and Wheeler died. Joseph
Sagle was arrested, but the jury could flint no
evidence against him and he was released.
Hie boye were eix and twelve years of age
respectively John M. BeeueU, Of Boston.
fought with his wife. Bis bead was pushed
through a show window, and his whole eca'p
nearly torn off by the glass ..... In the inquest
over the bodies of the two men who were
killed by the railway accident to Jersey City, the
jury fixed the responsibility open Mci'lellan,
the telegraph operator, through whrwe blunder
the trains met. McCleUau is in jail.
THE KEI> LIMIT.
" Maggie, is the light there ?"
" Yes, lather. "
" la it a rod light I"
" Yee, father, bat don't go out to
night, please don't—stop at home for
your own Maggie's sake."
They were father and daughter—
these two speakers, and the only occu
pants of the little cottage that stood by
the clifL near the booming sea. In a
pleasant little eottage, where every
thing was kept bright and cheerlnl by
Maggie ; her mother had been dead
many a year. They ought to have been
happy, and would have been but for
circnmatanoes which trill be made
known as we progress in our story.
Quite a number of people lived in
the neighborhood of the dill—one of
of whom was named Joe Clay. If there
ever was a singular character dwelt on
the face of the earth, this same Joe
gas one. He sold liquor and when the
red light shone from his window yon
could have had liquor lor cash or for
credit. Once in a aiiile Joe would
have what his neighbors termed
"moral fits" come ovef3iim and wonld
wake np to seeing hotnkinsh misery he
was causing by his traffic and how
wrong it was for him to deal ont the
liquid poison. "•£
At such times the red light was with
drawn from the window and a white one
was placed in its stead. If this light
was seen you might as Well try to walk
off with the State House as to induce
him to let von here s drop of liqoor,
for he wouldn't do it—neither love nor
money would tempi him to depart from
his resolutions.
How often and often Maggie wished
the white light always was shining
there. On the railway a red light signi
fies danger, sa much as did the one in
Joe Clay's cottage to the heart of Mag
" Sow what's the use of your want
ing to deprive me of Laving a pleasant
evening once in a while, Maggie?"
said the child's father.
" Because it is going to be a wild and
dark night, father, Q>l you always ap
pear so dazed like you oome'borne
from the Clay cottage that I fear you
will lose your way ami make a misstep
and fall over the elift Oh, it is so
lonely here for me when you are gone,
and 1 get so nervous end fearful some
times, that I don't hardly dare to look
over my shoulder-the very stillneas
often makes me cry aloud for fear,"
answered Maggie.
"There's nothing can harm ye, child:
go to bed when I am gone and get to
sleep, and I*ll wake jre up bright and
early in the morning with a father's
kiss.
"I oonld not goto bed, mnch less
go to sleep, knowing you were out.
Do stay home, and Til sing to yon all
the songs I know, and you shall tell me
all about dear mother/'
There was a tear in .the old man's
eye, but he wiped it away, saying as
be did so, " Now Birdie, don't feel so
badly ; I'll not be gone long anyway,
and maybe 111 bring you back some
thing nice."
"I'd rather have yon Btay at home
with me than all the nice things yon
could bring."
"Well, I can't stay foi all that, and
all yonr whimpering and whining can't
prevent me from going."
" Won't yon let me go with you ?"
"No, I won't. A pretty thing it
would seem to have a girl in Joe Clay's
bar-room. Why 'twould look just as if
I didn't know how to take oare of my
self."
Maggie pleaded no more, she knew
from experience—poor child—that it
would not be of the slightest use, so
she was obliged to let her father have
liis own way and saw him leave the
house going in the direction of the red
fight
An hour passed and Maggie had never
felt no lonely Iwforo. It grow darker
and darker outside, the wind hiul risen
and the rain Mimmonml to come down
in torrents. Fitful flashes of lightning
wonld for a moment light up the soene,
and then die away only to make the
darkness denser than it wns bo fore.
Tlio window* rattled iti the easements
and tlio door shook on though some one
wo* striving to gain mi eutniuee. Tho
ohihl crept close to tho tiro an though
for protection. Tho old clock struck
the hour, but Moggie was so nervous
she iliil not catch too number tolled and
no alio raised her eyes to nee. AM alio
did so she caught sight of a lantern
hanging from a beam.
"There, if father hasn't forgotten his
lantoru," exclaimed Maggie to heraeif.
" How over will ho find his way homo
without it such a pitch dark night T
Supposing ho should have started be
fore this ho would certaiulv lone his
way. The liquor ho gets at io Clay'a
would got into hia head and ho might
fall over tho rooka way down into the
dreary moaning waves. lVrhapa ! rhall
never ace him again. I know what t'll
do. I'll just take tho lantoru and go
after him.''
She did not seem to think of the wild
storm outside or the perilous and dark
road alio bad to trsvcrao-ail abc nj
pcarv .1 to remember w ua that her father
waa ill danger and thnt it waa her duty
to rescue him from bis ieril if it were
iu her power to do so. •
She covered over the tiro with aahe#
aud, having taken all due precautious
against a conflagration she wrapped
herself in lur cloak, lied her lurhl
closely over her head and with the
lighted lantern iu her hand started
forth on her merciful errand. IKr
progress was slow, for even with lantern
alight and the red light tduuiug tu the
distance but dilnir, the road she trav
eled was full of deceptive holes, into
anv oue of which she might attttnble
tiidewa she took heed where site placed
her little feet.
The wind *m high and would of ton
strive to whisk her dunk from her
shoulders and snatch the lantern from
her baud, but bhreir and nobly did
this child keep on, praying all the
while to God to give her strength to get
to the hut of Joe Clay'a- praying God
to keep him there uutil she had placed
the lantern safely in his hands.
Ever and anou would her light be
thrown on the surrounding objects,
fearing if her father had fallen uji the
way she might miss huu. The red light
never seemed ao far off to Maggie as it
did that night—it seemed to keep going
farther away the more she advanced
towards it. What if it should uot pro
ceed from Joe Clay's house at all but
merely be some " will o" the wisp " at
trading her towards the sea and then
into it?
At last it shone brighter and brighter
and Maggieknew sin- was near her jotir
nev's end. Then she could hear loud
voices above the storm then she ap
proached the window and jeered in
she could see Joe Clay and four other
men seated around the table, smoking
and drinking, but her father was not
one of them—her father was uot in the
room !
Maggie's heart sank within her—a
bliudmg flash of lightuiug shot through
the sky. Maggie gave one wild, pierc
ing scream and fell prostrate below the
window.
The scream called the men from the
room and as they gazed out into the
darksome, boisterous uiglit, this was
the scene presented to their view.
A little tiguro drenched through with
the rain, lying on the ground clasping
in her cold hands the lantern. They
thought ahe had been struck by the
lightning, but she had only fainted
from exhaustion and excitement.
"Why, bless my aoul!" exclaimed
Joe Clay, "If it haiut Mark Gordon's
little gal, Maggie ! What could have
brought her oat sncli a wild and tin
canny night ?"
They soon knew well enough, for the
child opened her eyes and, looking
vacantly about, exclaimed : "I've
brought the lantern, father then, as
if the memory of not seeiug her parent
came to her mind, she added, " He is
not here. He is dead, and Maggie will
never see him more."
" Don't take on so, little one—your
father's not dead—he's sound asleep in
my chamber ; he was drowsy like, and
so" I thought I'd beet put him to bed.
Ho wanted to go home, but I was de
termined he shouldn't; as he was per
sistent, I jest put bun in my room and
turned the key upon him," said Joe
Clar.
iluggie told her story to the men as
sembled there—it struck deep down
into their hearts and the roughest of
them felt a twinge of conscience.
"See here, my men," Joe Clay says
and Joe was himself the sjwaker—"if
this wee slip o' a gal had died out in
this storm, I should always have felt
that I murdered her—yea, jest as much
murdered her as if I'd shot her down.
Sow, from this time forth snd forever
more as long as I live on these premise*,
the light that shine* from that window
shall never be the dang* r signal red,
but the purer one of white, and you
very well know what that means, eh ?"
"It means that you'll sell no more
liquor ?" said one of the men.
"Precisely so, and you know when I
put the white light in the window yon
might as well try to make mountains
walk as for me to sell liquor."
It was a wise resolve of Clay's—bet
ter and wiser still that he kept his
resolution. It made the cliff better,
and the dwellers on it happier.
Maggie's father—when he learned
bow much his child had imperiled her
life to save his—forswore the use of the
wine cup, and did all in his power to
make Maggie'a life far pleasanter than
it had been before. He never strayed
from bis hut at night—he told her
tales of the dead mother while she
listened, and, at their close, would
sing him sweet songs of home and
heaven. Such is their present life—
may their future be as calm and peace
ful as it has been since the banishment
of that ill-omen in Joe Clay's window—
the red light.
The Amended Finance Hill.
The following is the United States
Finance bill as amended:
A Bill to provide for the redemption
and reissue of United States notes and j
for free banking:
He it enacted by the Senate and ;
House of Representative* of the I'nibd ■
State of America, in Conrjrc* a*- ,
*ernblcd. That the maximum amount
of United States notes is hereby fixed !
at gi00,000.000.
SECTION 2. That 810,000,000 more in
notes for circulation, iu addition to such
circulation now allowed by law, shall be
issued to national banking associations
now organized, and which may be or
ganized hereafter ; and snch increased
circulation ahull bo distributed among
the several States as provided in section
1 of the act entitled " An act to provide
for the redemption of the three per
centum temporary loan certificates, and
for an increase of national bank notes,"
approved July 12, 1870.
SEC. 3. That each national banking
association, now organized or hereafter
to be organized, shall keep and main
tain, as a part of its reserve required
by law, ona-fourth part of the coin re
ceived by it as interest on bonds of the
United States deposited as security for
circulating notes or Government de
posits ; and that hereafter only one
fourth of the reserve now preaci iV d
by law for national banking associations
rihall consist of balances due to an asso
ciation available for the redemption in
circulating notes from associations of
cities of redemption, and upon which
balances no interest shall be paid.
SEC. 4. That nothing in this act shall
be constined to authorize
of the principal of the public debt of I
the United States.
