Farm (Jarilcn and Household. Farm Antra and Hint*. Rainy dgfs can bo turned to good ac oonnt in getting ready for baring, in cleaning and whitewashing cellars, in repairing broken tools and implement*, and putting everything in order. Do not throw plow-point*, cultivator teeth, wheel*, coulters, harrow-teeth, chains and piecoaof chain, rings, clevis, extra whifflotrees, neck-yokes, etc., into some dark and dusty corner, bnt put some wire ronnd them and* hang them up where they can be seen. Grind hoes, and keep them constantly bright, and sharp. Spade* also, and if you have a power grindstone it will pay well to grind coulters, cultivator-teeth, and plow-points. Clover should lie out for hay as soon as the earliest blossoms begin to got brown. There can be no doubt that early out hay is mora nutritions, or at any rate more readily digested, than when the grass or clover is allowed to get ripe. Timothy and other grass, if intended for consumption on the farm, should also lie cut early. If to be sold for city horses, yon will get more hay, and a liottor price, by letting it grow until the seed is begiumng to form. In curing clover liay, our own plan is to start the machines in the afternoon and keep cutting until dark. Dew or rain will not hurt grass while it is green. The next morning, after the dew is off, rake the partially dried grass into small windrows with a steel rake. Turn them immediately after dmuer. and towards night raie tut > larger windrows and put into cock. Turn or spread out the cooks the next morning, and draw iu the hay in the afternoon. Milch cows should uow furnish a full pail of rich milk. See that they have access to plenty of freshwater. Tides* the grass is unusually rich, from one to two pints of com meal stirred in a pail of water and given twice a day will often prove profitable. Calves and young stock should Lave the best of pasture and more or less corn meal soaked iu water or cooked. The quantity will depend on the age and other cuvnm stances. Aa a rule, from half a pound of meal to one pound for each 100 pounds of live weight will not be over-feeding. The above rule will apply to sheep. Tne English farmers find it profitable to giro grain or oilcake to their fatten . ing sheep and lambs even whan running in rich pastures. Ewes and lambs should hare good pasture and access to water. The lambs will par well for a little grai: fed in au iaclosare separate from the ewes. For scours, change the pasture and let the sheep bare what bar they will eat. In washing sheep, be careful to keep the nose and month of the sheep out of the water. Tag tho sheep before wash ing. Lambs should be dipped in a solution of carbolic soap to kid ticks. Repeat in two or three weeks. Swine should have access to fresh water ai \ the run of a pood clover or grass pasture. Let them have coal or wood ashes, salt, sulphur, and charcoal —all thev will eat Young pigs are unusually scarce, and pork is likely to bring good prices. Feed liberally. Give the young pigs all the milk. The old ones can get along without it. The secret of pro ducing good and cheap pork is to get an improved breed and feed liberally, especially while the pigs are young. A t-occt Fertiliser. The Scientific American says farm ers have to pay a high price for an arti cle which with a little skill they could make themselves daring the winter months or rainy days when they have little else to do, and gives a receipt for a cheap fertilizer successfully used by farmers in Pennsylvania and Ohio. The formula presented below is, how ever, wanting—except incidentally, as recommended—in the ingredient which is most apt to give trouble and to cause injury in transportation and handling, viz.: oil of vitriol, or sniphnric acid, and is donbt'esa a good one, if the ar ticle is applied in sufficient quantities. The mixture is especially recommended for potatoes and wheat by a farmer who has tried it, and who says he has used it with success oc corn and other pro ducts. It is as follows : Take 1.000 pounds of good monld, sift and screen it to get the gravel out, and make it as fine as possible ; then spread on a floor, add 100 pounds sul phate ammonia, 100 pounds common salt, and mix with a rake ; when thor oughly mixed, add twenty-five pounds pearl "ash and twenty-two pounds sub phate of soda, mix well; then add 400 pounds ground bone, twenty-five pounds ground plaster. Mix the whole thoroughly, throw in a pile for forty eight hours, and it is fit for use. If it is to be used for potatoes in districts where potato bogs are numerous, five gallons sulphuric acid may be sprinkled over the mass. The caution is added that the acid must not be used in a con fined place, as the fumes are injurious to health, and that if it is spiLled on the floor, water must be thrown on, as the mixtuie generates heat Hog Cholera. A. G. Wallace, of Tuscola, 111., rec- in the Agriculturit, the fol lowing as a feed for hogs when the cholera is raging : Use two swill bar rels. Mix a feed of bran, shorta, or middlings, and water aud feed only after fermentation. Tbis mixture soon becomes sour standing in the sun, and is devoured eagerly by the hogs. Feed once a day through the season when hogs are most likely to have the dis ease. By using two barrels, and mix ing in one in time for fermentation to take place bfore the supply is exhausted in the other, the same degree of "sour ness "is maintained. He has fed this regularly for five years in the cholera season, and has not lost a single animal. Others who have tried it have met with the same snoot-as. Mr. Wallace has in the same time lost no chickens or tur keys by disease, aud he attributes their freedom from disease to the use of the fermented food. The cholera has made sad havoc among the hogs in Central and Southern Illinois this season, and as all the old preventives and remedies have failed, the very simple one above given may prove of value. Dry Food for Horse*. The Spirit of the Times says : We never have believed and never shall be lieve that chopped hay and corn meal, saturated with water, is proper for a working horse as a general diet. We firmly believe that the food of a work ing horse who cannot be pastured should be good sound oats and sweet hay for at least five days a week. Look at the South, where the common run of working horses are fed on corn. What is found there ? Why, the big head, a terrible and almost incurable complaint. We also think that corn meal is the very worst way of feeding corn to a horse that was ever practiced. And the chopped wet hay is not half so good as fine timothy from the mow. We like to hear the horse grinding up his good timothy hay like a grist mill, after he has finished his oats. A nice mash once in a while is good, and a very dif ferent thing from almost constant diet. A Little Hero, A correspondent ot the Boston Olobe, writing of the Mill River disaster, says: " Some of the workmen of the brass works have a little hero of their own in the