Farm, Warden and Household. The Tohsrrn Worm. If there is anything or anybody that is punctual in this world, it is the out or tobacco worm. He puts in an ap pearance without regard to the extent of the crop or the demand for the same. Yon will generally find him making ob servations abont an hour after trans planting, and the grower will need to watch carefully or transplanting will have to lie continued during the entire season. Sometimes the ravages of the cut worm are most disastrous, destroy ing hundreds of the plants in a short time, and again they will hardly be noticed. They usually attack the " chit " of the plant and frequently eat all of the contra] leaves, which renders the plant worthless. Ther also eat the ontaide leaves, but prefer the smaller leaves, as they are more tender. They can more readily be found early in the morning than at any other time, as the fresh earth will show where they have gone, or at least from whence they came. They should be destroyed at once. Some seasons they are very' small and difficult to fiud, at others they seem to be mnch larger aud usual ly as destructive. The only remedy is to worm the plants thoroughly every morning, and in this manner many of them may be saved. When the plant* are much injured, they should le re moved or others set out beside it. Plaster ia sometimes used as a preven tative against the ravages of the cut worm, but is hardly a specific. The best plan is to transplant only large stocky plants which the worms are le-> liable to injure. They, however, do not trouble Spanish tobacco so much as seed leaf; at least this is our own experience. They sometimes eat the plant off aud it falls over, but the taller it is, the more difficult will it !-e for them to reach the centre of it. lu the morning draw the earth away from around the plant carefully, and nstially the worm will he fouud near the roots or at a little distance. They feed npou the plant during the uigiit, and are seldom seen eating the leaves, in which respect they differ from the corn cr to bacco worm, which may he discovered making flue cut chewing tobacco early in the morning or during a dark day" The cat worm is fouud upon dark soil more frequently than upon light, a.d also upon hard stony soil. They are mnch dreaded by the grower, as they make the tobacco field so uneven that it produces a variety of colors and shades of leaf. Ilotttchold \oic*. A GOOD PisixrsmxT.— A very weak solution of permanganate of potash is an excellent disinfectant f.>r light pur poses. such as rmsiug spittoons, neu tralising the taint of diseased roots, cleansing the feet and keeping the breath from odor of tobacco smoke. Permanganate is not poisonous. Horsat WINDOWS.— The more light admitted to apartments the better for those who occupy them. Light is as neceasary to 6onnd health as it is to ▼eatable life. Exclude it from plants, and the consequences are disastrous. They cannot be perfect without its viv ifying influence. It is a fearful mis take to curtain and blind windows so closely for fear of injuring the furni ture by exposing to the sun's rays ; such rooms positively gather elements in darkness which engender disease. Let in the light often, and fresh air, too, or suffer the penalty of aches and pains and long doctor bills which might have been avoided. REMEDY FOB FITTER AND AORE.—Pe ruvian bark, two ounces; wild cherry tree bark, one ounce ; cinnamon, one drachm, all pnlverixed ; capsicum, one teaspoonful; sulphur, one ounce ; port wine, two quarts. Let stand a day or two. Always buy the Peruvian bark and pulverise it, as most ready pulver ised articles are adulterated." This is the reason why more cures are not per formed by it. Dose, a wine-glassful **ery two or three hours in the day until broken; then two or three a day until alt nsed. This mixture will be found excellent for intermittent fevt r and fever and ague. WHAT is IN THE BEDROOM. —The im portance of ventilating bedrooms is a fact in which everybody is vitallv in terested, and which few properly ap preciate. If two men are to ociunv a bedroom during a night let them 'step upon weighing scries as they retire and then again in the morning, and they will find that their actual weight is at least a pound less in the morning. Frequently there will be a loss of one or two pounds, and the avirage loss throughout the year will be more than one pound that is, daring the night there is a iocs of a pound of matter, which has gone off from their bodies, from the ludgs partly and partly through the pores of the skin. The es caped material is carbonic acid and de caved animal matter, or poisonous ex halations. Sqiuub and Potato Bog*. Dr Trimble exhibited before the Farmers' Club some colored plates showing the squash or pumpkin bug in the act of destroying caterpillars. He said that the Colorado potato bug, a terrible destrover of the vegetable, was now in Hlinoxs, and was on its war eastward. These squash bugs were not a scourge like the potato bag; they deserved some encouragement as the foes of caterpillars and certain other varieties of worms. Their mode of killing the caterpillar, as was shown in the plate, was by sticking two lancet like hairs, one of which is at each side of its proboscis, into the body of the worm. Dr. Wellington said he had seen sev eral varieties of potato bngs besides the Colorado bug. These latter insects were terribly destructive to potatoes, tomatoes, and other vegetables, and their march eastward is much to be dreaded by farmers of the Eastern States. tl Fodder Crops. There is no better fodder crop for horse* that can be planted so late as July 1 than millet or Hungarian grass. Either of these crops, which are very similar in every respect, may be sown upon a clean mellow piece of soil, using half a bushel of seed per acre. The crop should be cut as soou as the blos som is ov< r and before the seed is fully formed. It should be cured in thecock the same as clover, and should be ex posed to as little sun as possible. It may be put into the stack or barn in a comparatively green state. Over-dry ing injures it. This fodder is more nu tritious than com fodder, and for horses that are daing very light work will be sufficient with the help of a small quan tity of grain. Fattening Cairo. A sensible, practical farmer say# that he has often noticed that calves would thrive better on milk that is not rich in butter than on what is common ly called very rich milk. The nutritive elements of milk reside chiefly in the casine. If you have a cow that gives particularly rich milk, and one that gives a quality poorer in butter, it is better to feed the calf on the milk of the latter. The calf will thrive better, and