THE OUOAN as a household instru
ment has been rapidly growing in favor
aud the yearly sales are now enormous.
A good Organ remains in tune, is easily
kept in order, and blends naturally with
the quality of the voice. The advertise
ment of the Smith American Organ Co.,
in another column, is referred to theoon
sideration of our readers. This house
has an enviable reputation for good
work and fair dealing. *
\ 1.1 I Id ( ONFIKKSS,
fIKNATIt.
Mi. f'svis, of W Va., offered * anl-atllute 1"
Ilia finance t>ill providing that • MI,(KM INK) m
national nank etronlalnm shall U> withdrawn
from lh Ntalce in M<wi sod limited to ihn
Stain* having lens than thru nioi-"tU.in ll*
looted Yea# 2<i nay* SI. Mr. Merriuitin. of
N. I'., offered a* a •ulwliliitc for the thiol
section of the hill a* reported hv the committee,
llio following : Thai ♦W.OdO.OIiO In nolo# for |
circulation. hi a>tdiiiou to eucti droulaUon now
allowed by law. shall I* lutml to national
hanking assoriatien. now organlied sod which
mav l-e or,; armed tiorv-afln , and *uchincreased
circnlslloti shall l-e dlsltlhulctl among the
several States a* provided in • ii-n 1 of llw
act of July IS, 1870. This was adopted hv a
veto of 9.1 to l'.l.
Mr. ttuiwsy, of Miun. frt.iti Ihd Oontmlltee
on l-osl tinierS aiul t'-st lUtatle. roiedlml a hill
to |trot Lie f>>r llio tiaiietulaah'ii cf CtUTc#|H>n
tlenofi l r lelegraitli I'lacetl m iho i sloiutar
The hill is the lluhhartl I'uslal lolcgrsnh hill,
I ttiifhai.gc.l raoei't in uUii.u uisllciv. of tlolsll
t ll i'iv.|*aww lu litoor|*u*l tiai'liiei t' Hubluirtl
1 ami his asms'talcs so Iho I'iwlal lulograidi
t diifatiy mi t\uuhU"ii llial ll shall ootiUk.l
Willi lire I'twlruastci lienorai (or iho li*n
! rulsshni .if COf(es|Htmloitoe by trlogia|-h gi.tl *1
ialoe ami Ui arpctrtlamm wiih petitlsi"U olatsu
i ately |'ics.-rilao.l ui Iho Idti, ami hioltfti(e In
all oooontial (oaluios (ally {'ublisUscl.
Mr. t Tag in. of N 11., |ireetilo<l s luom.'iia!
j sigue.l hy iho surtltoia of Uio t'olari* cis*tl-
Uou, sotiiiig ftviu iho privhUoits whlrh ihst
auffortoi on lite l<ve fine tluiTug a |writl of liM
-lata, ami thai liirt areattllsiiffcrtiig plitslcaily
an t (■e.-tutiartly . thai they cio j iouiiso.l a
' Uautte"tud rewartl hv CxpL 11*11 when Ihey
shli'i-cl aiul lhal the ttoitttau tiotontiiicitl
gate the uicinbors of ll* sxjm.hU'u fI.IXX!
! cm' ll. Ihey *ck euvh relief as may l-o j>)mr
in the jtrrttiinas, aiul thst the Kx |uimaux
- liatmah ami Joe bo iiiisluUml in any mcaouro
• for relief, lloforratl lo llio C.iuiui.tlee ou
l Natal Affairs.
Mr. Stiertuon presented the potitiou of Mrs
Mercy Hall wiJ" of Caj-t Hall, i-f llio late
Arctic uxjio.litn.ui, for a pciuiu'U. Uufnre-.l lo
the l ouuuiUee on Natal Affati* In joe- iitlug
liie I'ottumi Mr. blierman sold lie knew of no
caee which appealed to the aympalhy of the
i'.tngtuwa of lltu l'lilted Stateo as much as iliio.
lAjit It all dicvl in liie sn > tco uf luo country,
having his wile and children tn destitute clr
cumatau.*ee. Iho |>etlUou ta uidolwed t>y i'ruf
Hetiry. lien. Miertuon, ai.d other prominent
perwoue
Mr J.ihnsU'it, of Virgin*, intrwlucrd a UU
giving jurta.hcti.tu to the t '.uirt of t'lornt* to
hear ttie claim of ri W. i nitio I.ee. son of the
late Oen I.ee to the Artiuglou eatale which
was referred to the t'oiumitte* ou the Judictarv
A petiuon avvomjvamed the lull tu winch the
j-eltli.tiler aavn the j*rvij-erty was (levlard lo hint
Ly las grainlfatlier, and thai Iho (ills of Ihe
Govoiumeiil lo lite prot-erty t* defective. He.
howovet. recogui<i<w the oar red uoe to wltich
lite ptvj-erty has been put and ban no d'—irc to
disturb it, hut thrtika hr should be c. rmjwiii-aied
f.>r his light therein.
The lull lo jtrovtde (or ihe pavment of the
bonds of Ihe Louisville au-1 l'ortlat.d i'ana]
i'uaipauy u taken up, the jwudliig i|uaw(ioti
being ou lulerring it to ihe t\ mimtlee ou
Uie Judiciary M.f-m. t'oukUn and tiehiig
htivaeit advocated such reference Meeetw
l'Uurutaii and Mcfreenroj ja-wedtl. had (avre-1
s cvfutottlal of the sulij. el lo llio I mmittee on
iinai'.-o. which u hi (led after acme disc t la-
4 on.
Mr. Cotikiiiig'* aiuomluent to the etirrericy
hill in as follows: "lhal noihtug Ui this at
diail t-e ootmlrucd Ui a ilhorue an iiicreaoe uf
iho pruxdjial of the public dei.t of ttie I'iuted
Stares," wan rejected by a vote of 21 lo J7 Mr.
Sk-oIL of IVunevlvaxna, moved as an amend
nient to the MCUdg auUeiTiAing the tucrraw of
♦ ■Mi.(IMP CM) national bank currency, the follow
ing "And each national banking a*r- ciat.on
no# . rgamie 1 or hereafu-r to be organlXed.
etiall keel- and maintain a* a |<ert of Its roaerve
iw|U.red by law one-fourtk fwvrt of the coin re
owvod by it as tntoreai on ihe li'i'ds of the
L'uttcd .Mates .lejvwito-l a* aecurily for c.ioula-
Uhg uolee Oil (iovermtiPiit dejowde ; and that
hereafter ouly one-fourth of the rwwrrvo now
prescribed by law for natt-uial l-aiiklug oa.x-'.a
--l on* sheil - iisiel of i stances dueto an aswuoe
tiou evaiiat-le for the redemj'Mou uf lis circula-
Ung miles from aeaoriallona in cities of rclroij*-
liou. and ujou which taiar. ,--i no luteresl nhaii
Ist J-aid. At gded t)T s Vole of 3n> to St.
Ihe bill wo* then read a thud tune, and
paem-d, t-v yeas J*J I-- nays 2t
The bin. aa pose lid. read* as follow. : Thai
the inaAlui.iw ainuuut of I'uiled Stales notes i.
hereby nxed at ♦i00.(1jl>,000
SXCTIOS 2 Thai (ftO CMi.hOO in notes for
cuvutairon ui addition lo such cirrulaiun now
showed by law, shall lie tawued to liatunial
bail king aeo'crasi.uia now orgamrod, and which
way tn> organiAe.l hervafler ard rueb increased
ctrculaiiwii shall to thainbuled among the
several State*, as jirovtded m eectu u t of the
*-i eiiltlied •• Ao act to provide for the redemp
tion cf the three per cwutum lemjawory loon
certificate#, and for an increase of national
l ank nolo*, opjwdved July 12, 1870, and each
naliuual banking aseucuxn< u now organised ur
hereafter to be r gar .nod 01-ali keep al.d main
taiu as a j art of its reserve revjnred by law,
one-fourth part of the A* HI rrwrre#) by it a.
inlerewt on bait.is of the United Male- de
pottled as aecuniy for .-irculaiing notee on
Government depowite, and ttial lineafn r .why
one-fourth of the rr-erve now prewenbed by
law for national t-ankmg as*o.-iali"iia*liall cm
erst of balance# due t-v an aow-xioUcu available
for Uie redemption of its circulating i ctea from
<ss.*iaunn. tn cruse of redemiu.oti, and ujmo
which balance* no tnierust aball be jiatd.
Mr. Hamuli of Me.. introduced a bill to re
lieve shif*. or-1 veeoeta frvtn comj ulavrv j-iloi
fee* in certain case*.
fSeualor Momtl, of Vl.. from the Finance
Com on use. Mtid he regretted to report un
favorably uu Uie Senate bill providing for the
r*eumj lion of sjvecie payment, and fur free
banking. He bad uo right to dtaciueo what
took j-lace In Uie committee . but it was well
knowu that committee* are made up of od>l
numbers, and, in one of seven member*,
where three favored the bill, andUireeopjxo-e.l
it, with the seventh one a Utile tuned. Uio re
port hod to be uufav rable. He would, bow
ever. ask that the bill b* | !vel en Uie caiemlar
Uvgelher with tl.e odvcrwe rejavrt. Ho ordered.
Mr. Horgeut, of California, uilrodm-ed hy re
rjnee: a fcdU to secure aiiU-m<mopoly cceen
cable commiuiicaUon. Lwtween Kurv-pe, Amen
ca. had A ma.
BOCBS.
Mr Gotjger, of Mich., from the Committee
on t 'ommeree. rejwvrted a Ull out lion ring the
aj>j(oinlmeut of a c< mjxient permm to obtain
and report authentic information regarvliiig Ih#
seal fiohenen and fur trails of Alaska. Uie own
diu-m of the nauvea. Ac., mlh a ealarv of fft a
day ami actual traveling exponeoe, Mr. Hcha
macker, of N". V.. tn di-cuiielng Uie retnvluUoa
redate-i how Henry Haven and A. H IVillel# of
Sew York lial long ago formed a fur weal ct ni
{•any. and sold their interest for f<-ur million#
of dollar*, and how Uie monoj-oly was now
owned br foreigner# lu Hamburg. Frankfort
and Ixmdna. Ho cboractenred it as one of the
most gigantic swUidlee of the age.