person of Jimmy Ryan, Tom Ryan's boy, a lad about twelve years of age, whose father worked in one of the shops and lived up at Williamsb :rg. When the news first came to that village he got his mother and seven little brothers out of the house to a place of safety, aud then took a team and drove to Haydenville to warn his father. He and Graves left the village together, and those who saw them thought they were racing horses. He reached Hay denville after Graves and before Hill man turned back, and went straight to his father in the brass shop, and told him and other workmen what had hap pened. Many ®f the workmen say that they received the first warning from Jimmy Ryan, as did some people along the road as he came down," Til It EE (illtl.S DROWNED. A Heroic Itoj l.oara Hla l.tte In an Kn itrarar to llrarn* Thrni. One of the most lamentable eauiali ties that lias been recorded in these columns, says the Detroit J\mf, occur red Sunday afternoon on Koulcau Creek, generally denominated as the east branch of the Uivor Kongo, at a point just back of Woodvjcrv cemetery. In this vicinity reside two fanners, Germans, named John Houseve and Antoiue Wolf. Sunday a fit* moon alnuit Uiree o'clock, Anna Wolfe, aged It years, Barbara Wolf, aged "J, and Au gusta Housovo, aged It, daughters of of the Above-named farmers, got into an old canoe, and rowed out into the sluggish stream, and for nearly two hours were paddling around on what was once a mill |HUui, but is now a shallow body of water, about six or seven feet in depth. Other children were also out rowing about in that immediate vicinity, but at the tune of the accident none of these were in sight of the ill-fated girls, and nothing is, or ever can be know u a* to how the disaster occurred. The tlrst intimation anyone had that aught had happened, the voice of Augusta llou eve was heard shouting, '• August ! August! Help ! Help !" the cries be iug uttered m a tone of voice indicating great peril. They reached the ears of Sir. Houseve and lus wife, but fur souie incomprehensible reason, he, instead of ruuuiug direotlv to the creek, distant not more than AO rods, ran to a neigh bor's house for assistance. August Houseve, a boy IS years of age, was also out iu a boat, and when last seen by the other boys was several rod* alnne the boat containing the girls, and out of sight around a bt-nd iu the stream. His sister's cries, however, reached his ears, and he went to her as aistamv aud that of her comjvunous, losing Ins life in the effort to save theirs. Whether the girls tipped liia boat over in their frantic endeavors to climb into it, or whether he plunged overboard to rescue them, was clutched by ttiem and dragged to the bottom, must always remain amv -tory When Mr. Houseve and the neighbor* reach ed tho bank of the creek tliev found the two boats floating side by side, each nearly filled with water. The bodies were recovered about 15 minutes aftt r the accident. A i'luckj Womau. Hero, now, is A personal, taken from the last ntttulH-r received here of tho London <\>urt Journal, that aid arrest the attention, if not the admiration, of our lady readers : " Not very long since a young English couple, very well off, and of gvaxl v>oial status, went out iu the same ahipto Australia with their respective families. The sequence was marriage. For a time they lived hap pily together, but with or without cause the green-eyed monster came be tween them, and the usual matrimonial warfare naturally followed. In the end the husband resolved to seek the happiness he could not find at home in a flight to the old country ; and so hi* wife one morning found a letter which conveyed to her the cheering intelli gence that while the w.ia reading it her lord and master would be plowing his wav to Loudon in the Br nek lay Castle, ami that he did not intend to return for at least a year. The wife received the information like a woman and an Aberdonian. She went straight to the dock whence her husband had sailed, ascertained that, under an assumed name, he hail really made tracks for England, took a first-class passage on board the Great iSritaiu (the firs: ship that followed the Brucklay Castle 1, and followed in pursuit. The winds and waves have favored her, and she has beaten her husband. The Great Britain arrived in Liverpool yesterday, and the wife arrived in London to-day, took apartments for herself and her husband at a hotel in Square, and has now gone to the sea-side to givo the run away a fitting reception when the Bruck lay Castle comes into port. The wife is only twenty-five years of age, and looks so gentle that no one would sup pose her capable of doing BO spirited a feat." A Singular Suit, The New York Daily Graphic has sued Bennett, of the lit raid, for re fusing to publish an advertisement. The complaint seta forth that on or about May 5, 1874, there occurred in said city an event of importance aud great public interest, to ait, a pedes trian match or contest between said de fendant, James Gordon Bennett, and one John Whipple, Esq., for a wager or stake of $3,G00 in lawful money (cur rency i, over a course or track as follows, viz.: being from the curbstone on the north side of Thirty-eighth street to the road leading toward entrance of Jerome Bark, and thence down the lane to the gate entrance of Jerome Park. The complaiut shows further that the defendant triumphed in said contest or pedestrian race, and that the plaintiffs illustrated the scene in their paper, the Graphic, and also that they did, on the sth day of May, 1874, for good and valuable consideration by them paid to defendant, contract and agree to and with the defendant, through bis dnlj authorized agent, to insert in defend ant's newspaper—the New York —an advertisement or notice of said forthcoming picture and illustration of said race, and of the defendant and his said competitor as they appeared while accomplishing the same. And the de fendant was bound to insert in his said newspaper said advertisement or notice, but neglected to do so, thus damaging the plaintiff. The case is in court, and will settle the often vexed question whether n publisher may or may not publish an advertisement, as he sees fit. Enforcing Taxation In Egjpt. The whole system of government in Egypt is rotten. The ruler himself, says the Rev. T. W. Chambers in the Christian Intelligencer, sells his offices, and everv subordinate follows this high example. The consequence is great poverty among all the native population. The Khedive wants lrge sums from the twenty-eight governors among whom Egvpt is divided ; the governors in turn demand large amounts from the Sheiks or local authorities of each village ; and the Sbeiksmust wring this out of the Fellaheen. The rule is to exact whatever each man can lie forced to pay, and to increase the sum every year if possible. When any one refuses, the bastinado is nnHparinglv applied. The following incident I be lieve to be well autbeuticated. A man whose tax