you will get more butter from tl e milk of the first cow. Charcoal Tor Cattle. Charcoal pulverized and mixed with water is now highly recommended as an agent for relieving cattle suffering from any derangement of the stomach, such as bloat or hoven, etc. This should be remembered There is no doubt of its efficacy, if abundance of concurrent testimony can be relied upon. MUZZLED — A correspondent says : " One of the funniest things a dog ever did happened the other day. A friend owns a splendid Newfoundland that has been taught to bring his wire muz zle to his master every time he is going out. Coming to my house on a visit his muzzle was left behind. As bis owner was going out after breakfast he said : 'You can't go, Lion ; you didn't bring your muzzle.' Quick as a flash the dog bounded into the kitchen, re turning in an instant with a wire-basket salad strainer, which, hanging on the dresser, had attracted Lion's attention, and seemed to him to be a new kind of muxale," NEWS OF THE DAY. The Boston freestone cnlleiw, who tisvo been on strike since the Mill of April, have resumed work *t theolvl price*. Two work men in Benltv's quarry in bran ford. Conn . foolishly tried to drill out shesvv charge of powder which had failed (o exphvle. The friction of the drill exploded the charge, and both men were serionslv injured one has mnee died, and tire other lie. in a critical condition Hie Secretary of the I. S Treasmy instructed the Anelstsut Trea*urcr . f New York to well $1,000,000 of gold on each Thurw * day during the month of July. .. The l". S. ciisloni* receipt* during June arc larger than during June, I*7 < There was also an improve meut in the internal revenue receipt* It i. esUnia'ed that live thousand Trench fan a lians have emigrated to the Tinted St* <-<- within the last twenty live Tear* Of tlu-e the majority are etuphvyed in inaiittfaelnre* . a few, however, are clerks, physicians, lawyers. I and priests The !'. S. liovemment will pay $22,000.tkkl for the July interest V suut of CIJ.iKX) ha* been l-equratliod to the poor of Brighton. England. by the late Mr. John llatve tt a *a!e ly auction of tare china ia England a Sevres chimney group w* bought for l.ord lOidley at the price t'O - o .. Official itiforataU i ha- Ucn revc.vsd at I lis War OlHee of the defeat at Thrive, tlrrt) eight miles norlhwe*! of Valencia aftvi two day*' lighting, of 10.000 I'aih-i* under com mand of Prince Alphouso hrorher -f lv-n I'arloe. hy a force of Urpuh loans uumLermg ,hlv A ODD men ..The Japanese Government has i*ucd a uotlfloaliou that after the I*l of August the exportation of i-.ce and wheal beyond the sea* will le |vt\.>hibllrd . The total number of Japanese troops in Komi i i. J Ik*' t'ollir-10l - I >e ovuiu-.i U-twrru thi tu and the i-.auvee. The Japanese have k -uiue killed, aiwl the natives ntai.y more Hugh l.-,ah-to. the pedestrian completed the feat ef waikn g I.IW mile* in l.ixM li.-urs in Spiingtield, Mov The flutsh wa* greeted by vociferous a; i '.ause from a large crowd of persou*. He ha* twin watched from the slait, aix weeks, and it 1* the opinion her o that tiie feat ha* been h >uetJy acvomphsiied The l. S, Comptroller of ihe Cttrrwucy says hi* . structtou of the new currency act it. reference to the reserves of Uis national bank* is. that the reserve upon cirv-ulation is abolished, but that tiie national te required to keep a reserve n|vii deposit*, as provided in seCUOti 31 and 3d of the N cat lu k act. aceita.n proportt.ui of which inu-t be koj : ou hand, ami acertaiu other propouiv -u with the.r reserve agents m the cu.ee enumerated in the sections rrferrevl to. The baiiks ate also r, juire-d to keep an amount equal to th e per cent, of their Circulation ou depoeit with the Treasurer of tiie I i.tted Stale-, which amount may le de ducted front tiie aggregate amount of the reserve re-puted to be kept upon the depostt* The mausiou of W tu. M. Tweed, iu Nov* Yerk lately eohl for fluhOOn. an ! lire stables #7*). 000.... Ttvm every gram-growing -.tiuty in California there is now a demand for labor, and eu thoU*ai:d of lie d-the graiu will have to he allowed to stand until hand* can be pro cured to cut it . .The Compulsory Attendance law of Connecticut has been attended by an increase of the number vvf pupil* in the schools by about 3,500. of whota oue-tifth represent the natural increase from popuiatiou. The taw ha* ihcref. re brought in about 2 KM from the haunts of ignorance to instruction, and still leaves out about 1 "JXI by reasou of paternal neglect, and 0.600 tn employment. A lot, having an area of 3.210 square feet Ui the midst of the business portion of Londuu, was receutly sold at the rate of #717 1 gold jwr foot, or $ 160.CAM tiie lot Several ladies > f the Women's Temperance I n; n in Oakland, Oregon, have received eopte- of a nonce to leave within three days or Buffer death Gem J. I) Cox. formerly I". K. Secretary of the Interior, has beeii invited to bee :ue Presi dent of Anlnvh College Mo-es Jordan. 70 years of age. committed suicide 111 West Chester, Pa., by jumping fr tu a aeeond-story window of the bhcitnati 11 >use. He leaves an estate estimated at #IOO. -.*) to SJOO.WO. with few, if any, rvlatives to claim it... A. I>. Wheel- ck. as as-ignee of C. M. 1 remain, recovered judgment in the City Court f lirook lyu. in a soil for i *),tk>6 worth of collateral securities from Henry M. I.ee for money loaned. This is the first cause tu Sen York 111 which an ae-iguee has recovered coilatetab for excessive interest Bishop littret-ger. of tiie American pilgttms ; arty has left It -me for Vienna. It is announced that the pilgrimage will be repeated next year, when it ts expected that over 500 Amr-icans will partK-ipate .. Strong shock* of t-arth-]uxke have been felt in Constantinople.... Ihspatche- from Pert.am bueo announce the death of the Primate of the Brazils. Owing t> the death of Marshal Concha th command of she Spa. -h n; .' 11.