Mr. Sawyer, of Wi* . from the Committee on
OHnmm rt-jxirUxl a lei! lo legolue a pontoon
(wide aerosa tiro sli*nieij(jit at Fralno Un
t'hlen. Faseed
The lull for Uio appointment of an agent to
obtain laformaUaii >n regard to the riir and
seal trade of Alaska was passed.
Mr. hj-eer, of Fa. offered * resolution
directing the Committee on Invalid I'rnaione
to inquire whether the eyr<-ta silwpted by the
managors of Uie national military asylum* of
deducting fine* and forfeitures fur breaches of
dieciphiie i in accordance wiUi the ej iril and
mcainiiK "f theperiMon law. Adopted.
Sir. Croreland, of Ky.. from the ComnnUee
on Elections, made a rejvort in the Kentncky
contented t-lecU(ui case, that Mr. Young, the
Kitting member, i. entitled to Ins eesh
Mr. Kiilittger, of Pa. from ilio l ommttloo on
Public liniUlLige Ami Gronude, niacin a rt>|iort
on the anlije.-t of the al!K'"l violation of the
Eight-Hour law in tlm Sew York Pfml-Oflßrw
buiMing tlial the law ia not Imiuß TinUxml in
tlio work (lone under the Government aaprr
viaion, and that an to the work done niidnr
contrartore there n> no war of enfomtiß thr
law. Mr. r.nt, of H Y , llterfl the Kight-
Hnnr law nliould eitlier lie carried out or re
]-ea! fl. It had not been carried out in the
public bnlliliiuce cither in Sow York or elno
whrre. Mr. Piatt, of Va., demod Mr. I'oi'a
.tatemeiit an to llie violation of the Kight-Ilonr
law on the public bttiJdiuga, and declared that
the law wan enforced on every public building
br the ex preen order H of tlio Secrelary of the
Trcanurr.
Sir.. Woo. 1 ford, of N. Y . from the Committee
on Civil Service Reform, rtumrtrd a bill pro
viding that no officer of the United Staler .ball
directly or indirectly receive or 1< paid for bin
own neo or ticnelU any money or proiierty of
the Tinted State* except bin nalarv or com pen
nAlio!i, or that no public pmpertv shall bo
ueed l>v oificiale. or by anv jiemon for private
pnr|toeen ; the act not to t>e no cnnetrue<l an to
pre. rut the payment of all actual and neorn
narv traveling expeneen when traveling on the
legitimate and ueceaeary duties pertaining to
their office. Mr. Meynard, of Tenn.. Inquired
liow the bill would effect the Collectors of
Port*.whore romj>en*atio!i wan made up largely
of fee*. Would it reetnet them to their nalanen
and no more? Sir. Woodfer l replied that It
would, Mr. iJawen. *f Mi , offered an
amendment by ineertuig the wopln "or make
any private profit or nne of the labor or nervire
of any person employed by the Tinted Stater,
w hi. h lahi r or rorvicc lr pAld for by the
Tailed State*."
The I.lon and the I'nlcoru.
James L wm the first wlio united the
lion and tho nnicorn herald icall.v,
adopting tho latter boast from tho sup
porters of the Hooltish sovereigns. Tho
conjunction of thoso animals on an
ecclesiastical vestment of the period of
tho Reformation must be attributed to
religions symbolism rather than to any
heraldic arrungoment; tho lion typify
ing fortitude and strength, while tho
unicorn ia typical of fortitude and
chastity. As auch the former may have
reforeuoe to the Lord, " the Lion of
•Judah," and tho latter may be an em
blem of the blessed Virgin Mary. The
tradition with regard to the nnioorn,
that it never would bo caught, except
by a virgin, and that if its Rkin was de
filed it pined away and died, is well
known. Its capture was a favorite sub
ject with the mediieval artist. I have
before met with these animals as a pow
ering for a vestment, I think, among
the inventories in Sir William Dug
dale's "History of St. Paul's."— Note*
and Queric*.
Tonsil uipllon.
Hi 11. V Putin■*, M f> , WORLD'S DlsrxtaAM,
Hcrraut, N. V.
The great prevalencs of llua disaasw, and IU
fatal results, aie well calculated to millsl our
host off.His for ilaeurn What I*Consumption?
It Is a disease of tlie lungs produced hy an acrid
and impnrw oondiUuu of lh blood, which
olreulallng through those uiosl delicate organs,
poison# and Irrttatea Uioir tissues aud llivlte*
the ecrufulou* huiuor* of the blood, causing
Iho dejHwtUoli of tubercle* and eslabllahlug
local ecioful*. Another prolific exciting cause
Of Iho development of scrofulous disease of
Uio lungs, or turben ular oouauiuj-Uwu, I*
Chronic Nasal Catarrh, winch extending along
Iho raucous lining membrane of the throat,
trachea and teouchlal tube*, finally attacks the
substance of the lungs, and lieie establishes
such an ImteUoii as to Invite the blood to
ds|>oail Us burden of uupuilllee lu Uieee
mgai'B (Viuauuij'tlo t ilsolf 1. not so ofloa
herethlary as Is geueialijr .IIJIIVUKKI 'lhal a
.ximliUou Of hiw tllality uiay lo liauslulUed
from |tarouls lo chllllicit i. ui. jitosllouahly
' Uuo. It Is llxie Jeftcteno, of tllallly which is
luhciilo-t a weeklies* which utakee litllriUou
liujtot foci, ami leads IO the .lojoeil of tube role*,
lint Utousaii'la of jrcistiii. who inherll feeble
, tilalily Ut'iihl net or suffer from cottsMßjttioti
t If the fancUtiua of Iho ayslom ucro kejit correct
ami llio bl.Hol jmio. When lite liver hoc-mea
' tor jdJ, ami bul very imjrfr*'lly jtours off the
effete, ptilsonotw mslciial. of (he bhtuj, lite
L lungs, as has bofore been shown, Imcoate
' IrniateJ The general health lcumee Igokrit
' ttowu, ami the jtereoii feel* laoguul, weak,
faiul, drowsy ami confusetl lam in ths
' right ante, lit iho rogiou of ihe hter, and sym
' jmthetic j'aiu in the shoulderw and ejnite, arid
i through the lungs, la getter ally oolnj'taurej of.
Tito patient has a dry, ba king cough that
liver Cough! bin*ll ulniue lul-srcloe are
detcloj'ed tu Ute hinge, ami perhsjm rxtst for
months all unkuowu to their vtcuut. Nothing
1 is done to remove Uio luborcioe hy the ordinary
treatment. Cough l. only a etiuj torn of the
disease, yet this only is aimed at ur the usual
treatment.
1 There is no rational way to cure c<m*uniiUon
. except to |>urify the blood. Thtme jousuuou*
1 materials lu the blood which cause the tuber
dee must he throwu off hy evening the liver to
t action. Tllality must be supjetrled, the sya
• tern nourished and btnll uj. aud the dovelofv
I meul of tuberdee Uui. jrevented. lUruov#
the blood jtoteou l>y restcrtng the oeuon of the
liver, and lite cough, which is only a st utj>t<>m
of liie real disease, ta relieved. Voti thereby
' rtriir at t\ root o/ Ist. .cr.r <- 'iroioj !."* an .
cure iAc jxirimi.
I From the propertta# and rrmeltal effects of
1 my Ooldeu Medical l)tsea>ery, the rvaadar wtlj
readily under.tAud why It has toeu #o stmewwe
ful in cunug tills fatal malady.
With it 1 Lave arrested the hacking and
harassing cough, the night sweau and hectic
fever of the con.umj'livs luvaiid snatched from
Ihe Jaw. of death and restored to health and
' hsj j .Lew many who, t>ut for my l>tstovery,
must soon have fallen vlctameto that relenUcw*
ft. God. 1 believe, he* instilled into the
> roots end {dents from which this wonderful
med.cme is silroclwd, Ihe heeling properties,
by the u*e of which Consumption, the scourge
of tire human family, may m lis early etages be
1 jiruwjttiy arrcstod aud permanently cured. 1
do not wish to delude, flslter, and Uieu disap
point the afflicted by asm rung that this can t
accomplished when the lunge are half con
sumed as many do who, being devoid of all
j conscience, aim to humbug Ihe afflicted that
they may sell their often worse than worthies#
compound*.
llal if my Go." !<n Vcftcil Ptm-tfry is em
jtloyed in the first or csrly slogew of the d
sje, I know from ample tiUsmu n end ectnal
teats Ui hundred* >. *a*se. that 11 will psllire
ly arrest the d.sease ai d restore health aud
strength. From Us wotiderful power over tiita
terrtVie disease. I thought strongly of raiting
It my t'ncisumjWtve curs . but from the fact
that it ta a jwrfcrt eject he for the eore throat
hod hoarseness to which minister, and other
public ejwaker. and singer* are subject, and
atao for Hrvnckttu. ami all wvmr o-wyAr, and
la an invaluable remedy for diwaae* of lite
Lover, and also a* a ttlood Funlter. I decided
not to apjtly to It a name whi -b might xxuslnod
and prevent its use tn other disease* for slurb
ll i* *o edmirotdy e.lepted. I wish to mention
e most wtmderful uutrllive ptuperty which it
pi ws etwee, and which eo |<uherl* adapts 11 lo
the wonts of the ounktimjute and the acrofa
loua. The nutritive projvertie* jxveseeeed by
Cod Ijver till are Uriffing when compared with
those I ii* ~nir--1 Ity my liisoovery. It i* esti<n
taii''Dg to Me how It builds op the solid mao 'i,
ilid increase. Uie fleali and weight ut those
whose *vtlmi are reduced below the usual
etauderd of perfect beaJlh. The follwwtrig
1 tewtim mial fully confirm* *3l that ! claim for
! my Golden Medical il.scwrcry in lite cure of
Ootisnmjaiou.
m.xxt ix.t PHOH Lrwne. i*#v* iiaokiTrmm
(hxirxrnax. A Wojuum. t't u.