had been put at two ponnda refused to give it. He was thrown down, his soles turned up and a hun dred blows inflicted ; then fifty more, bat the man still insisted on his inabili ty, when he was let off; but the Sheik in his rage gave him a parting cuff on the face, and lo ! this knocked out two sovereigns which he had put there in case his power of endurance should give way. This is not a solitary instance. Joan of Arc. Now that the canonization of Joan of Arc is being agitated, says an exchange, the old doubts about her fate are being revived. It is not disputed that a girl was bnrned as a witch, who has general ly been supposed to be Joan. Still, there are ancient traditions to the ef fect that the victim was another person, and some plausible, but not generally credited, statements that the real Joan survived lier campaigns and was lawful ly married. Voltaire made the career of Joan the subject of a vile travesty, but her reputation has survived his un scrupulous wit, and the majority of readers will continue to believe in her story as it is ordinarily told, however strong may be the doubts which de structive criticism may throw upon it. The received tradition is too tragically interesting to be rejected. Horace Wuf polo whitewashed Richard 111. with most artistic skill, but the Richard of public opiniou is still the villain whose portrait, was drawn by Shakspeare. Whether fancy or fact determined the coloring of the picture, the result has been the same. NEWS OP THE DAY. Die ematLpox t report p.I to I*> r*|titift Jamaica An international mnhreiw, to tli*cin>* measure* to preienl the epieail of oholora ami for the regulation of quarantine, has met 111 Vienna The Call of \ h*appcai isl nivalin tonsly flolli the ljiglleh lloitHP of I.onlr. rwonll) . ami ha* not latt ■PPII aiitce..... The in*urreie *rip burned. HIP troop# afleruaid entered anil aacktvl a portion of llie lean. Ninety of Ijtn inhabitant* ai le Willi J ilie lo*a lhctu*p* trilling HIP tliur)T*llt* (;*ie U|l UW 11^ lit ami atil'iuitlpil, ami llio Sultan liaa planted iham au aiuuosty. Tho IHatiiol of Colum bia Investigating Committee hare attired to re port a tall abolishing tho otilira District tint eminent llalanooa in llio 1 S lYeattry Currency, sti,Seii,lJ*. >]<'ial dejueit of legal leu,let* for redemption of eerUftcaloo of depoMt. #&7,9?&,ni>o. eota. * s t tntJ.s'J. ii .hid ing Cvau cerUrtcalee, $.13. tTV.'JW) oul*talHllll| legal leiuloia, $c *3,01*1.0*1. Ttto I'. S. tlooso of Slopresolilalli M passed tlio tall fi ,ho admiasnm of t'olorado as a Male llio I'- S. senate t'amtinllee on lorrttoMoo, having concluded tho evamiiiallon of additional charge* a* an.at lien. McCx* W, dee-ide-1 by a majority vote to again report favorably oil Ut nomination to be Governor of OnkWaki. lk>lt Car Lie ha* laeuoj a decree author uiiig tho province# no* iavU|4od by tue furvee to elevl member* of a oouueil whk-b I* to pereon ally attend huu ui S|>alu. . I tie c. uumu.iai* iu London gave llonit llvhefoit a banquet on hi* arrival ta England llio houtnlary i|Uli> between Chill and the Re public and tho dispute between t lull and lloiiva are to liul uieiil of Spanish Ami a**a.h r to France Mr* Mary Chime, aged 'hi. residing *iv tinier from halutnoro, u burned to a or top by an explosion of coal oil.. . Alums V\ hue, of M-nis. a. Mass . was instantly killed by falling from tho roof ola house on wbtoh he wa* at work Mrs. lleury Ruuaen, of I'vitt Wash lugton, L. L. was provuled with a prescription and took It to the village bhe clerk, who is a new hand, by some means gave her forty-two grains of morphine, which alio took as a dose. In a few tutnulee alio fell into f stupor, from winch alio could not be aroused Mis. \anderburg, aged sevculsen, and juat married, of t'mcrunatr. was fatally burned while kindling a fire with coal ell Twenty seven persons were drowned during a storm on Oneida and Onondaga l-*kco recently Au elaborate statement has t-een prepared showing that the V S. Government pays tI.OOO UOO i*r annum to railroads for carrying the mails. It also | roiee from cih tal staiis tics that the tioverumenl is uow paying rail roads more for the transportation of tlie mail* than the railroad com; aniea demand j-er ;*>und for freight or passengers At Watertown, Wiaconsui, a conductor on the Chicago. Mil waukee and St. Paul ltailroad was tried f.r re fusing to admit a man to his train without s ticket. The complainant proved that he had tendered the legal rate for a ticket, and was re fused. The conductor was found guilty, and fined J&V.' The May frosts have done almost as much damage in the hop-gtvwtng counties of Eug latid as ui the Trench vineyards. The de struction of a large jurtion of the hop clop will be the result. In the low-lying grounds, usually tho moot prolific, the vine-lias been the most seriously injured At the Anaheim vineyards in Lie Angeles ever one hundred thousand cutting* of raisin grape liave been planted this spring. The Old Mission gra; eof California has beeu abandoned, and the Jwple are going into the raising of raisins At the Suutou shaft of t..0 Lelugh and Wilkee barro Coal t'ouipany, Jauiee Williams, a watch man, was descending the shaft, when au ex - pioaioti of gas occurred, and he was thrown to the bottom, a distance of 600 feet. '1 here are twenty-ftte feet of waler iu the shaft, a d Ins body l.as not as yet been recovered. . An oil tank at Greenwood station, on the Erie Rail way, exploded recently. A piece of the tank struck Stephen Carey, a com! ictor, kiUiug Suui ....The inal of Mrs. Tumble, at Ilacyrus, 0.. fur the violation of the ordinance to pi event eroMkhng. resulted hi a v. nhct of guiity, the jury being out an hour and a half. Judge Scott, counsel for the defendant, made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, the mayor aayiug there was uo use arguing the question. as he had nude up lus mind not to grant it Die prisoner was sentenced to pay a tine of r !"