-an army :,i be taken by Genera! Zahala, Minister of War. who will be succeeded in the Ministry by lie in - • Cotoner ... .The la*', llus-ian papers contain report* of very destructive dres at Borditdiev, in the government of Y'oUiyuia, a town in habited mostly by Jew*. A tire one day de stroy ed £OO houses. The next day there wa auothcr conflagration involving the loss of nearly as many more buildings. The two suc ceeding days the town was again vi-tted l>y tires by which whole streets were lai-1 in a*hes. Thousands of person* were male homele-a The agents of the great European *t*am*hip lines sell tickets for steerage pa-sage for $ 12.50 each. Excnr-ion tickets, to Europe and back, were sold at from J2* to #35. The com petition which has led to this redact! -n is sal 1 to have re-me of tiie brcahu-g up -if the North Atlantic steannliip combination, in which all tiie large companies were repr eeent c J. Tiie combination was male to maintain a uniform scale of prices, ilailroat fares have be-n av far reduced that a man may travel from ( hica go to Liverpool for al-ont sl7 Iu answer to a question as to whether there is any truth in the reported dis|>oition on the part of Canada to secede to the I'nitod StaU*. Mr. I>i*raeli stated in the II -two of Coramou* that tlu relations of the Canalian Domii-ion and the Irap-erial governments are most cordial and satisfai-tory ...J. H. Klnss. member of Con giens from Alabama, shot and mortally wound ed G. P. Long, at Tuscnmbia. Ala At Janesville. Ind, Mr. llumeau's house was struck by lightning. His daughter. Id*, was instantly killed, aiul a young man vi-iting her stunuef a thunder and hail s tor tit which lie experienced at Pietermaritrburg, on the 17th of April : "Alton! ti> in the afteriiiHtti, I wan \vnlking with a friend, when suddenly the wind began to blow the diiat about. \t the aaiue time I observed that the southwest portion of the sky was tilled l with an exceedingly blaek cloud, con tracting upwards to a point. Presently a few drops fell, then heavier ones, and then solitary great lumps of toe. On tin sight of these we dashed under nti iron t < rnudah, and none too soon. A loud rushing sound oame from the Noalhwtst, and eventually hailstones, liberally mingled with great masses of mo of very irregular lornta, poured down with great violence. The haiUtoms were seldom less than one ineli in diam eter ; the average was from one and a half to two inches in diameter. Tliese wire of very regular spherlea' form, and consisted of a nucleus of white "■now, with an envelope of hard trans parent ice. Somelliues tln-y presented, when broken through, a concentric ar rangement of zones, alternately white and opaque and transparent. The ir regular masses were forundof a nucleus generally longer in one direction than the others, from two to four inches iu diameter; projecting all over were staWtiti s, each oue about the thickm ss of a little linger, and presenting, when broken across, an agate like structure, as though si-gregratron had built them up. (If these masses 1 weighed a few with the following results ; Thr- c weighed over eight ounces, two over six ounces, and oue i ver four ounces. The last, which was the largest, I found myself, and was weighed s >me time after the storm was over. Those below were weighed by others, but I o* some, and know the others are right from the |>er mu* who took the weights. Oue weigh ed seven ami u half ounces, one eight i Mices, ami oue six ounces. This last w.-s weighed til!ly fifteen minutes after the storm had ceased, and hud suffered much from melting. It was an irregular mass, with projections all over it. The storm raged with fury for seven or eight minutes, the great lumps c uld be dis tinguished as they descended, ami then a> they fell ou tiie road they broke into iraguieht.s, scattering all round. In about two minutes from the commence ment the whole fo.-ul was completely ts vered.and appeared as though cover ed with snow. The damage was euor rnoua. On many rofs fuilv half the tiles were broken ; not merely cracked, but very frequently the uien'ii weut right through into the houses. Fortu nately for windows, there was no wind, or tiie damage would have been rniieh heavier. Many of the corrugated iron roofs are dented all over, and have a jvock-marked asjieet, while some corru gated iron roofs are completely riddled; the stones went right through,as though they had but pajwr to encounter. 1 had mode a point of examining the iron roofs, and therefore can vouch for the above." The Village ( holr. The uieieiit village choir, with it* flute* ami riddles, has Wett swept away. It* pretentions w ere no doubt greater than it* power*. The principal soprano had figured front of tin- gallery for a peri >d of nearly half a century, and Iter performance rem- tn bled nothing *0 much as that of u hen when informing the world tli.it (the Lad ju-t added a fresh egg to her store. Tue ba-ao pre-fuudo, thinking that there was nothing like leather, sh -iit d to Mich tt degree th.it in summer time, when the di-or were open, he could be distinctly hrard on the top of the opposite hill. It is not easy to describe the horror t-f an Ital ian musician, who having been detain ed iuthe neigliboorhood by a oiach acci dent, and received at the rwctory, at tended the church one Sunday morning, and w.i* anbjected to the usual dis play : Til* wedding guest, he Is-at his breast. Eur he heard the loud bar soon. " Yon must find Ilatidel difficult," son:.' one once ventured to remark to the leader of a band, when some chorus from the " Messiah " was in prepara tion. " Well, zur," was the rcjdy, "he may be zo ; but then you see, us alter* un ;" and, in!t* d, it was sometimes dif ficult to recognize the creation of the great maestro which flgurevl byway of anthem. And yet, when all is said, there was a homelier-* about the whole performance which harmonized with the-imple old church, through whose " nnstoried" windows yon csmld s-*e the bees and bntterflie- bttsy among the sycamore blossoms, aud with the quiet paternal teaching of the rector, wiume discourse* bad at I- aat the merit of W ing intelligible to the humblest of his iv-ngre-gation. lint the secret of his in fluence lay oni.-nle hi* teaching. It was tliat of Chaucer's pnrish priest— Fur lorfl an 1 flu* A mtltn !! tMTirbt; tut he f tKiwe !it liimm'lve. Hehool Teaching lu California. A jvedagoguc in Indiana, who was " had tip " for iinun rcifullv welting the back of a little girl, jtistitb-d his action by explaining that "she jw-r-isted in flinging paper wads st him when his back was turned." That is no excuse. A man once taught school up iu the monutaius of California, says an ex change, and alniut every half hour had to remove his coxt and scrape off the dried paper wads adhering to the nap. Ho never permitted a trifle to unsettle his patience; he just kept on wearing that gabardine until it hn 1 no nap, and the wads wouldn't stick. Hut when they took to dipping them in mucilage he mado a complaint to the l-oard of directors. " Young man," said the chairman, " ef yon don't like <>nr way* you had better fling yonr blankets and git. Prentie-' Mnlford tort aknle yer for mor'n six months, and he never said a word agin the wads." The school teacher briefly explained that Mr. Mnl ford might have been brought up to paper wads, and didn't mind them. "]t ain't tin use," said another direc tor, " the children liev pot ter he