RocHitaTEa. N. T., Jen. I3th. 1871.
i ilt V. Finn . M. H Ituflalo. N. T.:
Jv tr Str I hod suffered from c'atarrh In or
eggratale-l form for about twelve year.and f i
several year* from Itmnchlal trouble. Tried
• many drxtora and thing, with no lasting bene
fit. In Met, '72. becoming nearly worn out
, with exceoiuve Editorial labor, on a paper to
New Vorh t'lly. I was attacked with ItrcwichiU.
i in a severe form, suffering almost a total loe
of voice. I returned houte here, bul hod lawn
• homo only tiro work* when I was completely
pr elrated with Hemorrhage fru the Lungw.
' Auriity/.mr envnr Uvtltn, IJX.'IA tri'.'.in (vro
i.-vrd'l, ar. lfirti thine Inside of nine day*. In
- the September following. I tmiwwed .uflicient
- ly to be able to t-e A! nut though in e very
! feeble stale My Itronchtal trouble remaised
and the ('atarrh was tenfold worae than before.
Frery effort for relief esc rued fruitless. I
| seemed to be losing ground daily. I continued
, In tlii. feeble state, raising Mood alm-wl daily
t until about the first of March, "73. when I be
-1 ram* so I-ad as lo be entirely confined to the
f Utiuee. A friend suggested your rrmethes.
r Itut I was extremely ekej-lic*] that ihey would
I do me good, a* I had lost all heart in remedies,
and l>egan to look UJOUI medicine and doctor.
, | with diegnst. However, I (Ibtatnod one of yonr
- cirrulara. and read it carrfnllv. front whledi I
| came to the conclusion that y.u understood
] yonr buaineee. at least I finally obtained a
quantttr of Dr. Sage * Catarrh Remedy, your
Gohlen Slcdical Pircovery and Pellet*, and
commenced tlietr vigoroua tire according to di
rectum*. To mv rnrpri.e. I eoou began to Im
prove. The IMaoorery and-Pellete. in a hort
time brought out a revere eruption, which con
tinued for reveral week*. 1 fell much Iwtter,
my ajqvetite im/Torv.f, and I gained inetrenglh
arnl flerh. In three month* every vertigo of
tho Catarrh war gone, lb* Itronchilia hail ncarlv
diaajipeared. had no Cough ahatevcr and I had
entirely c-awl to raire Mood ; and. contrary
to tlie ex|iectali. a of •me of my fnendr, the
euro ha* remained permam nl, I have had no
more Hemorrhage* from thr l.uug*. anil am
entirely free from Catarrh, from which I hail
■uttered en much and eo long. The debt of
gratitude I owe for llie file- -ing I have received
at your hand*, knout no bound*. lam thor
oughly *ali*fi*d, from my •x)ericnee l that your
nic-licuie* will inarter the wurvl form* of that
odiou* di*eae Catarrh, a* well a* Throat
and I.ting I'ieearc*. 1 have i .'Commended
them to very many and rhall over *i>oak in
their prairc. tiratefnllv yontw.
WM 11. SPENCF.It.
f. O. Bur 507, /fo rhftter, ,Yw I'orT.
In another letter Sir. Spencer *ey* : " I have
had a remarkat'le experience. Thnrc familiar
with mr p*l lllnerr link ujrin my prerent Con
dition of health ** an almoet mlraculoue rrrto
ratinti. The iih.v*ii-tan who trcale.l mo dining a
part of my lllnor*. ami who ia prohghly the l>erl
•urgenn and old echool phyeleian in Ihie city,
eaid to me, lart rummer, that ' according to the
itoual cnurre of thing*. * man in the condition
you were in a year ago ought to have died.""
Thoea who are inclined to be rkenti. al and who
may donbt tlie authenticity of Mr. H|x>iicr'e
testimonial, will have their skepticism removed
by addreeeing a short note to him. I h<>i>e no
oiie, however, will annoy him with long lellera,
as although lie feel* very gralefnl for liie re
storation to health and is willing to aid In
spreading the glad tiding* of relief to other
sufferer* from Catarrh, ltrouehitto and Con
gumption, yet If one out of a thousand who read
tills testimonial, aliould write lurn a letter ark
ing an answer, he would find little time to do
anything else than write replies. I hope, there
fore. any who do write liim will *ay but few
word*, ami not for get to rnrlntr a poiiagr ttoiup
for a reply or you cannot exjiert him to auawer.
Mr. Bpeneer ia a gentleman very widely
known and, among tlioee who know him. no
one would pretend to mie*tiou bis statements,
nor doubt hi* round judgment.
Hit testimonial is only a fair sample of thou
sand* of other* received from thoee who hare
Men enrod of Lingering Cough*, Catarrh,
lirouchiti* and Consumption, of revere dis
oare* peculiar to Fomalea, and many other
forma of dircaae, by uaing my Family Medi
cines, after they have been pronounced in
curablo by eminent physicians. I have moro
teetlmoniala of thia kind in tny office than one
man can lift, yet I had no room for them
here, having already tresspassed upon the
oolumnr of this paper more largely then I had
intended when commencing this articlo upon
Consumption.
limine a Picture Taken.
The operator i jnat about to with
draw the cloth. Ilia back is toward
you. The index finger of hia ttnooeu-
Pled hand tnarka the place fr the eye.
I'.rery nerve in tour body in braced for
the ordeal. The doth i drawn, aud
the uoiaeteaH aud unaoeu Angora of the
prepared plate are picking up your
ft'ttturvn one by one aud trauaferring
them to ita niyaterioua aurface. What
an infl-ienoß ia thia you are under and
which you cannot explain, which weak
ens every nerve aud unloosen* every
cord and muscle, and acta free upon
ami over you n myriad of aeunatioua
you never knew before. The eye of
the camera glarca upon you like the
eye of an offended ami threatening
power. Trickling aeuaationa are felt
ill under your scalp, and a heat evolved
within with aiuaaing rapidity fluahe* hi
I the Htirfaiv of your body aud leavea it
pierced with a thotiaauri paiua. You
"tare at the mark with an intenaity that
threaten* to obliterate your aigbt.
Heaven* ! how slowly the time drag*.
Your eye* grow weaker and weaker,
filling with water a* they die out. You
know they are cloning, but you caunot
help yourself. Will be never pnt back
that cloth? A thousand reflections
upon your appearancp, on the sound*
in the street, on thing* irreverent and
dinantrou* to vwur ootu|>oattr, flood
your mind, am! take such hold upon
you that you cannot shake them off.
Aud yet uo move h> restore that cloth,
lie btauda like a ktatue cut from flint.
Aud you—quivering from the sole of
the foot hi the crown of the head, with
eyes blinded liy tear*, with perspira
tion ooruig from every pore, and every
muMcle * trained until it seema ready
hi snap and let you down upon the floor
a man* of disfigured ami palpitating
flesh. lie need not put up the cloth
oc. The opportunity which he con
trolled to reproduce you in jierfeetiou
is gone. It matter* not now how it
looks, only that you may get away and
le at rest. Yon grow hysteric in your
de*|Mur. It settle* down ujioi! you like
a cloud compressing your throat within
its grasp until your breath surges back
on your lung* as if it would rend them.
A weight is PRESSING UJKJU you. You
strugglk to wrench yourself free from
the dreadful oppression, and yet not a
muscle of your body is in motion.
What dreadful thing is this ? You must
shriek; you The cloth is up—the
thirty second* have expired, aud yon
are photographed. - -fkmbury Xrw*.
F.iiwts I'ukßiLer'A WIFH.—TH r xeeu
tora of KUwin Kurml have ofleoted a
•cttlemrnt Hitii tLe divorotni wife of tlw>
drcta*tvl by |>ayiug her $95,000, ffbe
•jrroeiiig U> fun-go nil her claim for
this mm. It vroa deemed pmbable that
lu r divorw- in Note York would not
pnvtut Mra. Htuchur from laying
claim to all of Forreat'a enlnb-, aa he leit
no hen* by coUßangtiiuity. Thi* aettln
ment, therefore, may lie regardtwl aa a
WIM and reuaouable method of clearing
the eatale and inanring the exeention
of the tragedian a will reapeeling the
,' AcUir'a asabor Home," fur the eree
tton and su|>|Hrrt of which it provide*,
and at the same time gtvea Mra. Sin
clair anfßcient to keep befhaudoomely.
C'oine, and lad I t Kea.on Together,
To the afllicted in btidy, we offer a
few words of platn, practical reammtng.
No matter under what form of atekneoa
♦on labor there ia one great truth yon
Ihould ever keep in mind, vix: All aia
ease originate* in an impure condition
of the blood. iNtrifr that, and the dis
eaae must depart, for it liaa nothing to
fret! on ; hat you eonnot purify the
blood by the use of poiaonutu Jmga,
and exhaaattve stimulanta; the relief
which three afford ta telujairary and
decv-jvtiTe, having yon worse off at
every interval. The IH**l lllt/ttd Puri
firr evi-r dieeorered ia Ida. WALEKR'R
FAMOPH VtwroAM UtTnttia, compounded
of aimple hertva. No matter how liope
lrM yonr ease mar seem, try the VINE
GAR IfrrnutH, aud a f<-w draughts will
convince yon of their virtue. Dr.
Walker, the discoverer of Uiia prieeleaa
remedy, hod been given up to die by
the rhyaieiaca, and ia now a aoand and
healthy man from their use.—f bm.
Dick Holland, of tkncinnati, hod an
impulse of generosity in coming home
from Uie New Orleans carnival, and
gave np hia sleeping car lerth to an in
valid. The fact that during the night
an engine in the rear ran into the tnun
and mangled the invalid baa made Dick
aelf-deuvtng for life.
Home Parenta apend their money for
FaU-ril Medir-ue le core their cluldrtvn • colds.
Sr-tn* nave thexr money and jwwveut Uie oolila
by buy-tug Hit vaa Tirrxn Hhoaa. winch never
wear through at the taw Oorn.
Withoat doabt htindrtsia of pvoplo
wli.i will read tin* item are *uffertug with
Kidney IHerarc in .'Of form wluch might lie
fired with a bottle or two of JiAumi .taw
fynt I OUMICH/. owed Internally. Why uot try
it .' Outm,
Pnrmott' Purgative PHI*, which arc
now Ir-ing extemuvelv erdd in till* State, are
purely vegetable, and are mild and gentle in
Uieir operation. One to a doe*. Good qumli-
Ue* rertkuilv Com.