> and costs, in ah amounting to £175. A bond was giTeu for tlie cost*, and the case will be carried to the Supreme Court on error. Die attendance each d&v at the tnal was immense ...... Mr. Dioniaa U > th of Tei-kskill was in stantly killed in the People's Stool Work# of that village by the bursting of an emery wheel at which be was working. A piece of the stwne, weighing alsmt twenty pounds, struck his head. He was tlurtr-eigbt year* of age. For diphtheria a corres;x>ndeiit recom mend* one teaspooufnl of latlc salt and one teaepoouful of pondered alum in a cup of waler sweetened with honey to be u*ed as a gargle for the the thr t every half hour or oflener. Fearfully Hard on Parker. Says an exchange:—Our young friend Parker went round the other evcuing to visit the two Miss Smiths. After con vening with them for a while, Miss Susan exeused herself for a few mo ments and went up stairs. Presently Parker thought he heard her e miing, and slipping behind the door, he sug gested the utlier Miss Smith shonld tell Miss Susan that he had gone. But it wasn't Miss Susan ; it was old Mr. Smith in his slippers. As he entered ho looked around and said to his daughter: "Ah, ha 1 so Parker's gone, has he ? Good riddance. I don't want any such idiot foolin' round here, lie hasn't got the sense of a rnta bag* tur nip, or money enough to buv a clean shirt. He gets none of my daughters. I'll shake the everlasting life out of him if I catch him here ngain, mind mo!" Just as heconclnded Susan came down, and not perceiving Parker, said: " Thank goodness, lie's gone ! That man is enough to provoke a saint. I was awfully afraid lie was going to stay and spend the evening. Mary Jane, I hope vou didn't ask him to eome again." Then Parker didn't know whether to stay there or bolt, while Mary Jane looked as if alio would like to orop into the cellar. But Parker finally walked out, rushed to the en trance, seized bis hat, shot down the steps, and went home, meditating on the emptiness of hnniau happiness and the uncertainty of the Smith family. (>ushlng t'onples, What a study for the disinterested to watch the "billing and cooin " of a newly-married couple when they are in a gushing mood. How lovingly in the street or at n funeral she hangs upon his arm. As he gazes down into htr face, lifted appenlingly to Lis, all thoughts of earth and earthly things disappear as " mist before the noon-day nun." Heaven itaelf becomes a dreary placo compared to their happiness. They Ix-como a mutual admiration so ciety. In them the enterprising Yankee beholds a fortuuo could Lo but exhibit them at dissolving views. Hee how natural their hands seek out and Hud each other. How lovingly he adminis ters "love taps" to the No. 8 hand resting so cozily in his toil-hardened "pair." Their faces, acting as strong magnets, draw nearer and nearer until daylight has no power to pass between. Hear, or imagine you do, the shtu,> click that follows. Observe how little space they occupy—at first. llow at tentive is Mr. Happiness as ho assists the " apple of his eye " in or out of his carriage. We will say no more, as those who have been there know how it is, and those who have not will learn rapidly enough, but wo honestly think that at " gushing" a much-married elderly oouple can give untried and timid youth oddß and then distance them. No DISTURBANCE. —During the recent jonrney of Queen Victoria from Wind sor to Balmoral the public were exclu ded from the stations except at Windsor and Oxford, aud instructions were given to the porters to perform all necessary work on the platform without noise, FO that the Queen might be perfectly un disturbed during the journey. LIFE IN NFW VUKK. Nnm Aul|nnUttr IMclurci fm tlir I4r <*•!■ >f iliml i If) • " Mr*. Mitry Tin mi an tcKtiflcil t lint Mrs. llurlov ttirnnl her out tlictltrla' LotlgiiiK House ou a stormy night to illt* ill the Fifth .Street Station House, ami Setgeaut Snyder swore that on the morning of the INth of Mitreh ho found i Mary lvtug stek tui the thmr in the i station house. She was iu distress, and j said : " • For Ootl'a sake, have some one do something for me V and in tin* midst of her ery mg and mourning she gave lurlh to a ehihl."- A>fie /iV/sirf, "Hut the private statdes of Mr. Itol uiout. Homier, and many other gentle men art* made of black walnut, beauti fully furnished, and nioely warmed. The horses are elothed tu soft, white blankets, and fed and eleatu.l with the regularity of clockwork. 1 urn endeav orttig to have all other animals well cared for, Uk*, and to accomplish this 1 caused the arrest of a private coachman to day, ami detained tlie carriage in J front of A. T. Stewart's, because the ; driver had driven tacks in the side of 1 the bridle, which pricked and chafed the home, compelling litni to keep his head straight. If cars are overloaded the horses will l*o stopped, and the peo ple will have to walk.' liti t/h * I.eUrr, " A woman, who up !> the time of our going to press had not heell ideiiti fled, was found dead yvstervlaT morn ing on a dtmr step iu Thirty-fourth street. The deceased evidently wan tiered from some of the jHx.rer wards iu search of employment, and from her emaciated condition, it is probable she had not tuste.l food for several days. It is thought that poverty ami starvation caused lu-r deatu. The body, scantily clothed in a few rags, lava unclaimed in the " Morgue." /Wire diHtttr. Hut " Mrs. Livingstone's elegant and fashionable reception and gertuan, at her palatial Fifth avenue wmiHion on Monday ovening, wa* too gorgeous fid description. Many of the ladies' toilets came from Worth's, and ooat fabulous sums, and the flowers which drajved the rooms—all rare exotica iuu*t have cost a small fortune. Among the guests sparkling with jewels was Mrs. Lawrence,whose bridal frou*t-(iti, wbeu she was married last week, issatil to have cost §7,000. The rare aud rx peusive win- a which cheered the inva sion astonished even the connoisseurs." Jlotm Journal. " Hellcvuo Hospital is often crowded to i-i. i ss w:th sick, so much SO tha! pa tients suffer through bad air and inat tention. • " It is impossible to warm the Tombs, or to keep it from beiug damp, uu whob M>me, and sickly ; and until an Appropriation of at lea*t $50,000 is made by the city, priaoners must con tinue to be crowded together aud con tinue to suffer, especially iu cold wi-ather, beneath damp bed clothe*."— A'r/nvrf ('iiMniisxkiMfr oj VhttrUit.* (tnif (hrro-fius. But " the Park Commissioner j* of the opinion that it will cost $5,000,000 to c* mpliite the new Natural History buildings iu Central I'ark, to give am ple room for the minerals, fossils, and live animals. Tlie wild animals of the Ecological collection take up a large amount of room in the Park buildings, and it costs the city a great deal of money to feed them and keep them properly warmed, but they are a source of great amusement to the uur-es aud children."— i'ark Co in rnU* to tuT* lie- The Yeautltt* " Funicular" Hallway. The Liberia of Home describe* the model of a " funicular railway," the eonseeaion of which has been applied for to the Italian Government by a company that proiHo.ru t > construct it up to the crater of Mount Vesuvius. The model ootiatata of an inclined plane preaeutuig a gradient of thirty three per cent, with a double line of rails, one for gontff up and the other for the descent. The engine, which in Hied at the botton ol the plane, sets two drums it motion, round which the metallic cable ia wound by meana of which the trama are drawn up and let down simultaneously. The projected rail rv>ad is to start from the Barrier* dei Ommlli, outaidc Naples, and, touching at San Sebaatiano, l'olieno, Trocchia, St. Auaataaia, S nime, aud Gttaiano, would meet the alo|e of Mount Veau viua at Son Omaepiw. All this section ia to be performea by common locomo tive. the ro|H> is tin n put on, and the ascent commences I>T the new plan. The whole length of the railway will be twenty-six kilometres e that in two years more Illinois will have a Governor who will be equally efficient in looking after tho rights of the people and the enforcement of laws. A Htate ticket was nominated representing men who were allied to both the existing parties. "Pray, madam, why did you name your old hen Macduff ?" " Because, sir, I wanted her to lay on 1" Xl.llld I'MTKII MTATKM COXMKKHN. IN TIIK HEMATIC, muu. Mr. Heett, of l' fr>>tu the (\>ttuivlit*c on I'lntuM, ivtHHiol I •nlaUtutn for tin* Hon#* bill to •UUiiMiaM liimtiW roniinH>rUiiK lb* uno llUlulwlll smut nsary of tbwgp<*t timet lug of tlin ('utttliioiiUl I aim u( tlie !