amused." The school teacher protested that there were other amusements quite as diverting ; hat the third director here arose, and remarked, " I pcfekly agree with the Cheer; this youngster better travel. I consider as paper wads lies at the root ot pnpilnr edyercation ; ther a uccessara adjnnck ttv the sknle system. Mr. Chiermau, I move aud second thet this yere skulemaster be shot." The school teacher did not re main to observe the result of the\oting. Tucked In nil It n Rat. It isn't pleasant for ladies to mee! rats in the daytime, and loud screami are apt to follow such an encounter. But night and loneliness add to the terror, and fainting is not uncommon. A comi cal scene occurred in a big old bouse in England, infested by rats. A large company were visiting nt the house, and among them a stalwart old lady, positive in her opinions and over bearing in manners, but with n mortal antipathy to rats. Bhe would not sleep in this bouso without a lamp burning all night in her chamber, and the chamber-maid before leaving, tucked in the white dimity curtains carefully to keep out the ruts. One night the household was startled by a succession of violent screams issuing from her room. There was a general rush to learn the cause, ami the company could not restrain their laughter, when they s:iw Miss Cowe standing in the middle of the room, barefooted, in her night dress, and shrieking at the top of her voice. The maid, in tucking her in, had tucked in a rat, who could not get out, and, on waking, she saw him squatting beside her face on the pillow. STARVING. —Two hundred and fifty dollars will be offered at the next Geor gia State fair for the man who will pro duce the best living for a family of eight persons on the smallest number of acres. And this leads the Louis ville Courier-Journal to denounce the offer as an open, direct, and most in famous attempt ou the part of the State fair to bribe some poor Georgian to starve his wife and six children to death, ' Til K BOltltOltN OF H YIWOI'BOBI A. A lllalrrtilitK Cntr lit Nrw \oik til). Our Now York elehangea give the details of the death of u well known dry goods merchant bv lijdrophohta. " He tlrst i xhihlted ayinptoni" of the malady in it* incipient alngea on Mon day, when he complained to hi. tela lives of a peculiar niinihneaa and los-i --tude of the arms ami hack, ami more particularly ahout (he ueek. He sanl that he thought It wax an attack of rheumatiaiu. The feeling grew on him, and he tried several aimpte luedleinea without itnprcv nig lita condition. On Friday he said that Ilia throat f*-lt parched, ami made avallowiug painful, lie ilrank lUlieh water that day, how ever. tin returning to hi* house to dinner at an o'clock in the evening, he looked wild uml haggard. \ cup of tea w is offered him, and on raining it to drink he wua tak< n with a alight apaani juat an it toiieheil his lipa. A physician waa allium nod at eight o'clock that evening, hilt waa unable to d lag none hia ea-xv on tlrnt looking at him. The doctor noticed that hia ev> a had a wild and metallic glare, ami that ne kept thriu constantly roving from one poiut to another. 11c talked 111 a whining tone about hia tlurat, and begged for a glaan of water. Ilia rag ing tlurat at once led the physician to Miapeot that the diti aac might p voslbly t>e hydrophobia. tine of the atteml allts at hia hcdaide atepped into an ud joining room for the water, ami when he heard it running he behaved very nervously nmt ga*pcd like a man b< lug atrangleil. The water was put iu front o( him, ami the Night of it made him shudder and tremble more violently than ever. The glass was held close to lus mouth, ami he shouted : " For tkvd'a sake take it away ! take it away!" L'ho water was again offered him, aud he seized the glass with trembling hands and managed bv a desperate effort to carry it to lis lips. He took two swallows and then let it drop, ►.creaming, "Take it awav, take it away." After this his delirium sub sided itiul his oonvulaioiis were less fre queut. Dr. li tdilctl inquired whether he had boau bitten by a limiM', or a cut, or any other animal. Mr. Mct'orraick said that he had beell scratch) d nil the hand by a little poodle dog, but that it didn't amount to anything. He said that he was playing with the dog in a baker nh'qi round the corner, about three weeks before, and that the animal hail scratched his finger slightly with one of hta teeth. The wound was so slight tli.it there was no blood, ami it healed in a day or to. lie poiutcil ti the soar on the index finger of his right hand, above the thumb and near the finger joint. All that was visible was a faint redness of the skin, the mark of the dog's tooth having disappeared. He was positive that the poodle was not mad, but admitted that it was taken to the pound three or four days ago. After listening to his story, l'r. Had den offered him some brandy, but lie had the same horror of the stimulant that he had for the water. The doctor prescribed fur hiui.aud left him feeling much easier. At miduight his spasms returned and he moaned and frothed dreadfully, lie broke down the l-.l on which he lav in hi* convulsive at tempts to get off, and afterward ran to the window and tried to jump to tin sidewalk. It required the united strength of his two brothers and his brother-in-law to drag hi in back. His litubs were pinioned and he was placed on another l>ed. In his struggles > e made several snaps of his ts-th at his attendant*, and while his hands were being tied he sprang at one of his brother* ami tried to Lite iiiiu. A bed sheet was held before his face to pre vent him from spitting at th >e around him. Dr. Hsdden*returned to Limwith Dr. Tattle, They found him frothing at the mouth ami throwing himself about bke a madman. He struggled with superhuman force, and tl. dwet r ha I (* throw a mattress ov. r him t-> keep him down. He raved about the doctors, and said they would kill him. Three grains of morphine and otie twelfth of a grain of atropine in a solu tion of one hundred drops, w.i injected under the skiu. The effect of the narcotic* was ap parent in a few minutes. The atropine was the first to act. It worked on t!.