For Hebihty ue PaarviAN Srat p.- -Com.
ritlHTk IKiKV KXI'KHIKMK UF
AM (II.P Ft HIK.
MM WIRILOW't FOfTTBtNO BTRrP It TBI
I'RRBCRIFTION OF an* of tke k*t F*mal* I'ty.l
fan! and Rartet In tk* Cnlt*d tlat, and ka
keen n*ed tor tklrtp yrr! wttk n*v*rf*ttlrg *frl j
and *ncr*! ky militant of molker* and ekildren
From Ik* fr.bl* infant of on* week uid to Ik* adalk
tt correct* acidity of lb*ttoma<k, r*il*Tt wind
oolic,rogalat*t tk* bow#!*, and give* re*t, b*aitk
and contort to motker and child. Wt helitve It to
K tkr Beit and Farral Remedy la IR* World la ail
hmhol r>T*RNTKRT and PIARRHfKA I* rfflb
PRKN wbethor It ariie* from Teelßlng or frrm
any ulker oan*a. Fall diraruonttor nslng will ae
rompany each Nr'ttla Won* Oenutn* utile*! tk*
fac iitnil* of CrßTlft d FKREIXt I* on Ik* onUld*
wrFF*r.
Bono nv atA Mantcias intuit
• MOTIIIMU BKTTKR." Culler Bro* No.ton
Hi . John nirr. oalekratod Vart*aui
rj-iwnaanv laiAU, tor Cold* and Cn*mMio
HOCSEHOLDj**#' " ,,u *"• wn
PANACEA To alt pr*on* *aF*rlns
AND from llk*um*tl*m. Kcnralsta,
F\M!T Y I'ramp* la tk* limk* or (torn
*rh, Riltoa* Colic. Pain In tk*
LINIMENT, nack, bowal* or aid*, w* would
ay Tna BovruoU liriraj
urn Pamii.v Lmaairrt* of all
IIOUSEIIOLI) Othara tk* rrmrdy yon want
P WACEA tor Internal and *mtornal na*.
It kaa cared tk* akov* com-
AND
ylalnta In tbonaanda of raaoa
TAMIL 1 hare I* no mlatak* about It
LINIMENT. Try It bold by all PraswUl*
The MAI Rots.
■raw YOBS.
ofif OBtUD-l'rsm# toßitr Bullock* .11V*
rirt(|tttllty 11 \ al2\j
rt#onnd qMMty ell V# .lis
Ordlußry thin OatU.,. .1' 4
Infikrtor or low*w< ffTßd# .i • .14
Milch .0J • s ®.
Uosn Uvr t K* .<*•*
Umerd t"S< ."'i
i?k
Oct ton —Middling JJ •
Floor —F.xlr* Wrwtrro. *.*o a BT>
Htate Kxlrn ** a • J.TO
Wheat— Hod VmW* I.'d d l.dl
No. a Hprnis I-B • 1 RJ
- -n 4 ** I **
Uartoy Mail I-'* •
onto Mitral Wmtem (0 a ,<IJ {
Oorn—Mitod Woatoru bft a -DO i
Bar, per too II OA nFR.tiO
Straw, pod tot* 10.00 nH.OO j
Hoar. .. W JRedS—WFI. Be .18
rork—Mow I* SI KalT.oO
■ 'OS
Petroleum—Crude............!%"' lief.ned 18\,
Batter- Htate. B8 a IB
Ohio, Fine SI s .SI
'• Yellow SJ a .St
Wo*torn ordinary.., 30 a .35
P< tiuajlvaiila All* .Sd a .SB
obeeee-81at<- Factory 10 e
'* BkillllllM e.e.baa# e*'® 1 HN
Ohio - .1®
Kggi-BUte 101s J
•miiA
BoefOattla d 84 g #.71
Hherp Til aB 38 |
Hog*—Live 800 a 8.88
Flour, 8.78 a 9.80
Wheat No. 3 Spring I.SS • l.* 1
Oorn .77 • .M i
Data M • •<*>
Bye 10J *lO6 j
Barley lISa 1.#5 j
lard oSe .10
A&bAjra.
Wheat M t.dl a l.F#
Bye— HUte 1 04)#d 1.08
Corn—MUod RS a .B7
Barley--Htato. 1.75 a I.SO
Oata—Btate 80 .0
raiumLMiu.
Flour 718 •
Wheat— Weetcru Bed 1.68 a 1.68
Corn— yellow M .8*
M!v>d 81 a .81
Petroleum—Crude 11W HoAnrd .IB\
Olorer Heed 8.80 all.oo
Timothy SOO a 8.00
BAtrndoaß.
Cotton—Dow Middling 16 .18*
Floor—Kxtra 6.00 a 8.50
Wheat 1.60 a 1.88
Corn. #Bl a .87
Oat* - .81 .68
CIIIbURRI UirrKXl UNIX PA MB ABO
RICK
(max as otaer eaoas xaau Oavtog wenas li use
NMMh
IIOWXV TRRMircai COMFITR
will *Mlrov Worms wllSeut Injury to the shIU
heleg i>*rfsi ily WHITE, auS frae (ism all aotorla*
or other Injuries* logreSlSßte aaaailr use* la
worm )i#i-ar ntiun#.
CUItTIM A MMUWB, Frwprl.l.iw,
He. HI h Vol wo • treat, Haw Verb.
Bd* by JlrwfMr ss* i%mt (, ssi Sislrrr te
VrJliMi, el f aasTV V ire COSTS a Boa.
\v IM hll AIiKHTW In MS) lbs Ids Of I Carlo
VV llaaiu, , |p| iter ilia* * •.- /\M cm fit It,
aud auftihlu, a Bustwiuty for wlSs a aahv
raavsnsrs.
It R hi site 1.1., puUishsr,
Beato*.
\ #ll Wi will glva a Mas. Uuy, Woman nt
I Ui'l lu evsry village In Ihs lolls*
A Chance !o Make S2O in Two Days.
Wills |>stl rar* will 4o—to
UXll A JWW, Wslslu. OWte.
BrTTiIT* 1 MQRT 1* PORTA HT
te
fjf KIAITIO VIrUPTUKKD fertuaa
■I T E 111 WW *s si'* {<••(. i Heme
venue* of The m.xir
I / I truss IS elthvul 4. uXI
\ M hs most mp-triaet
V* Biestrsl Sisrwvsry uf
WW ike Crlitsr) Tfc# is
• ult of this srw diseovsry fir Ibs.srfsi* rslirf
sod start t- tier uis ars ami ##i-*lai sod gtoti
fllii* Ibtsnssr fituit wum wii# {.sirsel eom
eorf Jay ll >tluiosvi munus • f
Ih* too,*, sissvt tsfaioln* ihs Rejoin# duns* ihs
Si(lsi , ifini, or severest eirsrs.ssd if Ibt di
■ rci'ot t sis f.iltosed s yrussi est cure will set
be rffs, isd Mo sr. II lotu.msd ostaos sill use s ear
so* 11 the u'd Isth.oued m. I*l tytis* nsssse ifcst
wars form*' I* used Cut sow cutter led Tan new
Truss I# tei,l L, Mi lor Key eet •• all imrte uf the
ct-unur wnfc full dttsetiuue fcn Sim y a full ds
s. ri sites cirruisr sill Us esoi fits if rerruestsd hi
Msil The Xlesllt Trute will oe • tij>{.l(*<i to. agk
the Rtirgeun-General t "Bra us leanest, to so *
rr.t aunt whu ars entitled Is a Truts frt-n. ihs
'Vrrumsul Ayr or the l#erlfc if Urns a (iaUeet
Let lissit ruylursd will est prsvsni a run.
Prom Ihs auuiero*. lesumumsls la our puesss
siuo ws syprud Ihs follow.eg
- arts, etc . , {,,) teo.-e . f tooi.lSe psOewte teaur*
• Irunyl* to ill tfh ury , se seU •• lu Ihs t are so*
freedom fiom InMiovenieon* with whlrh Ih* In
■ Kumrul ■■ worn WHS superior advautages, fhe
I<- Jrutt {metrites lost- gl> degree aLb IS
It tiut sod ouaUAunioi'* Heirsr.f fur olhet unt
il"" 1 hsts LO brt laiiuu lu regard.•- II st nr.
lm(o'rlaul nesstloi tns relief and -ere f Hero a"
J H ( AHSIx HAS. U fi ,
" K* Heslrh Officer of the C..H <>( Mew Turk. Lar
g<->n ta-C bier of Mew Vorh Stars Mutytisl,"
etc , etc.
Maw Teas, Iter, a 10th, 1*74,
Geo V Holts, M l' boo I tissue Trwee le
Itar Mr Aficr itlrriui lu thirl* fasts.ln a|
|.U f.itvi float the use ft evert f >rm of Metall-c
Trust {irocuraCl* Id tine ruuexry ml la Isruft.)
MS year* a*-., spylled feur }ls*g Trwee, and
tier* thai lime 1 have sinerieiierd cumlLrl sod
eelief action aud l-eso Isugai Ih* Irnth. IS el the
kleeuc Trure is Ih* only inslrueisol ibst etoe 11
he used for ins rel.ef sod rsrsol Hernia and resw
sfier mors thso thirty yeais runtiuuous fit lue,
aud Saviug adjweled mau* hni.drsde of Trusses,
(sod ( r Ike leel twenty tu ulhe IOSII ss.lusivolyj
1 grslefullr d* lire it lu Ue my del berate, p 0100,
thel v ... Casfir TVui. n the ot'ls oa* satltlad te
the m.undsar* of ihs yutlii , that slesttrtty is tks
rraty {..est st *ll sdsyisd I- the r*a airsme.u or a
Tiuse or ft |i(oirier and sat tonvlured that yeter
AXast.r Irso srrwslly rurst a lei ye |>iopurtit>e tf
s l.ee ■ i airs i is sypl.sd. nel " > am ng
eh 1 Use, hut |a oumsruss '.see within my owa
knowledge of nstlanle fowV to V fee Iflf age
W. U MrHKH AH M (•
PtcHrreor of Attaturny and aergtry, H. X K. Hsdtcdi
Cullfff
Address
THE ELASTIC TRUSS CO. v
#d llnesdMef. Mrw lurk. .