>o darilhui of liutepsiiilriio*. I'ssmml tilamiiT IOVIM Mr. Tliuritian, of Ohio, front the Juihelsry i'liuiltllliw ii*|***itt*tnt rlt't Jiulaio to stlpiut iiil liolii tlin court Hi a iliaUlrt Hot Ilia own. I'wuhl. ■ lotmitii iiin Tim Holiati* siiinii.lmoiil to liio Mutely UU, allthoiuiltg tlin I ' iillihl Malm allotiiev to rtauilun tlin txa'ka Invoices. or |'a| . mof tlo fniutsiil*. sm tejecloil by a Yule of it jmss to °iltau Commissioner*. Itefel ted to 111* t'.iiiunttto* OB liultau Affairs rue Muirn mix. Tim const.lorstluu of tlm Mo'ety lull b ro autuail, anil sio-lticr lot jj tlrt.alo took (Haa'ai. In tlin course of slilrh a letter from A. T. HWnart, of So York, saa rest, Ilt>|{ lata opinion* aa to mliat the provision* of lilt* law alioiiltl In, not rial aiuouitlunlita solo to, and Until) tlin I ill aai |w-eo.l lit to 3, repoabiii; tin* Moiety sYstem an now carried on in tlin I'uitod Htalra Custom llottar*. mi i* l iolii Mr Sherman, of I) , fiotu tin* Committee on Finance ro|.ri<-1 favorably on the lloiist* lull to a lunt tiro of .1 tit % articles Intended for tlin International evhlblUoti of I'aaswl. THE riNascs mix Tlin r|xirt of the Conference f 'oummtee on Urn Finance bill wan aittooti to t>y a vote of XI u> a tmk a|wr correal* .ndenls, and ttie n<. . it an |ito|.Ußad hy 11.0 Judinarv Com uuttee would |* runt the service upou tLeui of pre* ni n an agent* for the J aldlnhrrs of the papers which they represented A paper might he sued in the t>ilricl of Columbia nmply t 1 neirthg a pre* OU lis agent hole. lie),. led XI to >1 Ait Carpenter m *ed to amrnd the section so a* to provide that a cv*p* of the pi.were served oil an agent shall actually 1-c delivered to the principal of sitch agent anywhere iu the L'lUled Males Agreed to. ihe hill wa* then read a tlonl time and paaetd yea* 33. liays .'J Tttlt tcuamit mix. Mr. Edmunds, of Yrrtu >ni, fr>wu the OPUI inHUo on t inference ou the bankrupt hill, made a report which au agreed to. He st plained thai a* the bill isimkml Ihe Senate 11 provided that a voluntary bankrupt should pay thirty-three ji isut of |us tudrhtednoas ; aa m <.tilted by tlie Confi rrnce Coinutltlee a voluu tarv t*ai>krupt could le discharged O|*oli the pa* uiei.t of thirty |>er centum of hi* indebted mass, with the consent of uue-fourtli of the number of creditor* rrpieeeiittng one thud of tlie value of indebted* or. Idie Senate lltsUVK'tel the Committee nti Appropriation* to report an amendment to tlie liivrr and harlwr bill f. r the surver of four routes fr eut of (metage on p:intra! and askel its immediate ooti* siJeratlou . but objection was made, and it was placdl on the calendar. This le thellouae t'il! without amendment. IN THE liOl'sE. tiur ia mot'i ct p. To increase the revet tire and restrain stock gdbtbhng imp.se g a tat 1 moved to suspend the rules and pass tba tail fur the admission of Colorado as a state. Tassel yea* 170. nays rjvn. MOST* >iu. Mr. Butler, of Mans , moved to stisjirnd the rules atid take from the Hpeaker's lalvlr the Senate Civil liighl* t ill*, and refer it to the Judiciary t'ommiUee. ;Ui the right to rep rt at any iime. Rejected 136 to v'.; no: two- Uuid* in the afliimanv e. ItroXTXP BIOS • Mr. Dave* of M*M . fr-1 hack adversely van -a- bills, including the f Mowing . To abolish the tat on cigars, tobacco, and suuff . to remit the duties on certain goods destroyed by 6m in the ll stou conflagration ; to repeal (lie tat on dejavsita in savings tanks to repeal the act of Mar l, lvili, 1*69. •• to slmngtheii Uie public credit to repea; laves on distilled spints and tolacwo, for the uwue of convertible hood* . to imp *e an income tat ; to remove ail internal tains from apple brandy, to rw|tal the iluty on satk TRKOBKBVA twtau tvttj. The llullcr substitute for iha iteuova Award bill againsl allowing the insurance com pan ins to take part in the a ward was. after an eicite-1 and personal delate, pnej by a vote of IX2 to 101. Ity Uits vote the claims f lite insurance (vocnpanir- for luw*a rietaitied are omitted from the bill. wtsßtJtoTo* wotrrwrrr. Mr. TMndge. of Wis., moved to suspend the rules and uiake in order to the Civil Appropri ation bill an item of #*.'>. Ok) for the Washing ton Monument. Negatived by yeas Its. nays si, not two-thirds in tile affirinslive. Mr. Msynard. of Team, sai l the Committee on the Washington Monnmcut had intended to ask a small appropriation for a monument to tl:.- mother of Washington at Fredericksburg hut 111 View of the vole just taken the Commit tee would uot now submit the proposition. hints rvssi ic The bill appropriating #500,000 for tho relief of jiersons suffering from the overflow of the lower Mississippi river, of the Tomhigbea, Warn i. and Cabasia nvers. and of ttie Ten neasec river, the authority of Uie Secretary to etptre on tho first of Bepiem)'*r next, was passed. The lull amending act for construction of a railroad front the Missouri to the Pacific, was passed as It came from the House. The Senate i**eed the bill providing for the publication of tho Revised Statutes of tho United Stales. rivii. sxavii'X. Tho House refused to vole any more money for civil service reform, by a vote of 4* yeas to 108 nay*. TUB d by the House, after Ixting before the Committee of Whole for four days. Tltn CHOCTAW (TJlllt. The proposition to pay the w in insurrectionary Slates, which was agreed to. . ASTOVISIMNO. —Few persons are nwnro of the time, talont, aud exjienso neces sary to develop and perfect an invention. The new Wheeler .V Wilson No. A Hew ing Machine, advertised in our columns, has already oost that Company over 9300,000, aud to bring it well before the publio will require $200,000 more. It costs as much to design, construct and introduce a perfect sewing machine as to launch a Arst-class ocean steam ship. PROOF POSITIVE, —(First ydnng lady.) "Hut what on earth makes you think I am in lovo with Mr. Smith ?" (Second young lady.) " Because you are always about Mr. Brown." Colorado. fVilorailu to day la the centra of tha beat, as well as the largest emigration from Uia tutted States. Ami with reason, fur both tu the way of geographical piwilion, Internal re aoiitiies and capacity for diversified Industry, it stands at Ihe head of all the Tarrtlories (loographically, Colorado la In tlia very I van of tlie column of solid migration, Iming Hie westward front of Uiat great Usr of pros perous