< glands and stopped the frothing at the mouth. The morphine made the pa tient insensible. He remaimaf so until A. xi , when he showed signs of con sciousness. Dr. Haddcu. Dr. Ircavitt, and Dr. Hammond, late Surgeon-Gen en! of the I'ntled States Army, were in attendance. Dr. Hammond confirmed Dr. Haddcn'a opinion that the patient had hydrophobia. He said thai there was no well authenticated case of ri*cov cry from hydrophobia 011 record. He thought that the certificate of three or f-.tir reputable physicians should be sufficient to have the body of any one dying from the disease destroyed. He agreed with Dr. liaddcn that to admin ister ans'sthetios was nil that oould be done for Mr. McCormick, and that it was utterly imjiosnble to save his life. On the patient recovering conscious ness he showed the name wild symp toms that had first seized him, and another hypodermic injection of mor phine and atropine was made. The second injection was not so pow erful a* the first, but it put the patient in a comatose state, in which he con tinued until the time of his death. He died at five o'clock." A Ttionund-Frinr " Sole." A Paris correspondent says: " An other case of swindling has come nuder mj notice, and this tune of so flagrant a character that i cannot resist the temptation to record it. An American lady received one day a note from a friend, written on very pretty note-pa per, aud hearing an extremely tt< ftil monogram iu gold and colors. Struck with the beauty and style of the paper, she sent to inquire of her friend Where she had pnrchmed it, went to the same shop and ordert d a good sized box of paper, with envelopes to match, all ol which were to IHJ KtamjM-d with hex monogram in gold and colors, and tolw sent home. Ido not exactly know the quantity she ordered, hut presume it eotlld not have been over half a ream - a ream would be an outside and an ex travagant quantity, but it may possibly have been as smelt as a ream, though certainly not more. How much, O reader, do you think she had to pay for the aforesaid box of paper, she unfor tunately having omitted to make any stipulation about the price when she ordered it ? Five dollars ? Ten ? Twenty ? Forty ? Fifty ? Nay, more than fifty. One thousand francs. Two hundred dollars in gold—such was the price charged for that solitary box of note-paper." A Strange Case. There is in New Vineyard n ease which puzzles all physicians who have examined it. Two years ago last Janu ary, a young man named Henry M. Oreenleaf, who will he lit years of age in August, had a shook of |alsy, which left him perfectly helpless below the short ribs. r lhe only motion or opera tion of his IKIWOIH since then has been by injections, which have been given nearly every day. At times, when any body hits the tied suddenly, his kgs will contract and bend nearly double, requiring the strength of a strong man to straighten them out again. His ap petite is good most of the time, and lie is in full possession of his mental facul ties. Ho is strong in his arms, mid his general physical condition above the point paralyzed is usually good. He sits np occasionally, and is fastened into a chair like a hahy with a strap in front to prevent him from falling out. Physicians pronounce it one of the most singular cases on record. He is an in telligent l>oy, very, and spends most of his time studying, reading and writing. DESTROYED. —Two Turkish villages, ono having a population of 50(1 or l these seals been left alone for right or ten days, 1 am quite within the mark when 1 say that, instead of only tukiUg ,°t(W tons of oil out of thrill, 1,500 could as easilv have lisrii got, and that without touching an old one. In one day, by the men of the five ships, upward of 4,iKM old seals were taken, the young ones in thousands yelling for their mothers, following the skins as the turn dragged them to the ships, and sucking the craiigs, r., skins, in desperation. The maternal love for its offspring was made use of to taw the men tr< able, a* a seal killed when giving suck was more easily secured, arid often seals deaper ately wounded were seen administering nourishment to their young ones. The plight of the vouug ones which had lost their mother* was pitiful in the ex treme ; tluWr Were Me!l huddling to gether for heat, and tryyrg to suckle one another, til! they at lcngtli suc cumbed." There seems reason, also, to believe that the s als are flayed sjive and have their livers taken out, and then are left in the water, still living, in agony. Some humane captains, howevi r, put a bullet through the animals' biuiua to terminate their suffi rings. There is no doubt that in Alaska similar butchery and wastefulness were going on with the fur seals, but we believe the new laws, ami the care of oar (lovemmrnt, are prev. utiug this. It is not verv tilf - ti -nit for man t*> exterminate a useful animal from a given locality. We have fatrlv driven the salmon from our H' i Kngiand rivers, where it was once so abundant." The " man tee " ha* dissp peared ; the Atlantic right whale, which u once captured fre-iy near the Hrit i*h coast, is seldom seen tiowr; the Northern right whale i more and more driven toward the open sea at the poles, and is more diffi-nlt to take, the walrus i* becoming more scarce.— •V. }'. Taut. A Strange Case. A New York paper contained a letter from J. C. Dalton, M. IV, on the Bnle jeot of hydrophobia, in xthieh he s|reaks of the possibility of a mad dog com muuiciting the disease by simply hck iftig an abradetl s|>t on the hand of its mat-r. The truth of this wa* terribly illustrated not long ago. A Mr. Van (ladder, n printer employed in an es tablishment in Fulton stfeet, Brooklyn, bad a small black and tan term r, stile ject to fits. One day while tlie dog wa* in paroxysms his master took him in his arms t-> ser, peas shot from pop guns, ami iM-nuiea. Now an English penny weighs s third of an ouuoe, ai„j when hurled from an elevation with alt the force of a strong arm it may inflict an ugly wound. The young gentlemen seemed to entertain a violent dislike to bald heads, and w hen they spied our in the pit beneath them they Isimbarded it with showers of pennies. 1 saw more than one gentleman bleeding from the wounds thus given aiidcoin|Milled to re treat. The undergraduates had also conie armed with bags full of orsiigrs, and these they threw at unhappy individual who had the temerity to ap par with a blue or red neck lie. Eye glasses were an abomination unto them, and a gentleman who appeared with one over his eye was ]>eromptori)y ordered to remove it; being slow in compliance, he was greeted with a shower of |>ea* ami ja nuies, which rat tled over his hesd aud struck him in the face. There was some fuu in the adjurations addressed to the lions whose duty it waa to escort the latlies to their seats. As they perforated this duty they were greeted with shouts. " l'ou't you Bqttccze her baud !" " Your wife has got her eyN upon you !' "1 sc you !" " I'll tell Betsy Jane, and then won't there let. a row !" The holies tht wsolve* wore uot |eltetl, htlt they did uot eecajie comuieiit Each of them vliiiin jn-rsoiiai charm* or whose attire pleased the god* in the galleriea was welcomed with