Colorado for Mis and Toimits.
1 'a s 1 v sot ages for CouruofU vee i.f Asthmat
ic# Ku.l paiuculars given free
Address, A- H MATIKRfOM.
fsn UoltiM, rolaraße.
15,000 Sold ill 60 Bays.
ABENTB WANTEo2zr£*v<r,£!
I te Mary Clem me r Ames, rwwsys ike
Af"rnase ivk" nthix werweli. is;>■ mreet da
~ luxr*. tf Mr Ogialei ivlhreetr M We
rnwn awwe rftwm.'* It wu rs.s, i ratm .si
Uurftn w • mi. wvwrAmVtac WttUh #RMBI U. a•
WJL ll kR BW Hhwrw wiLH wvipry bm4y Uml •
h* AM k' llmilli OM AfTRI IdßPft 444 Biwt II
MB idMhU# MHk km BIWIM M ' oA JW 4
Rffk* t H Thtehla 4 Mkff kßßkt hR4I ftteßl Ukm4 wir't IB
Ah 11# k-sNB terim HAm br brkkmbßM otHMpptHdar IB aplfh
1 t f io*MfteHl, RHpMhl; ltel AM kR Ikd UdM §mt Ml
RdteiAMWr*. MB AM MR fwMtlrVhUNx. *. BHM.r baMf.
Me *. ewfsJ te PW| kMMlite Im-rI fkat rUThtai tm* *,
M 4 tm B, TWkS iaßffta.wek*te •*.A m*M U~• tw-Ut* AAflfteßß
A- Kb WUATAUuTuk A U N |RMsAir4. Ul4.
THE SMITH
AHERIGAIV ORGAN GO.
WMsA Nearly a Quarter ot a Centnr?.
50,000 Organs Sold!
'pax T hryof tMts Company .t to eas the hrst
1 materials without regard So eoel. lis em
tlfees. sswsrtally those in leading pest ileus,
avshsen Urn.liar wttM the mualotsrt of road
taste um.st* from rh* tefanry of la* husl cess
The . use ai* solidly constructed, and from Maw
and KLA<. ASV Daeiues
The mar ufsctuiert claim that they have sue
cesdsd In eredlwringih* m. ef otf.e/urtory hersuee
rwr heard /cpwt HrrAt: while si Ihs seme in,
their trvgsns Urt teeter Ww ryeselsd Ml Jhsrr.
AN OBOAN LEADING S 000 RINGEBS
The fol tew log letter. from the Meet Rminsnt Or
ganist In Ifee rriled gtatrs refrts to as Organ
new used in Ihs Rvv IW Tslmsgr t church Tks
Organ f rmer.y used, mads I > anelhtr he use, ho J
proved ibsutttci.eril
fISAa In —I ewe you personally my heel (hanks
for aeading tows (the Brooklyn Tabernacle Caa
g.cgettooioneof the gmitb American R-ed ( rgsns
toths Academy of Music 11 ts perfectly wonder
ful thst so small art Instrument I* sirs should have
an!!!. i*Lt pswsr te -ead a Csagrsgstios of wo many
thousand yrryls TM* Trustees, se w*U es myself,
arc mat k pleased with it. Xhe quality of TUBS ts
also all thst can bedertrwd It speak* fttr Itself,
and sill have met with, who attend Utses-not*.
epesk of It st most sauefhetory. Accept my
thanks, and believe me to remain most rsspsci
falty your.,
Geo W HuaoAM, OrgesHrf.
-New rori, rch . IKTA
Mew Instrument, of a Bsflned tjuallty t ( Ton.,
fee Trt tret# Ron.r.
Cataloguee .sat to any addret. on .yphcajiow
Trrwinnt HI., (opp Wallham.) Ilosfon. Haaa.
Angsts W ARTgp to Mil our Ju.tly celebrated
Art trie, tor Imdts.' wear Indispensable sod
tltolxt'ly necessary IW.OOO MILD
MtISTIII.V. Trey give o tnln d tsl.t
fscrt-w Ml KKM tl.Kt tt Isl ITII-
Ot'T TIIKM. hainple seat on receipt of
g'd UO Fit KK. Send for tUwetearml ctreu
tar ta I'MRLR RIMBTR 1 O *0 Cham her* gt .S T
ii,,s PKM Dtl Commis.loa or g:to a week
C — >l fsls-y. and .spsmsss W'.oSar Hand will
pay II Apply sssrvr. G W rasa, d C. , Harlon. O
uiuv Send* cts with sddrostss of other# and
" n 1 recstee pestj aid a Fine Oeroutn, ?It worth
01AT Rl-HR sod it str rcttoas to clear ff s day.
nui. I'tcssf t'e '.in lU-uth Mh St. I'ails.p*.
AGEHTB WANTED FOB THE *
HISTORY OF THE
6RANGE MOVEMENT
OIL THE
FARMER'S WAR AGAINST MONOPOLIES
■rln| • foil e wmiUe iro 'iul of lb* itnr
Sir! of lh. American F*imra kgeiuat U lor
float or tk Rsttr. a<! Coin panto*. wtlk* klatory of
the n# an 4 rroftfii of th* Or4#r of of
- nbio4rf ; Iff WrrU ltd proipKti. It tl>l ftt
• kt. *u4 for •prtMn •on 4 Urma to
Atfrbii, Mil itf w>y It arllt nilft than wt otli
hrtk A44TM. KATIOKAL Pr*LIHl!6 CO..
PtiilaJl|kbia. Pa
nil ?'r 1i \ V Cnarnir*lott pufciiafctM
1 Al# I II takrn adnniir of
ik* f r*at d*ntnd tor Oil litlnry of lh# Oraop#
Mot•ar>l. to l*n* anrtliikl* amrka on Ik* *k
, lirt <mr '* afriruttunu
wn l>o not k* imp <*4 Upon |*r thai Ik# WMfc
i yvn buy la indoranu by lb# laailkf Qraaftrt.
I pot day Comtnlt* n r ftjit a wrfk Paltry
aiid *ip*mc* Wa off#* *t and will pay It. Apply
BOM . Wotibrr A C 0.. kiatlum.o.
NOVELTY
PRINTING PRESSES.
Ikr Mr.l Ye linralrd.
For Amaianr or Iluatn*** Fwr
•*>*#. *"8 nnanipaaaed for geu
aral Job Prl*""*.
orar lO.fOOO la Tar.
• BEN J. O. WOODS,
L Manufacturer and Tkaalnr IB
| *v*rr description f
rRiNTmO MATERIAL,
I Mil IV.|rr*l atul I M Kiirr
lantl tit*, lift.ton.
lalttl-TI. r MocKual.k * Murray*' . Mr* Tork
Kfliry. U. wril ft L.fiaiu ill; M. krl M . I htla<tol
pb'r. ir. &-■■*#* Itl Munn* St., rktoagv. Sand
f.tr tllaalraiad Caftagtic. ________________
ry kCAliislei'* Patent AKTOPrICON.
The moat power oI M.elo l,.ntrrn
II rrar made with a brilliant Oil Ump
tor lltimr, Sunday .Irhoola and bee
'"-I uitaa. Stor*optlrona. *e lU* al
*.Er T fd reduced price* . pr-.tf/,iMr tminfii
fair i ii, lb / lir nw i. trill nr.v'f cu trial. St nd
• '.tap fur Carol gur, W. MITt lIRI.I. M JILII
Tl R nit Chr.lt nt iltrrat. Fhilad. Iphla.
i nnirirn mke mora money .films SlL
ftlip NIK VKR'd raTl NT BROOM.th.u any
ituilll IVJ "tkrr arilrlr Ona Ag*n made
fjlin In II hay* Recommended bt Am A prion!
trM< aad over 100.000 tomllira natr* ik.ui
I'iroJirt /rrr CLEGQ 4 CO. Sai'ortlnndi M, 11 1
THE MORMON WIFE.
An lIKKTX ir.ntril to T ihl! fratlea* book. II
rompriara iba Adventure* UJ Bxperlance* of
a IVf man- rnllrn ty Acr*</—tor reai* lha wifr of
a Mot mun pr.tphrl dtorioalitg all that la nryate
etoni, mrk*d and atarilltig Full of tbrtltteg ad
vuntnraa. humoroa! and pathetic aranra—tkr moat i
fascinating book eatant. Portrait of Ik# Aa'horeaa
end of leading Mornc*. mm end tmmm L'f* and
Scene* In I'tah dr. For cl-rnlari, addiata HART-
FfiRP FURLIBBINO Cfi . 'Urttofd, On—.
mj A A A MllilTll Tt AUKFTI to aril
Cl|nn ba IMTBOVBD BOMB tHrTTLR BEW
mII 111 ISO MA< 'IIINK. the only low prtcad j
111 I 111 I Lock Stitch Sewing Machine over In-
M*WW vented. Adrtrea* JOHNSON. 01 ARK ;
A c<> . Hnaton. Kim . N. V Oly.or I'lttaMirsli. fa.
Profitable Employment
Work for Everybody. Good W*g*a. Pertna
nrnl Employment. Men and Women wanted,
roll particular, free.
Add. tea, W. A HFJSDKBSOB A CO..
Clevrland, O.orßt. Loula. Mo.
iHUKNTS WAKTRO foe the new book,
l.tn AS'l) ADVKSTXRSS OF
Kit Carson
iy bit [.anli tad frlnad, IX W. G. Palaan, Brnatt IA
Kbatd fa,a.UAA> fcrtn k 1 "-
aalt T.rt TTia4AiTBoWS'AjMj
iraaVMi HI VTAR, TRAPPItE, SCOfT tad Ob IDS
■tit nubllit. ad. 11 e*n taint Ml (ad omplttadjaerlj..
i Indian trlbaa oflbt FAR WIBT at tana by KUCarawa
vba llrtd aatnng thtta all ktaWa. It ritaaa full, rnllabla a-oaai
ct Ika IdOIXM-S.aad tba MOBOCWAR. At a wark 01 HISTO-
A fraad npportanl t j kttagnulu ksmnia-oav*
Oar Ulttattutad cliralart teat fraa lo all naallcuiu WiiUaadua.
ankniHnilwa DUSTI*. fiUJdHt A iXX.HarUaid.Ctos.