oominoiiwealths wluoh boll the L'ltiuti Cenusylvaiita, Ohm, Illinois. Indiana, Mis souri, Kansas, Colorado. Emigration alwaya , moves iii straight lines tlie imputation of any one climate, aoll, or teiupeialum following Its parallel of latitude. This has been the uniform litstory of settlement in lids country. Colorado, however, wtU have the advantage of her older sisters, tu that while their settle ment was slow, furlullotia and disintegrated, Iter's 1* rapid organised and systematic— while their'a was the work of Individuals, her'# . s the work of gieat organisations, suppoiiod hy evpeiteuce, capital and oomblnauon. hlie liegnis at a |mlut Uie others only reached after a generation Already her condition reveals her vantage ground ami demonstrates her |s*Uttoti ae the leader of the great Column of the Middle <'■-l-.ra.bi l# even now an eirv|Hiiwially favnr e-1 territory for any oue thinking of going West to settle. Society is all<-a.ly eslabliebe.l tlieie; railway ooiumimk-atiiHi with lite Allan ti>- si ut I'scitic HlaUw la direct at..l rimm! , the territorial government eoou.auieaily orgamaod and houceUy adunnuterod, exempting the -etileis from otierou* taiaUon. Witness the follow lug Items Tavxs. There aorw no territorial taxes laid in IKT3. i't sir. I>KBT 'lYiere is no territorial debt, aiid a of #1H,172 12 iu Iho Irokatin. Ht HiMtLM Th CMlUfmUolUkl fftCilllitM Of liio Territory are ftmt-claas. The oonuiKst achool system is well orgonuad. There are good ladles', theological, conventual, and hoys' achools. Tlioro is a college at Colorado Hprtng*. TUB Pr.rwi There are 7 daily and 96 other papers published in Colorado IUNBS Hi err am 27 bank*. Tta-tußAiii -There am 1,018 mile* *. i till k U!< COLO&altu. Southern Colurado t* the neboet, meat fer ule. aud nilidasl tem)>arwd section of the greet Territory uf Colorado. It w a Mute wilbiu it- Frit uf uißgiutkeul proporuoua, incalculable natural roaoureoa, aiid • diversity uf sutl end c.miale, and a ea|iacity for agricultural, pas tural. mining, manufacturing. and commercial dev eh iuurul which render it eelf-#uj>prUug. Lying auutli uf tire Ureal Divide it ia the m>l gonial rUtitalo uf all Colurado. The Arkatieaa, the greeteat river running fr -rn the Rocky Mountain*, give* tt the richest valley and strongest eater power in Coluradu. lull, racing Ut ita hmita the South l'erk and Man Juaa country, it cuvere the richest mining diatnrte uf the Territory, ita minerals being not merely gold end silver, hut oual, iron, copper, mar tie, itivleum. rcuiA Ttie capital city of this greet region is Tncblo, located on the old trading route uf the San la To trail, just a ham the ancient highway crossed end the trunk line uf railway now trusses the Arkansas river. Pueblo is an old, well -established point. It has 1-eeii a missionary station, a trading post, a military fort, and is now a thriving Western town. Its location has been determined by the established routes of travel for over a oenlury. It lias therefore a Solid foundation It is now a railway center. Five roads, two built and three building, converge hem. At this point will stand the U&ILAT crsnui cm or nut ran van. In every re*t*et of cenlrahty, climate, local situation, position with reference to North, South, has! and West, Taehlo is destined to t-c. rue U.e grsai e mmsrrni city of the Rocky M unlaius. Kur one thouaand mile* along the hase of the tnoutilain range there t* no pout I equal to it as a commercial centre. #OT*TM rrnibn. The *ytcmati>" development of Pueblo toward* llus, its own proper position, is now going on under the ausp.oo* of the lienver and lho tirande Railway, who have opened to Colour settlement and improvement the land oUnl I'i-nnsylrania Ji. li. Co. KAMVEL M. Piu.Tojt, Philadelphia, fxi.'c i'rrtitUtu IP. ply at an early date, will secure }|>ed up in three shawls and a bed <|tiilt, ami was iu aguuy every moment for fear it would aneeoe. " Do ore his darling, darling little face I" she said to me an she uuaonnd him shout forty times aud looked to see which end his leet were on. 1 looked. 1 have been the father of eleven just snob howling little wodsiom, and 1 don t see anything remarkable about liaacumh'a baby. " Heo those eyes ; that flrmneoa of mouth ; that temper in hia look I" she went on. I ssw them. The little boy Itegan to get red in the face and to beat the air, and his mother shouted : " 1 know he won't live—he's too atnsll f" The child recovered, and, as he lay on his hark across her knees snd surveyed the ceiling, she went on : "Huchshoadl Why, everyone who sees him ssys thst he is going to be a lleecher. Do yon noUtve that high fore head 1" I did. I thought he was all fore head, as his hair didn't commence to grow until the back of hia neck was reached ; bat she assured me that I was mistaken. " Wouldn't I just heft him once 7" 1 hefted him. 1 told her that I never oaw a child of his weight weigh so mueb, and she smiled like an angel. Hbe said that ahe was afraid I didu t appreciate children, hut now she knew 1 did. " Wouldn't I just look at his darling little feet -bis little red feet and cun ning toes?" Yen, 1 would. She rolled him over on hia face and unwound his feet, and triumphantly held them up to my gone. I oontem ' plated the hundreds of little wrinkles . running lengthwise sud crosswise—the ! big toes and tlie little toes, and I agreed with her that, ao far as I ooaid judge ' from the feet, snd the toes and the wrinkles, a future of uneutmpled bril liancy lay Ivefore the pttg-noaed imp. He b-gau to kick and howl, and she ; stood him up, laid him down, and trotted him until she bounced his wiud colic into the middle of Hwptember. " Whom did he look likeF* I bent over the scarlet faced rascal, pushed his uoae one side, chucked him under tlie chin, and didn't answer with out due deliberation. 1 told her that there was a faint resemblance to George Washington around the moutli, but the eyes reminded me of Daniel Webster, while the general features hsd mode me think of the poet Milton ever since she entered the house. That was just her view exactly, only ahe hadn t said anything about it before. " Did I think be was too smart to lire ?" 