ehi-era. •'The lady in red," "the aweet crea ture with the white bonnet," " mam ma'* I vet in pink," all received their meed of applause, aud did not seem b> be disconcerted by it. All thie waa carried on amid an indescribable uoiae of hooting, shouting, groaning, -tamping, tinging, and cheering, {'here were groan* for (ilauUtoue, cheers fi.r 1 >.uracil, fearful groans for the Mayor of London, and a round of ehe r for King Coffee, whose uuibrella, gorge.usly decorated, wa* let down by a string from the gsllery and dangled oV. r the head* of the |reo pie iu the [tit, Mr. Bright'* name waa often 1 card and a* often greeted with temjieals of groan*. A Health) IndlGdual. The following is the lost written by the late " Artemas Ward": Ontil quite recent I've ln-eii a healthy individooaL I'm nearly sixty and yit I've got a muskle into my arm which don't make my fists resemble the tred of a canary bird when they fly about and hit a man. Only a few weeks ago I Was exhlbitm' in East Khowhegau, in a huildiu' which had formly bin ockepied by a pugvlist —one of them fellers which hit* from the shoulder and teaches the manly art* of aclf-defcna. And he cum and said he was goiu' ill free in Oonsekeeen of previsly ockepying ed bildm', with a large yeller dog. I Bed, "To be sure, sir, but not with those yeller dog. He wij, "'Oh, ye*." I sed, "0h,n0." lie set!, "Do you want to be ground to powder ' ' I sed, "Yes, I do, if there is a powder grmdest handy." When he struck me a disgustin' blow in my left eve, which cauaed the concern to at "dice close fur ri jMura; but he didn't hurt uie nny more. 1 went for him energetically. Hi* parents lived near by, an onto a shutter carried by four men, ruu oul d"is, k'v-r/ully hsikc d him over, aud sed, " Mv 9u, you've l>een foolin' round a tiiraahiu' masheen. You went lu at the end where they put the grain in, eome out with the straw, and tlieu got tip in the thingumajig and let the horr.es trel on von, didn't yon my son?" You can judge by this what a disagree able person I am when I'm angry. lto; and tbelr Cost, The St. leouta Otobf. has been making soma calculations fnun recent statinties on this question, and stuns up in refer ence to the Mtate of Afiasoun aa fol lows: " t>ur 400,000 dogs furnish one of the most important economic consider stiona now affr>ctitig the State. In the first place they militate against the inntton crop annually to the extent of at least $5,000,000 ; secondly, they cost at an aVrrage of 25 cents a week each, $f1,50f,000 -enough to run ail our cttra m'on schools and bwve a large surplus; thirdly, they slay annually, through hydrophobia, at least 120 persons, which, at $5,000 each—Uie average price paid by railroads for the very poorest of brakesmen—amounts to the further sum of 9600,000. Here is a di rt ct expenditure of nearly $7,750,000 for dogs, not to mention the fines, costs, and more remote sentimental damages resulting ffom lawsuits alxint tlog fights and severance of friendship Itetween the owner* of the combative curs. Capitalised, our dogs represent a waste of $50,000,000, and invested at compound interest their worthlessness would pay off the national debt before 1900 c" I*. S. Soldiers' Pension*. The act approved .Tune 17, 1874, en titled " An act to increase pensions in certain eases," provides that all persons who are now entitled to pensions nndor existing laws, and who have lost either an arm at or above the elliow, or a leg at or above the knee, shall be rated in the second class, ami shall receive $24 is r month ; provided, that no artificial limbs or commutation therefor shall be furnished to such persons as shall be entitled to pensions under this act. This not, by its terms, was to take effect on nnd after June 4, 187.1. Gen. Raker. Commissioner of Pen sions of the United Htates, announces that persona embraced within the pro visions of this act can aeenre the bene fits of the same without n formal appli cation and without the intervention of un attorney. A power of attorney will not be recognized in an application for the increase of pension provided by this act. A letter from the penaioner addreaacd to the Commissioner of Pen sions, enclosing his )x-naion certificate and giving his post-office address, will be n sufficient presentation of hisekiim. How to Keep Yonr Pet*. A veteran dog fancier who takes the snme view of hydrophobia that the un fortunate Prof. Francis Rntler took, says: I have kept pure-bred dogs for years nnd have been bitten dozens of times, in all times of the year. My treatment of dogs is: When fits are coming on T give them a spoonful of common table salt. This mokes the dog slime. When dogs cannot slime they will have fits. When they begin to flime again yon can rest assured that all is right. I)o not give them raw meat oftener than three times a week. Give the dog plenty of water, and if he is chained up have the chain so that the animal may lie down in the shade. Never muzzle a dog. The best food for dogs in warm weather is corn meal made to a spawn in a gruel boiled from sweet or good bones. When this is cold feed in slices. Dogs will keep in fine condition on this fi od and in perfect health. Tmk Fihst.-O. T. Jlutler, of Brook lyn, N. Y., write* to a New Haven paper that the first vessel ever driven by steam was started on the Oauadal quiver in 14H3, while Columbus waa prowling along the shores of the sup posed liidics. Mr. Butler asys that he bus seen the original plana on parch ment iff the boat ami eugine hy l>ort Bluano, the inventor, and that the en gine la far im re simple, aud iu ita action more direct, than auy Ire haa ever seen in this count iy. King Ferdinand hail the Venae! at l machinery broken up aa the work of the devil. A Few Word* fo Feeble and Ifellrale Women. By It V Puses, M D., of U* World a I>IS- Ibiffalo. 14. V. Knowing Uist y.m ara subject to a great amount of suffering, thai datiesey on your pari has a strong ton.bury to prolong, and Uis longer It Is neglects*! the mors you hsvs to endure and the lucre dlflicutl of cure your usee becomes. 