BUY J. 4P. COATS' BLACK THREAD fur BACHMII
•lO HATS KIT.T.KD
Wllbea# boa AIARK I RAIikIIOT Brie* tori* ,**k
soar kloitolll. JnMW r HKHT * CO.
u.w *. rb ii M... v* r j oo.pkiia
HOKCEOPATHIG
DOMESTIC MEDICWE
Bl LAI'RIK * Mr(i.T(IIK,
Ike tflk eAlllun Wilkin itm IMII; luit rto
can-A. II i* tk* stoat . umplet* ani Mliakt* work
In I AIT page*. inliiluutill koauA, >flM
' A >li'*ui rat* with caarl'M of W
n.rrti, II r . Oil 111 to.ok at. A **al to any nan
of lb" Ci.it>4 ktatea h i uMi <•* receipt of (ftJ.
* 11 II IMM lwl.lt It* MM! IU *t*f fatally
■ Ilk rhilArea Mrh year
AAAr*** IHIRIIUKK * TIRKU Ho**®-
patkir lAfittrt, It.'. Hruit At., ktt fork flti*
iimi eeUt-iiakeA ii, UK. Sif /or Aaerrt/A*** rtr
rtlur
•WW* A Tr A AOb.lT* vanteA In town AAA
I §■* li country to ttll TbA ,or get up club
■ "i ■ ortftrt lor Ik* l*iA**t T-* r-mp*',
la Atactic*. Imaortnr*' price* and : nfturamaate
t **•>.!• koo* for i i<uin/ AAAr***.
•i iHI 111 WRl.Lk.av***! kt NT I'OBaa.lW.
KUAINT, KUEER & KURIOUS
la 10" aloal.lt Oak **gl*U.*H. bulliJlala.
•■UK* an* lea . *1 ••** ; * plrtare* InrkM* 'WO
tlaoiu* ail A a*4iaa l<: ■ .<• A' o "■ kloato'l b T
fb/\ AffF ■ ' ••*" *'-.**#*• t koala karaedby
KIIIIK •" f'• * •'ami.a AAAr*■•*
OUI/U '* 10'IAfAHTf. f'lntiaaatt.ii.
Orient Safety Lamps*
ftCnllrely of Htlal, art Ik* an I j
lui|>a In MM nblrkiau Mllbtl
break,leak,war Ipla*t. Art ar
aaairalal and cheap. AAtpltA
la all hameebwM atta) a lata la
■ tori t, fatlorlia, thartk**, ttt.
Agents Make $lO a Day
BclUat Thw* Lamp*.
Aiirin WAlint*r nsao'yts
tka L'oitaA kiam AAAr***
WALLACE A SOWS.
II t bauibera Mml. Saw I ark.
1 LOVBJoYU til Htli MM aa
; til.A an CITt KH At \ M
Pirn KkifK. v
Cult plaaa bolltr loan W
all ..14 bava or." Al i ( J/o>y >SBfIL
ch IA mi utt it. kebtl
to four *A4rru car*!
tal*l of to Mail taliwy
i alaao 0* ALVA k 1.. \ly _ __
1 bOVII JOY, tt Wa• 011 —
ton ktrart knQ.a lilt W
Ll'v •..4i* la Mvr<'dff. ft
keeper i - K. .lajr^fMHHßim
Wanted, Persons
< Who will. t tarur* * par man ant b**ta**4 aaA
j maka notif at itrai or oikaratta. *llinp my
kkW CTIAM wAkßkk. ao.iteaeieety adeaniaaA
ta at pa not du*u>a* !•#' mawli <t,600
total, to acdrea* lot cirratar an 4 tartnt.
J C. TII.TUM. pittaaurgk Pa
est >\m i B. in it *
FAMILY PHYSICIAN
i Will kaaaet fr>a ky mall In an* at* sea*lug tfcair
i odar.ai i. Tit Bruadwa,. lit Tork _
THE Agents Make SISO &
otir par Moatk, talllty oar nam
pr PT MAP*. PtCTl'BKk, t HMO-
DbOl .*HU, Air., near Hap *f IKV
IOKK kTA tK. b.ad tor Ifll
(tUM*ul *1.4 aor oar u iter*,
vcw K. C BkIDOMAB,
w BT Aktrtbr tiiMt. k T
i^OTf]
PBS a 1 -a m page p***pal*l lea*
I ;. -no r.w . i* A Ma.
VSE*XS9U bnnkan a J bmikima.b Watl ai . 1 V
\ rrni• inl<4. Urn or nan gh a week
or tiaeiorfrii** I'a/iaaMr *mp4rt /<•#. Writ*
] at ana to P M kBKli >iatk ktraat. kaar Ttrt
HO! FOR COLORADO!
Wnk n*lnii" rllmata, matrotterai aanarry.
j mtiln* y*~aM, *trk *rv■>•■.* aaA
bamltb atiaulafti ra*rl uaA *p*rta4 lafbrmm
; tin * rat. Ira*. AAAr*** A- R I'ATTXUOV, Purl
j QoUls, flelnriiw.
Dky pukrantppdtbi*-
S Z&w* *"*
GREAT REDPCTIOW.
TEAS AND COFFEES
AT WHoLUAII rklCßt.
locreued Fkcilitie* to Club Organizer*
•and far Sw Prtca-LUt.
THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO..
r o .bob *. ii —a aT>tr ' r.
mitVu* ktawb Witk. A*at* wwitaA. parttaa
I<sl A. lAltfra. .VU.ir.THA
DTTT Tl Pk> run ARB PII IM
I I Itun: -PLAI* BUST
I V 11 aru." * TimlAa* on Ui*
\ I nana. Hlaton, Cor* and
■ % fmoiuauiplLtA. bit
m ana. t-r r. *ri*TARA-
I ■■ I'LK ACO.tl Wnikar lint.
■ II ltra *rk- Srni RK tonß
I IE |>na ot tb* taatd Haw* an
J JLI at a kaar *fp,
Irdn in the Blood
#THR rz&crtAH
fTJtrr viaiaa*
u>4 Knrtebta lb*
Bland. To*** Op LSa
Pi Mrm.Bttkla ui. tb*
< una
Faaalt (imrdklelA
erwrDekfttr.il a-
Bum l>ya|" pnl*, ko
Tkouaaada bail
bona ckaaprA by Urn
in* of Uila rrtntdt
from *mk. ftkk
saflr tint mshms, io
. ptranp. bcallhy. wud bai.i-t mra and mature; aaA
hitiuli aaeao* neum'ii bmiula U Ctrl it * Mai,
Chorum ll* aur* )na p.A tbr rtcht artlci*. fia*
tbal "IVrtrrlae Syrup" t* I .loan U> tlw eft***
Pkmjiblriakva- S*dSir*>a. StTH W.IOwII
A SUM, tVajftrfcm, Ikabm AUm Par tab ky
drucßUu laimlr.
EXTERMINATORS
INSECT POWDER FOB
Ra'a, ill or, T- •. l.ra, Ania. llo.l4m*, Motka, Ac.
i. 1. HKS U*. I I! HAS.lift., N. Y., Solr Apvota.
THIS P6HTM6 If V'
Karprr i BuitCinpa. S. i It it for tale ky K T.
Rrmartprr Palo., la Wnrtk Birrrt. in IP lb. aac
9lb | a. kaprt A iao a fall *a t rttnrot nf ink tab*.
Bk yw. ilarrh Hrnrdrl
If.'iirra by lis mili. brul-H
Iff" vIMk 11nc iin 'iirriira.t a1: trb ■
t!* 4iar*tac ) IcldaH
m vVa". I U'bcit Ihr r- airtn ba*H
\ 1 put In i-crloclß
ffPt 1 onler with Doctor ■
™ \ _ Plcrrv'e Luldrnff
■rdtral Dlarutrr), which AxaMl
bp lAim cjnK KljfW correct l.kma I aalß
pyMcm. W. rh arc e!**i al laulL alwiM
to *<" l i<;v acaUy. npoti th
pkli f 111* no o it ml iu c'.
CBDrrli i.cric vaftotil.l Iwapplicl ahH
Mr. PlCirrN Num.il Do tit be. ml 111 HI
c.hich i :t <i r.m l> c.irrtc.l hiJrh /■
and;irr. ; a ■;ot loan punt of ]*-■
tap • t : .st ;ncr la uMch tore • and ■
ulocr* C-. i.airlfrom which ditchugaM
prpcci •. • • Mioocaaftil hatlhlt conraeH
oflrc:: • ' (irovcn.l'tal I!k> I'mpricterH
oflCr. Ilmard for a caw ofH
**Hf-f i /.ci d"or i.Vi.'nrrA which hrH
cannot c • Xhc Iwo mc'lrim-i wlthH
3000 WORDS.
TLe f HaiS \took of WoHIt often Miff
! pronMored. re it rrti bf U* Mt Qllorltt.
! Sent to Miy*9tlurH on rwe*ln of S sty ceati.
JIM *HK|'AtU B Btoa.
CRUMBS
Ar* a modtro Hue* d\ P" Arm b*ttr. kaeaeat
joll tk. tor balltr lift I hay air* a Real
tkaa aay otbtr la ■ Rina* than any MHtl
taitiaara. polttk.
COMFORT
TiaM a krtlllaal allcary akaae, wttk last Ikaa ka
tk* labor r**nlr*A wkaa otkar politba* art aisd.
CRUMBS
At* a east an* titan- |*" Caa b* ultA trra la
ty art e!*,maklua ao I I tba parlor wltkuat
Art aar Aaat wh*E ■ tk* trouble of ra
ut*. moTlu* furnitara ar
COMFORT
oarrtlß.
■•( a* Al*a*rr**akla aulp. uroa* or tlron* a.it
tmrll wkaa pi*par*A for utti, bet ar* pUasant ant
karmlaa*.
CRUMBS
Ara pal ap la aaat la **ck ku ar* It
•tyl* anA in a form nam m itlrkm-, I *tich I* inf
mora ooaraniaal Hit 11 ■■ (nrutltir aay Hora,
a** tkau aay otkar B tan* all wast* it
pollak. aarad.