1 felt of his ears, rubbed bis bead, put my finger down the back of his neck, and I told her that, in my hum ble opinion, he wasn't, though ne had a narrow escape. If his nose had been set a little more to one side, or his ears had appeared in the place of his eyes, lbutcumb could have purchased a weed for his list without delay. No; the child would live. There wasn't the least doubt of it, and any man or woman who said he wouldn't grow up to make the world thunder with hia fame would steal the wool off a lamb in January.. She felt ao happy that ahe rolled the imp up in his forty-nine liandagea, shook him to straighten his legs and take the kink oat of his neck, and then carried him home nnder her arm, while my wife made me go along with an um brella, for fesr the sun would peel his little uose. Hl* Haughtcr. A long letter has been published from Mr. Thompson, the father of the ladv artist whose picture in tho Royal Acad emy, of " Calling the Roll," has excited so much attention, which thus con cludes: " May I, ones for all, beg to assure all who are pleased to take an interest in mr daughter that she ia not, nor ever has W-n, married ; that she is not, never has been, never eould be, a hospital nurse ; and that any other re port is incorrect that is inconsistent with the facts that her life has been a very uneventful one, and tha* she hss been from her earliest days till now the inseparable companion of her parents —very quiet people, but very proud to find the talents which they hsre seen gradually developed so generally and generously recognised now." "Tits Common Hsnse Medical Ad rfeer. tn Plato English. for all Teopla or Medi cine simplified," u> Uie cumprwbeoetve and #x preeatve title of a forthcoming work of from seven to nine hundred large jvage*. bound in >th. from the |en of Dr. It T. Ptntm. of Ui* World's 1 iispensary, Buffalo. N. V. Pnoe. 11.50, (vwl-paid. to any address within Uie United Male*. To all those who subscribe for Uie work note, and send she muoey with their suhecnpUon. the twice will b* but #1 90. Tbe latter mice scarcely covers Ue cost of puhlioa lt in. and at #1.50 it will be the cheapest hook ever |nibl.*hcd. and Uie author can only hope for com pen saltan for lit* labor iu Uis immenae sale which the work must have. Tbe author'* name la a household word throughout America, and his fame as a physician is uot unknown in other land Hi* retuitation. eonpled with the cheapness of tbe work, insures for it. in our ' isnion. a sale surpassing that of anv book that lias ever l>een published in th* Fnghsb language. Tbe lsik wii! he illustrated with tt'itnerouv otlgtnal wood engravingw. will con tain a fin* steel [mrtrait and autograph of the author, and altogether will tw tlie most com preheustve. plainly written, and practical medi cal adviser for both young and old. male aud female, single and roamed, ever published. We advise each i f our readers to send the sub scription jwioe to the author immediately, and thus encourage lam iu his labors, and secure Uie work at tiie reduced pnee. The author wtU acknowledge tbe receipt of all subeenp- Uons and send live book as soon a* out.—Com. Toothache proceeds from ague in the face. ot>eralit>g upon the exp<>*>d nerve of a doeaved tooth Hub the gum thoroughly with Uie Anger, wet with Jo'truon* Anodynr f.ini mrwf, heat the face well, aud lap a tlanuel wet Willi the liniment on the face, also put a little of the liniment into the cavity of the tooth on cotton. —Com. The tyatem frequently get* ont of order and should I*> at once regulated, else other trouble* will ensne: when physic ts needed take Vartotu' }'ur,f best P*mt* yrm -*■>• o< rarest ta U< Baits* • later, trl bar t*ss or ad far ISluj rsarr wttb RITN felting HMT H< ISMMI KF ml 11 lout af aulAtrr aa* oblliraa Are Ik* fssbl* Infant af aa* waak el* I* th* s*aM It aerraeta Mllitf at ta* etemech, roll**** Wis* •alto, ragolrlar Ik* bswat*. aa* l*ar rati, baaltk aa* (oatorl to sclbn aa* abll* w# belt*** It la k* lb* BE*t nl Burrti B*r- la tb* Wort* ta all r**r of DTSBNTBBT an* DIABBHIBa IS CHIL DIABN, Wb*tb*f It ari*** froti Ta*ttu*g or hum Anr otkr- can**. Ball dtraettoa* fur natn* will a* sonr*n> rack bulla Sou* Oeontti* utile** tb* fbo *itnl'.< of cruris * PBBKISa ta oa th* eatMd* wrapper _BOI.D BY ALL KBniriKß BBALBIU MILUHBA orris LOOK FAUS ASS SICK Ma *0 etkai *MH tbaa hsvtaa wsnai U tb* f it. BBC Wire TIBSIMI COW FITS wttl iMlroy worm* wttbowt tnjwry to tb* abll* bin* perfbettr WHITE, an* fres from ail oolona* ar om*r tnjnrtom* lngt*dl*n%* aioally ars* la warm preparation*. CCKTIS S BBOWB, rropneteee, 80. SIS Fulton atr**t. S*w Y*?H. MS bp Prwfuti as* <'A-mf, as* d*el*r* 4* IM*SAI sf TWSSTY-FIVS o*T* * . __ I Why will Von sutler Y To all persons mfler'ii* from Bheumaliam, Neuralgia Crampi in the limb* or atom ach, Bill on* Oolie, Pain in tb* back,bowels or atde,w* wool* •ay TM lIortBHOLD PAJIAOBA AJTD FAMILT LIBIMBT IS OT AL other* tb* remedy yon waul for Internal and asternal n*e It baa onred the above com plaint* in tboniande of ease* There t* no mutak* about tt Try tL Bold by all Dr HOUSEHOLD PANACEA AND FAMILY LINIMENT. HOUSEHOLD PANACEA AND FAMILY LINIMENT. It may mvt m a comfort to na in all ! rmr oalamitica and affliction*, tbat be who lime* nothing ami geta wladom is a gainer by the loan. %a Hot Mr (lion *ailN| Ml Intnl. kM pMwrt mora MrM of r hanmalitm, neural*!*, • piilnl, train, taraa, aali rhauat.au * tlpplaa, aaa.lla r, lamaaraa, ihappat kutt, pciMtoui hilar, alia**, hralaaa, 4* , dr.. on aan, woman an* ih 1 4 ran, lyid tpraltia, atralna, atlla, til* Jul nit, Infl animation. 4r., la ba**l, than all uthar Uat* noli am t'Waihar. It will Ao what la |ialw< r pa ani*r refnndad Ta* Orau.i Marnlwildra la McmcaL Taaav u*t, ahull Wit commtnead ta una, It anil In yroffaaa. Hulkin* rao tO. It, ft>r II la frlanra ha* ahuwn thai Puirttiui Hrrraa* la a paarl.rt larlforaat, a* wall *a lb* hart pott I bit aafaguarO aflitll *|ildrn If airaaara. ll*-a>ttu,attni( lit* Halt. Van tha hair eaaaaa to draw tinm lb* *rl th* natural labrt raat which la Ita mnattan, It* rltallty ta, aa It war*, dnapaudad, and if not pruapili all*ad*4 ta, hatdaraa will h* tha cartaln rraall Tim itaa tara Btaihud if aruidl im-t an in plwuil caltrtro (■ha I* to ua* Lr h'a Karnaih a which, ahaa wal ruboad tuia Urn aetl*. will i|pis 11jr ra-aalmal# tha hair and |> #*•! II from felly ut. Tha tarral of tap! I ration. Pdatara* tf Or*, law nx-t.ll, n at 11 turnad nach hd haautiftiUy roandad arm*, at* ao doubt ufa lea uunfl* ta haar. and ladiad who potttta than*charm* hart rtanin m ha thankful In Metbar Ha In re , y at, aftae all, ih# m-rl c*|tlivali * ot all womanly charm* It a yurr, fraah and hililtaal ruapkrin* Thl* at, pat 101 lv* InteluaVloa any ltdy may taaar* h( urliif HiUO Maurmua Haul. The lirktU. are vuaa. Uaaf OatUn-fnmalo Aurmllulioah*.* .llld* .It ruof ouaiity . lffc* . 1310 hctod rjualMy .III,* JJ Onllutr) tislh Colli# .... .lt'fca .11 fc Interior or fcrwwd grade . • .11 Mik* Oowa U.OO *oo.on Hug*—lire H*fc . l* Irreaaad , Tfc* . twa . fc Cnttuu Mid-iling ,ll<** .Mfc ; tluur —Ltlra WaMrra IM *d > i utaia tllra. IH ait j Whaal-lu-l Wewtarti lAJ * l>3 1 Hu. 3 Hprtttg . I.do • l.tl By# lit tin liorlay- Mail IJu a XM ■ UU*~9II>MI Wrwtrrn .61 a JBA Com— Mi rod Wtwua-u .as a JO Hay -par hw Jujuu oSUM tHraw-par ton U.l aXi.UU Hoy* nv-ll a JH . ora- . * a .11 Port-Mr*. U.uu *ll.OO hao> II a ,11K pftruirom—Crude I % t ftfc HrAnad .llfcj I Butiar 4U t t yi Ohm, n I a JO Utun, V allow n a .la Wmtarb ordinary.. It a .1* IVnnaylroai* |j>a 2* • .J* Cbata* Mote Ptehu. y JJfca -Id* Mala Ml in Iliad d a .1 ohto I* a .Id ! **b-*U' .idlda .Id* ; at mk, Wlraat Id* a I.l* i Myw- Hiau 1.10 a 1.13 l-oiti -Mitr-d no a >3 Hart*} *u*U 1.7* a l.tdifc !