1, as a physician, who Is daily ooil eum*! h> -cores or your sex, dealrs to say to you. Uisl I am constantly mooting with tins* *ho have tioeu Iron. J fur liuSt allmeula fur ■ninths without being bene 11 Oat In live I oast iu. .ll lliey tisve bee me ja-ifortlv tlisnuuiagod and have almost mute up liieir minds never to take snollier dose of me-Heme, nor be tortured by any further Irosliiu.iL They had rather die and have their sufferings ended than to live and suffer aa they have, ibey say tlu-y are wura out by euffertng and are only made w, res by tiealutenL Of anytiiUig more die octiraghig we certainly cannot conceive, ai.d were there nom.es successful mode of treating such .liffi-' ilues than thai, the principles of whn-h teach the reducing and dspioimg • A the vnal forces of the system when uis indications dictate a liealtweul dlreotiy the revere# of the one adopted for them, their caeee would he dr plural •:# inde<*l. Hut lady sufferer* there Is a heller and far more sttccersful plan of treat ment for you , one mure in harmony with the laws arid requirements of your system. A harsh irritating caustic treatment and strong medtcmes will never cure you. If you would use .rational means, sorb as cotumou-sense should diet ale to every intelligent lady, lake such medicines as embody the very I-est In vigorating bimes and net mica compounded with special lefereocie to your detirats system Much a bawpy combination you will And in my favorite I'lrerrpiluu. which has received the l .udeet praise from thousands of your aex. Tn.aae Ist gold tiresome sensations causing you lo feel acan-ely able to be on your feet or ae c nd a flight of stairs, that continual drain that is sapping from vour systems ail your formes elasticity, aint dimug the hi ua from your cheeks . thai continual strain upou your vital forces that render you irritable and fretful, may all be oveicume and subdued by a per erwring use of tiiat marvelous remedy, It regulamies and olsitruc-Uona to the jiraper working* of your system are relieved by this mild and safe means while |*uiod.cal jsnns. Hie riistsnce of which is a sure indication cf eertous disease that should but he neglected, readily yield tu it, aud if its use is kept up fur s reasonable length of lime the special caues of these pains is permanently removed. Further light on these subjects may be obtained from try pamphlet cm disease* je-cuiiar to your eei. sent on receipt of two stampa. My Favorite i'rascription ts sold by druggists. - Cotn. In • rwmnt letter to Mewrt Rem liigtua A On., (ss|*. E. W. Whitu-uvor*. ISiij li.fuiUT, U. H A., iliim ijmlui ot tha item liigUjM Scwiuj; Midline: "It your oewuig tuaciiiii** are *# much of an imprvxremmit over uilirr# a* your double hot-guii in lie breech luorbariiatn la eu|nriur U> Uie guua, 1 kball eaut on*."—Una. Improvement is the order of the day. Ilir greatest rhatige la nrnte in the Klmwood (uliar. Tbie ia made a Utile eider llian it waa, a I aa U) tie 111 the lircaenl all le. Ark for the Improved Kltnwood.—C. Fearful- thc amount of money thrown ij in nut buying abon |inHMUil by Biltii Tnv Parent* t*> vm ami insist that tout shoe dealer should keep them.— Com. WisTsa's liatesM far the lungs.—Ocrf.u Tha Serrsl at CapHvailaw.—fsslarci f (Its lan nubtl, s well Is mat nr<* aad fcaaotifullj roaadad arms, sit ss 4onl>t in; sirs U>!c(i in ha*#, sod ladird tko j • iktit cktiwi hati rtaaos to h# thankful Ui M lSrt Jtalur* yat, aft#* tU.tfct mot I iaj tiTatiKf at sit womanly charm* la a |i*. r.-ssh sad XMlllshl n.mylaxun Tsit • S|*rrialiva faartnatioa say lady ansy wcart ay 1 nalti* ftaaaa's Sitt ui SAL*. Xt Old Sit alias Mustang l.laitsl, Sat yiofiitl mars carts of iSsamatiam, ararsl*)a. tf.rait.a, aealJa. barns, salt rhaam, sois Bin Irs, ivtlhai, lamtataa, ttlt Pous Oaastns salsaa U> (SMtta- tsdCtTßTldd PBhKlVdtlo* Musnkaldr wrapp**. I VI ALL ■■nieiss PIILMA chujihki orrxi usiv rsui vn Bl< M hwsa as othar aasss tku hsn.p assms la tha iSoaianh. aacww v vpswircaa conrrra Wtn daatrcy worms without talary ta Ua ahlld bat a* parlaotly WHiTS. aad frwo Horn all sole clan ar ouar ligwrtsaa lafradiaaka tuuntil asad II warm praparaltoaa. cr arid a HOST, Pvoprlasara. Vs. Sib run on IV! tut Saw Vara, and sp rvwfputa and ChrmliSt. aad dealers b featmrut el fweerv-Prya nisn f li-a __ HOUSEHOLD W. y will law suffer f PANACEA at' persona suffrr % • ' No. a Spring 1.31 a 1..4J llr* A 1.10 liar • x Rill IM * - i I At* \ir*teni • # .fW A .60 (Vim- MIhJ WNrtMH •!! - 7 k (lay—par !*•* is.uu ear.iw Slr.w |>cr ton 13.(10 a*'.)*) ■mm HV ■ a. WPW— . S a .If fnrk-Xtre# 15.75 at(t.Ts I.T-1 JIA .US Ivtmlonm—CrtiUt A.. # a #S Refined -lf\ Butter Htale so a ,l Ohio, rint JM a .21 Ohto, Tollow .IS a .19 Wiwtrrn ordinary .1# a .17 IVnn.ylvmnl* fino JS a .29 Chocse—stalr Factory 1:< v. a .jsyj Stale Skltuntod...... . 5 a . 8 Ohio 12 a .IS Kgßl-Rtato 22 a .21 AUIST. Wheat I.fis a 1 fid Hvr— State 1.10 a 1.10 Corn— Mltcd 77 a .79 Barley — State 1.7S a l.MOi# Oatn -SUte M a .M vcrPAto. lleef Cattle .f0 a .*7H Rherp fi.H7<* .78 Moire — Litre ft.so a 8.(11 Klnur 6.50 a 9.00 Wheat— No. 2 Spring 1.29 a I.HO Corn 87 a ,7 Onto 83 a .M Bye l.io a 1.10 Barley 19 0 a 1.90 lard llftga .12* HAITI HOUK. Cotton—Low Middling 18V* .18* Klour — Extra ft.2# a 6.0n Wheat 1..X8 a 1.43 Corn 91 a .98 Oat* 57 a .75 PUIuanELPHtA. Flour 7.(10 a 7.25 Wheat - Western lied I.3ft a 1.35 Corn— Yellow 90 a .80 Mixed 79 a .79 Petroleum—Orude. 08 w hrflutd.Ua Clover Seed 8.0 all.oo Timothy 2.90 a 2.98 A flailing nchuoncr from riymonth, Htwrnt from port Itrntpiii hour* In*! wiM*k, onrunl I <>WII|I A TUCK >g n BHroa* Pike*. B#W i alb. g. J.. will **ud nua K. P. M. Pluitng Mai h .... # in., to aap tOnat, C. 0. l Prlca f Wt ton >ir 4tf it Terma Pra*. M'l . l tm4 , lilt.a.lA 4 CO . Portland .Malb*. WAUKSSIA WATBI. MINERAL ROCK SPRING, CURES Dropsy Diabetes Cravol Dyspepsia Constipation Jaundice Bright'* Disease And all 4l*a*a* of tiaa lir and kidnap* Thi* aaiai I. ..• hi own and a. Mai a i.m.j, f.„ in* lw> i ntwa la all Mil, of Ik* world, it la tiulr vo..d*'lul vital •#<< I it ha* upi.u "k. aaiaaa • it 11 uuv balhg *h ppad at th* I. Ilowing ariatt a.tr Mmr aaual Ma -our • ptu* at. a lha mli.l* .1 Mnb la*t, for a k>4- n f citr.rnlip ihat I h*a ba4 aloca I waa ala taara ulg (I agl u<* 'vamp . an* 1 aaaat aa, I Hal It b** t ad a vuadnffl i upon n*. I ka*a baari a ai.at lufaill lt> lha tag u* if I*. klia.,l f* ~a ll baa hw with Ibr gi* ,l*al ailUiull, ib.i I intli u iukii a 4 lla .gar la bat. baas lint up •■< tn, gab.>al baaltb tbat I bar. not baau iiu l . lab-. Imt a pail at tba naaa t i paarr, bul •u.. • | big -a bu 4flu* Miuaral hub tptlng W'atar a, b.allb baa alaa4il> iaa,iurag. aa. I tan wa d> a ga-daap a vufb without faligu*,au4 Im ai J.i mr*a f trail a* lb. luag ts hi alife tat happi uaaa I vuuM n.ia...J tba vu fraaa four • pmgui all ib'ia* that bar. baa* afßlrla. *I lb tba kiln.? diflt-ulj aa a bnrrlgi. i.atd, fui ibai i i attbba* tiaaaaa aa n baa duo* IM • wbai autiiM ixiaM no- raark K.aprctf.Mp pmr*. HaHVbTCLkKK. Tbtaiato rartlfy that I aa> !•< f.ttti if Htnr, Cla h lha ah r I.arval, and I ar ki.