COMFORT
Ara tk* rkaaprat poll tb In tk* market, beraaaa out
boa al lOceutt will poll tb at mack turfac* at M
c. ulf worlk of the old potltb**. j
CRUMBS
faealett Wktu tk* m Hon with **▼***!•
rtl premium at the (JP tk* beat of tb* eld
Indiana pott* Knpo- ■ ttova polUhaa.
altloo, la compel!-
COMFORT
Buy CarwM ot Coerour of your atorekaapar, U
ktktt Ibem, or will procure them for you; if aot,
tend at one dollar, your name, and (be naaa o
your neareri eiprett nation, and w# will tend you
ten b oart, and tami ltt of Bartlatt'* Blacking and
Pear 1 Blueing, free oi cost.
C* ram op CoarokT ran b* bad of all Wkolaaal*
Grocer* aod Dealtrtlu th* CnltaA ktataa, and Em
tall Daalert will find them the moil proHlabla,
from tb* fart that they ar* th* teatatt tailing
Mild* oftbe kind In tb* markat.
H. A. BARTLETT & CO.,
115 North Front Street, Philadelphia.
143 Cham ben Street. New Tork.
43 Broad Street* Boaton.
DUNHAM
PXAIfOS*
Dunham & Sons, Manufacturer*,
Wkrareoms, It East 14lh Street.
[Established ISM.} KKW YORK.
Jntdjbr lUuttraUA Ciromlar am 4 Frit* Z.M. ,
M
Allniiml'JllllirA
I>r. J. Halker'H ( aiffornia Vla
mCßr Itfttern are a jmrely VcgetablG
' prejiaratlon, made chiefly" from the nft
| tire lierbß found on the lower range* of
the Siernt Nevada mountains of Califor
nia, the medicinal uro|*rtu-* of which
are ei acted therefrom without the use
lof / johoi. Tlio queation U almoet
dai sakert. "What is the cauee of the
! unparalleled euccens of Viseaja* Brr-
Triur Our answer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, and the patkmt re
covers bis health. They are the greaS
blood purifier and a Ufe-gi y inr principle
i a perfect Renovator ami Invignratof
of the kTbtein. Never he Core in the
j hUu-ry f Um world bw a aiadkdoe bmm
! eomj'-uttd*d ppsktawins the remarkaUG
qll nil ling of VIBBOAB BITTBBS la hciiling Lh*
sick of every dia*w*e man is heir to. TbdP
ara a (renUe I'urgaiive as weli a* a Tuoim '
! rwlieviug Oougctoi-rti or laflainmauqa m
' the Liver aaa Viatsentl ifrgoza, is Btiioen
| IMkifi— ni
The |Poporli<"> of !>*. Wiunirt
Vm ta. ah liiTl k it* are Apvrteat. Inapbfh%
! Carat native, Xutriibrti*, Jatwrtive, Diuretia,
j Sedative, Cowiler Irriunt, Badorifie, Alterw
i live, and Anti-BUioaa
A M. MrDOVtLD A CO..
i Drag gut* d t* Agtt **m Prascl*m Caftfajwl^
I aad oar of Wwhivlut andfkaHam Hkt.lt
laid by alt l>rugl.i. d Dtabrw
# r. *■ v. m*. j*
STANDARD LOTTA BUSTLE.
■■MB Dtplmaa Aaurd.
■ '4l>, (At* Aamari
r*M Immtliitr# aw*
... A I'-
ktnUk*
Hi • imLit kettle—
■■■WjTk* tiaodard Lotte-
SBwaSiiV ■ eat cms b* wore
| Mm* * tail ***** tiytaoAdreae.
wWltatl* lit put* :
111 MIIITtbI .MVI IOKK.
•OI BAtjrlrm VWIbADBbPiU*.
WILLIAM A. DROWN A CO.,
Umbrella and Parasol
-MANUFACTURERS
MAJfi rM-TOBV AXII WABEitOOJIS
MS Marital atr.cl, IS, I* A ST otlk
third Mrttl, PfIILADtLPHiA.
WAKHI.OOB*:
Gk 4k soe Smewsy. SKW t ORK.
By artiMtt A**tgwtt g aaA atiiuMait*f
wt , ret t brttrr I'mbrmUt* m> Pa.-ttoi* tkaa ara
mais is Euiop* and Amcitea.
If yoa a at ltttltU> I'mkraUaa gad tka Mtrt
title <4 P. >.'. log.il rt t, par make
Leo* /r uw TViaAe Afact
fWAiTAIT Kkmn MKX r. -At home.
V male or f. teal. p. a we. k werraatad. Bo pt
tel repaired. Pall aarttca'.ara ut a walaaMa
asm pi, meet ire- Ai4r.. wnbdct retura tump
A.. TOCWO. MP Piftk L. WUliUiilHirD. . T.
lUV I leuAiaggs Otaaddraa*of tra ytrtout with
• I tort* will recatee Jaa*kaaattfal Carom*
Aur I and ie*iraciioa* k w < ge" rick, m aipatd.
Ult 11 ,w* Af Ma On. Ito IdtAkh St.- PBile Pe.
NEW BOOK.
Nothing Ukr It Im l.lteratre.
Agaata wanted tor boa*tea In Story, ky D-. S B.
Fw i' Sal* t yor territory, A<. a**ie*t. Ku
ril Hill PaLliukligCo ,1 r>i *lk f.reel 1 T
tPIIK T.ft m.K
Soda Fountains!
|M, |S, fTS A B lot*.
GOOD, DUSABLI AND CHEAP.
Shippvd Ready for Uaa.
Manufacture,! by 3. W. CBjAPMAX
a Co., Maitmmc, law.
IV bend for a ClrtaAaru*.
Aptihiaa't I timet rated
AMERICAN CYCLOPAEDIA.
KKW RETISBf BMVIOB.
Xlttad by tiaoau* tinar and Cgaa A Dana. *p
bt r mplrtec in M ealataae. yWual, i(h>aitai*A.
Pie* eoiumea pew ready, letaed BiauaitklT Unit
ky lubaer,plioa nv :,. cd fur .nmeu pegtw
D. APVUm-l A 00_ Pa ki lake-a.
at* t4 Al (tmedway K ■ w Tork.
Nature's Great Remedy
THROAT AND LUNG
DISEASES!!
it e e. "ei p-m.p. -e. t. mu
ky a pacmiwr pronam ™ the .'wianoo af tk* tar. by
wkick It* kigbcat mecboaai propertica ara miwd.
Tar emea la In crude ttait baa been recceametwiad ky
namotnt piivmciau* ofovreiej It it ciekdiady
•Sii i I to tk* aSUcted fw the (allowing timsl* reetc-m;
1.1 v cwnn*,—* tr wA-w/riy ifiemy Akr cumw*
bat by Aiteolrini tk* phlegm mat at tmtrat amto-e la
Uirow ad" th* aabeaiuy matter cauv-M the Unubta
la ntn af atwAegcowmrtrw* it botk praltMi and
raodcra Una buidanaoaut tb* Uh of the eflkted auSarat.
•.It* bealmg principle acta opoa th# irritated aar.
p. h rtruptnsaira gmttctrai rwa icc-on. PoalUaa.
-7 curing all bunen. from ihr eommoa nana <w
■narrtoj. to the teeeteat caaaa f Scrofula. TboutaaA
af aftdavits ccwld be pradweed fans thoa* wtw kaew
Mt tka beneficial cAecta of I'ina Tats Tas '7"—try
la tba vanoua diaeaae* aiuing baa tmri'arrtan am
rms mm. ,
A rwMgmewtet tk* dgwerme "(WWaW namkigf
aITCTj ham* fcnoara or tried Dr. L Q. C Vlb'
hart"* rcmedtaa renuue na references from im, but tba
noma* of thousand* cored by them can be given Is
grm nrhodoobm aur uatemtnt. Dt.LQ.C-
Wmhan a Great 4am** , ,r/up*aa Br mmd
,>mo ** have never been equalled. Pa*
Ml* by all Dngghta and Stnrnktepam, sad A
Dr. L G. C. WISHASrs Office,
Mm. M> sr. a r . rfi fTatrs
GREALTLraLm^B
AND BLOOD PrRIFIER.
, I 1 It is not a quack uoetTum.
I W JThe ingredients are publinhed
on bot tie of medicdne. It
used and recommended by
! Physicians wherever it has
introduced. It will
Jj positively cure SCHOFTLA
WM tn itt <triott* tfagr*. JtHEU.
B L^mMA . JtM, WHITE SWEL
VIILiyo, oni T, oojtjße
TIN HEONCJUTISp XMi VOLS
mBmmnEEiLiTY, JECJPIEEI
I CQE& l 'ifPTTOK, and an die
■ ■ I eases arising from an impure
|f J condition of the blood. Send
for cur ßofiADalts Axjlaxac, in
FH which you will find certificates
■ 4 from reliable end trustworthy
m H Physicians, Ministers of the
Gospel and othora.
I Dr. S. WQaon Carr, of HatthsoML
■ M)a be has tin d It to rate* of Scrofula
■ and other dtnasen with much aaUafae-
B Mhi n.
■ Dr.T.CPogh. of Baltlmor*. reeoow
tyig (amfts Bn cd* It to all peraooa suffering with
direared Blood, aajrlsg It is superior to
in siiv preparation be baa ever used.
HI ~Esv. FaVmey Ball, of the Baltimore
K. Colliercme South, nys b* has
teen ao much benefitted by 11a use, that
■■Bin cheerfully reconnicnda It to all hi*
Iricnda and acrjualntaucee.
■BH Cravrn A l>rug*it*, l>rug*it*, at Ocrdimv
Vs., ray It never has faded togir,
WlaatiaJaction.
■ Bsai'l 0. McFadden. Murfreeaboro',
taya it cured him of She*.
matiMu ihfn iUelMlilitd.
THE BOSADALIS IN CONNECTION WITH OtTB
will cur* Chllla and Fever, Liver Complslut, By*.
ri-VtU, We guarantee Koaaoan. inperior to
*ll other Blood Purlfisra. Band tor Bescrtntlvs
Circular or Almanac.
Addraas CLXMBNTS A CO.,
• A Commerce St., BaUimmro, 3U.
BSBMMbw to ask yosr BruggUt to* Bosasaia.