**•—Mala .. . a M ' ■emu. Barf Oafttr .td a tjfffc Aheap I.Klfch 74 Hop*—U*e tJO tdOJ Hoar Ml tin *"hal— Jto. 1 SlTUig Ut * I.M Oom. .T a .13 out* m a J* fcy 1.10 a U* Bartry Ut a LN ha'd 7Jga ,lu) : utrnou. Middling Mfc* .lfc floor—tcatra Cdfr a *. i *!<••• 1> t).H i Oom it a ,J thda M a M ruutumu. fWmr TJ I 7JO j Wtml-ViaUni tl I.do t l.dl Cora—Yellow da.* Mi had 7 a J i yvtmk-um -orudt W> Jfl.rhaad.Ufc ChtrrlM I H alMd Timothy UO t 3.30 iVKm Waalod ■aarywhara >o rrreaai f-r i\ oar man tßcaat tiael •• | ii.w thai my Hadaamar n**ih " Tarw lihaeol frrat* lo dfrrtf*. brad fnr Cat* of** MtllTHliYi Tnay rira ial< il and *atia- Ihrtio* MirhfltLKCdlDOWini. "I T Tit KM. ml* aant aa rao*ipi of Id.M PKKK. #-• A hr \!!tslr*Ud csrm lar U 1 RhLh RriidßH CO. m Cham bar* hi.JIT. CANCERS, Ulcer and Scrofulous Diseases CtTRED WITHOUT FAIL BY TIIK THARPKAN SYSTEM, A treatment Uiyiti V lb* anabtrl eematita ikui. bar bar* In .-arc rtrry p tl id preitir. D BsTBRN tiro CO.. Cbica*.., 11L fe%^S#soo,ooo ZincCoilarFads Have Been Used Since Jan. Ist. 1874. A .nutrient unarm.tee if their aa.tuln*.*. They arr wan anted t pnie'tl haling. and t.i cure anjr ordt an ilii.lKn Sh K ■ n or Mt LICb, If Kri >ted IHrer too. a.e billowed. Hare a.ao a 71 AC 010 SaDDln l'Al> tb.t pi event* .-bating oa th bark, and a I.FaD I.lNgn h.ulder* fictn tra'ta, A'l r detecting f< nuteifett Money, Shoddy ta Cloth, ftiretg . *b ■ taoret tu the By*, tu Wouude, etc., and toecanitn* Inaerta, F'ow.ra and l-ltnt*. to detort flaw* tu M*tat* fluanoaa of wood main ; to dactpber wrlt t ig otherwise Illegible ; and f>r lb* tnapertton of irra'n.mtne al*.*V. i'..ful fnr everybody. Doubt* Convex L*. a, 1 i-7 tnehr. lu diameter. M a ted In leaihei, and ranted tn the ve.t p rtet. rrtre AO Cent*, two fir SI, free by mail. Axairra Wastkii. Hlu.trate.t t'trru ara and term. fra*. Adorer. M. L. BVRN P. O. Boi t fit®. K.w Totk Olllca, He. owam gtn.t. Bute wi.eie you .aw thte. AM Yliondtim n* th* addraaa of taa parsons, wltk ml ' Ito eta. will rwdn/rw, a boaattfal Chrome fthiClaud tuatrortton. how to dot rtrh, poet-paid, UN t|(Vv Novtty WH Booth th 8t . Phils.. Pa TVrnVPVt ' VI - # will pay 10 to 1? per rent in iul/ltEil . a< vanco, ana gtv* g. od aecartty. State .mount yon d*.tre to inveat. Aodre.a, SEIUBITT FUNDS. P. O Bo* Sl3*.Cincinnati. Colorado for Invalid and Tonrists. Its advantages fnr Consnrapttvaa and A.Uunat lea. roll particular* gtvan free Addraaa, A. B. PATTRRBOH, Fort collttu. Colorado. fIA ATT of Medical Wondara. Bhoold h* road by HI II 111 all. Sonf fror for 7 atampa. Addrr.u JLIUvA OB BON APAKTK, Cincinnati. O. A cents Wanted.—Man or women. IV a wort iv orßUtiforfcitad. I'u/uuMe u mplte/r**. Writ, at onoa to F. M B*Kl>, Kighth Street. New T- rk. Aonrn wantk: ih xtxbt tow*. At mi far Bdlamlrli PROTECT YOUR BUILDINCS IT if* (fawwta* ftr* and Wolff Prof/ PW M* tar Id W*ad in tbia compoalMwa, mnyn H which l**aal tod mofordlbary oatnt. od hlwWa K vary Uah. filllt* ofati hole# la dbinrl* fall, tin or Iron rr ft j n*rr rrarha nor team# o*J and it Only *o naalt a ftlioa. read* *wr waa.wiih * t Una >*l ut*r.uM to thaltaua. two aalu-at will aorar i n aa.tt.tr alunolat, or orar *ouf Ma Il , toad fu roil t-a* itcnl<#. tu NEW YORK SLATE ROOFING CO., robotl.yei. dfrdtrdlmi.*.*^ "EAT TO LIV£." - P, ■ SMITH A OO.'S WHITE WHEAT. A f"r'r r Vi-b't i'v- . 5£ sHasi2a3Bcsa diUHHTAST KMflrUlfMMirP.-At hrmw. 1/ mala or famal*. • a waoh war ran tad *o aaot tai rrfairad roirinrMotlar* and a folofblo .ample aant fra* dddraaa, withdat. ralarw • tamp, A II TOr*A, Wdrifth at . WllllamtHorrh ■ T__ What will It tfn I U tha hrat thtfAtrf IM dick mth* eohoarniatr a otddlMaa. iappotd Tarramt'd leltaar Apannht Id th* tahyact rf tha l*rrof* ory, what thaa t d.mply ihid rally : II will ranara aad car# head aaho,naaiaa.dtiaiaoa*. i,tir* fra* Addrao*. W A IIKVDBRao* A OO- Olaril— I Q,wlt Lawta. mat GOLDEN SUNBEAMS Th* Utaal aad h< *t Mwatc hat f -t th* da. day •ch aad Ih* Shu fir- I*, dawtla Oryr ami ow rmwiplo-M-aata. I.RH d *H*>4KD. Hx*! a rata mw.no JlnonaM yean* In* dam tnfelM da Ut* warn. Id nnd/wwd fat > aad t# tha todf ff ad (* aad If than uwo - fWcdftr" aontf ta yrw hat. dWy hTwiWIIg t A Cd'Sra rtf. l2ft> K, *MM UA* Coram-aatcmwr lst waah Hal) Salary, and wttttM Wantfkf It and win fay It Ahhiy hdwHl Wotaira AOa.. *"-■ O- Bl Itf BSTMP3 MM IL 1..1 AWT ML, KIJ V narrai, toferl aad iha *a<*t Hyht Ut ■dW ■ iMatnlt Th* m • i.'raa. HO! FOR COLORADO! With ltd rtoriow* cdlmdir. aanitmi *wary. m .iif taa orcwd dined it ltf. farmitid and hat. ih wrttitfei • arwl atd taaetal mr dm tionyiraa (Ta*. Addrraa A. Bl fdITUIOII, fort Ooltt'.d. Colorado < | jl a day A rata wan tad awarywhara. Ptr.lr -1 If nitit iraa-Arfdyaacy Men irh f. hr.Laalf ftfTD I " LUW PaUWß'' * t Uliu I by •!> I 1 niMto,ttri TiUiMt, ir.-fWI*- IIPTIT <- rv >aili *••• by matt, (* f A lan <*Ll> i>cu iK rn *a A e*'. JIDI* |mi K>b (treat. rhlU4r!|>. , a. r*. ■ GENTS WANTED FOR \TMIIMV ■ ■ • Kit Mi hnkM tm 28 .tbaf * Mar ■ Bifb ngmt- *ua • UMiMM br Harriet Ulnchii Stoma. t.i*i|ii6iw vi* c*dM ift* Miiwii >t WW* to —teak W i* wrm* bmM mmd I ■Tail* AM.' •*>► M k HMr< a T lMrMM^>UMai * M TRIIR All* a tbe •*■*)<. lIU iwrt it lUi—autr) IwnKMK IM —<■ ami enure V rciE ■■ ■■>' I m mary -*iUn Am, Wife Mo. I*.• ft u ma It 625 ii lUCrata4 llklkr MM |>|Nf UftM MW Vtkltf*. €'/"!. pa? i* 0*44 f'ttmif tut r ftsr MM Mn tar AM ~ MMimi M ftgOO • Ml Mdf M4e Omr iwilK taiM 4* pmMta. AMrmi 6 OtTMIGTO * CO . •<> t** hanta I A K f§ !*<• r" • Jierfectß PVWA if onlar wKS Boturl Wr \ Pkrw'i kuldrul aiedlral Blk■]■ netcm, which are alwaya ai fan It. >ln>N •it art tncciiicadly, opnn tie dlateiadl rlan.U of Utc note ami it* Chanslx-r*. ■ Catarrh Kcnso.lv .hiitiM he applied nrlth ■ Dr. Flercfb Siaal Doßrbr,iUil nine:, bioVlic cam br carrted fc. *H ami perforfiw a, oiiml in all pnrta of turn-to •a*** ami riiambrs. in '•> !. romt ami to akcr e\li.il from ahich mac harm to pnaroe.lt. K. tnrcexM hit Uilt coccrae ■ at tmftponl prosett, that Uc pr iprtnorM offer- **.(KI Reward for a cat* otto - ti-M i H*d, clean.** all of th. organs, aad pcaaaasea a controlling powar over tb* uorvoua system. Tb* remarkable cur** (fleeted by Vxarrtxa hav* Induced macp pbyatctana and apothecarle* wt-m w* know to prescribe and us* It tn th* r own families. In fact, Vxoktixb tt tba best remedy yet dl*. coeered for the above diseases, and ta tba only re liable BLOOD PCBIFIBR yet placed before the pnbllc. PBKTABKD BY H. E. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. l*rioo f 91.QG. Sold by all Druggitta and Dealeia Evocywherr. AGENTS WANTED for UuTbcw book. UFB AND ADVbNTL'BBS OF Kit Carson trmm fart, dictated by klwmlt Th. mly vxc. out .croon. " t NT KH. TfexrPKß, acocr ate " mptate dwcrlplhw. .fib. 1.4t trlbm.f tb. FAR UtM,.. *. KuCarai, wit. a fall, mllabl. wriwißt of ib.Mi IINIC ueIUDOCWAK. A. ■ wwkrtHUITORT.It UI.ral.MU. Head Catpwon'w Certifkonte. Tkb 1. U certify that D.WIU C. Pv tf °D , 51 A. IsUmmlj pcno* ipw MUMia*4 Wwriumy IIU aad Advetnu®^ cuZfS AddMM DUBTIN.OILMAN 6 COwHu2^,u2t