< •). gu lb. • ug.ria Ibad ktha undergo** during alaioat all b ■ tif. vnb h. Iru. Lt i 14* ( I.4kg . Itmra, Mu a , April #lh, Ufi r. c Our 4 Co t*f lur ll gi r a aia plaaa arc 111 U J Utuaati In tba ralaa . f lha watara of guar Minora! til bring Mr vifa baa haaa aAt ..I*4 f r lb* p *t aia trai* vllh dtaaaao'f th lidai |i Ti tough tba im laair i.galioa of a f ad •haa a. ladgcag to marl Is W auk.at alu 4in k<4 ll> baaliug natal* wa triad lha M'baral kit *pri u W'atar Mta. Van Lma ha* baaa gr. all, boutfi ad and la atilJ uai.g It, foaling thai lb lima it vili taaha a kriaui .*'t rura. Tlloa B TA* LOO*. ft AA VT it N.dual b -.tdri r a bun Id ha r and by HI M s hU Iraihi-iArliiaaM A44raaa DUUJu >'K HdfhATAKTK, CiueiaMU, a Colorado for lovalidi and Toiriiti. IU agrautagaa kit CouautaptirM and AaUuaat US. Pall particular# girvn fr.a A*4raaa. A. M PaTTBBnO*. . fan t oliiua, Culorada. ni |%# UKVUK'* BHII.LUXT OIL P\ II pur.ai, *afr*l at. a iba Attn llghi la AdR PhN OA* UmaiMMoi |lua wvM <*jn>rP gatarf,ai>4 rapatiaaa W'aoSrr it at>4 will |*/ ii Api'l, aaw. Q *MWilOb.M*Ha* O "EAT TO LIVE." F 1# BWITH A CO.'S WHITE WHEAT. A*'m*Mit Mill* ftrenilr*. K Y i th. ffVrfrrthw •f Kami. W holfMimt. Drlklmu ug£ Kce* Hnutlrsl. Ni( N tburt#4y f dibit. K t rinkltw. Mi lotlttik. Mtwrlsl 1 * tt* ,ti IS id A Itw i 1 (isrirr ih rsmslikUi, villi •*.- •Im dbliKtiodh* us Pood v£ 11, alfti *ii Ida I'narlu.l aa • Ttvirplrrr. —Calaa* tba U a.U4olb.tr duty wtlh lha ragulallly of rtork *ttk. prrli <1 kaallh la mpo*aihlA Tbiralora. vhra linrfnaf, Mall th*a* laauadialaly artth TAfTASt'* KffflTMMßt Mtggf Apgncat, lha *<••! grtilal brluuptc and rfrchii laaatlrv ml alur.ttr* k.>oan to the grdieal prof.* lon bold hp traafiu* Vrn UVUUtIUi gaud hhrra. to OKA p Row BI.L 4 CO.. 41 Park Bow. **v Torh. t tr than ntpaul eg MO paper, routatalag latiifm orv* papara and ntlm.ln U wtog mat af adrrrtlaing. STANDARD LOTTA BUSTLE. ■■■■KMMMMBpiMBtf Iklt'louia Aw aid r.l tip ttar Amrrl pt BWdvJ^™ ran liaatllnr* oath | Jg. .vnt: ,**. A- W. Thorns. M 1 111 u I I| IB Palaoua and M*t u i ! MBS) M faetar.t fur th* Light- J| jR ■ -fSrfw .*l. Mi .ngrat and Mpaßß-11 a< al cm f .rukl* bu*- tU Th. Maadard I. IU - ihat can h* v.m. lirr* v to t .rarr at pi* of 4r*a. Wh'l. • il* rt*p<.i-9l While fctrc*t. it* York. bOl 1 Rae* Bl>**l. Philadelphia _ Ha* grant M*d*!m*o pr.uat. ua*d |nr df'CcUt g t..u.t.,feil M.ti*,. ttbod.p la Cloth, for. Igi. **h • tuir* in th* Br*, lu W nu.li etc.,and to *ln* Irifetr. P)ov*r* and lliilt. to d*t*el Hair* tn M*ul* <••'.• of nnod grain ; to drctpbrr nrti tog oih*r i lUrg- l>l ; and tj* ih* impaction .1 grain. IB*>.! t-\ I **Ail fur *rrpho-tp. Donhlt Conrta L* . 1I S inch** in clntnaur M at led In Iralhar. nnd canted m lb. r*i , >rk*i. Mc* #* t mm. two f .i Bl.tr** hr in all Atm Waaran ltln*t*aa town. Wf*y to I'OUKSTIC S. M. CO..yw Terk. 9 ' ' ' ' '' * j, """ J. SAENGER. 21 Murray Street. N. Y. Im|mrter of Mttilral Infttrnmesti* I Ac stent. -• Make* • prrfrrt toca rriTca, *l kt on both tide*, oa
    J gv-vd*. А.— Run* LIURT, Saoora. NOISBL*** and Rxritv— test dnbiailiea of quaitil. s. 4,-l>m>u - Umi/or IMP* without R*:alr*. ft.—M'iff do *0 mrirftct of Work and /'un.-g StifcAeng in • *uperlor manner. б.—l* V.ul KarUy Managtd by the operator Lrngth of atttih may be altsrad whlla running, and machiu* ran be threaded without paeaing thread through helet. 7. Design Nneipit. /ngrni 'ua. £fegmblci OB PT.il lem j wile* re,lunler hoot r*e eold by li cit onteellloe nil olhee* riree fe one. It tntni like wttddre. tpio# 000 era k eolA Steedy Wert or (or • per* None* for mea ec somen—42S t >2OO awl ***l|y mede. One Peeergr'ive ea ( !el lee me it.. Mat Feet* ah, niO pests lts. Add re.. * , rt WORTSrsorov 4 00., Ssrttora, Ck KIT CARSON, r W2j. and Aalboruad Ufa pub-unad Sou '**"* •, Itfalty lllaatratd*. Aft** "I'"** '~.l, aoll Cir*a'ara rtall nr ynrga "ddri.TrtTi*. OlL*** 4 Ctv. ■ SiKU ~ HOI FOR COLORADO I In* it.*Mbt diauf. giatnuKoddt aaaaorp, 'gg j~gn-fztzi fr a.fsr* .ot- <■ a r.tKum. •" (l>lna Colora-to —S- - the on EAT 11 em ED y fob CONSUMPTION which can be cured by s timely resort to this stand ard preparation, as has been proved by the hundreds of testimonials received by the proprietors. It is acknowl edged by many prominent physicians to be the most reliable preparation ever in troduced for the relief and cure of all Lung complaints, and is offered to the public, sanctioned by the experience of over forty years. When resorted to in season it sel dom fails to effect a speedy cure in the most severe cases of Coughs, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Cough, Influenza, Asthma, Colds, Sore Throat, Pains or Sore ness in the Chest and Side, Liver Complaint, Bleedings at the Lungs, &c. Wistaria Balsam does not dry up a Cough, and leave the cause behind, as is the case with most preparations, but it loosens and cleanses tho lungs, and allays irritation, thus removing the cause of the complaint. ftKfIUD ir BETH V. FOWLE * SOU, Bo Mm, JUm* ▲ad sold U/ tkruinpau aad D—tf fiowlly. nriD |"Lauta* TaMaf* calaiat 1 Ml. Ira UUn I> m *m *r or at ' aa Niml Vaadia I ,ra ThlaM* d .- iMiU- Ml u*< mrti li.lo kto|l>ln.W ■* caau At* fit waalrc. nrii A CO , THE DYING BODY SUPPLIED WITH THE VIGOR OF LIFE THfiOUQH DR. BADWAY'S Sersaparilliaii total, THE CHEAT Blood Burifior! OWE BOTTLE WIT mtt th lil para, ita Ma dor, Mo l;i on^fci,ta Oamynnaa Mini aad kraaaparaal,ato ■airOtroac.i ai'l aDSarm.FSJßptoa, Mwaßri, Tuatum. Tartar*. Oaalrri oka, hmm MM Baa a, Taoa. Vat*. M.atb, Ml Boa. l M jUmal ta taka and Ma Aaaa ta aaaU. D >—a>taa i**t Dlami I oopoafta | M Tmldm Ma ■load and ■maaf Ma eyatoia. I una vnfc eartalaty al Cknali PI nam Mad kin b mar ad ta Ma ayalam In aa tarn raara. vtatfear B ha ScrofbU er Byphllttle, HeredlUrj M Cwtillftw, U IT UATZD U TSI Lwi|d StMul Skta *r Bmii, Hoik or Ranraa, imcmsi ru doLipd axb munn rai rlci us. numwiT Kwrraaam KIDNEY and BLADDER COtPUINTS. Wiarf aad Womb Dtaaaaaa. Ararat, Die baa*, O">M, tiimi ad Malar, larat aaa aaa ad Crla-, lrl|Uk Diaaaaa, Alkamtaaiia. aad <• ad am •Man Mora ara Wak-dad daf jaiia. Ckraad *ba<~ ■ inia. Scrafaia. Olaadator •aaiUm. Haakf d Ut OaotX Oaanaroaa AEaotioaa. drvtUv.tr CampUoaH, Mar dim ad Ma Laap. I>T*i*rwa, WaMr liad, Trd Palaraaa, Wklta dwal Sma. TBiiiara. Ctoara. Mia aad Hip Mil ai>a, ■armrtaJ Plaaaaaa, Tomato Con. plaint*. (JOBS, Propap . EtMaaa, tail IMovat, Mmo. afcltia, Oanaampcian, Xbrar Omnplaieta, Ctoara ta Ma Throat, Mania. Tnmora. Hodaa la Ma Otoads aad aMar pana ad Mo •■atom. Lan Eyaa, Mraaan aaa Hactoipa from Ma Kara, aad ua mm forrra ad Bkth Dtaaaaaa. Entpttoaa. Taror (torn, tai ■aad. till Vara, dolt Kb ram. Lraiaiai. Aaaa, BUch tpoto. Waraaa la Ma riaafc. Cooaara la MA Vomit, aad all waakralm aad pated*) d'.artaafwa*. Klffct Itoali, Ua ad Sparm okd all waalaa ad Ma Ufa prtsolpto ara MUla Ma eaiaHra ram* of Mia voadar aI Madam Oh aa> tally. aad a !•• .Sara' aaa will ln ta aay oaraoo ustm n for *"