Thanksgiving Proclamation by the President, < J>,y iKe President of th* PMrst ftntf* of Amrrioa : A PROCLAMATION. We are reminded by the changing seasons that it is time to pause in our daily avocations and offer thanks to Almighty God for the mercies and abundance of the year which is drawing to s close. The blessings of free government continue to lie vouchsafed to s; the earth has responded to the labor of the hnsliAndmau ; the land has been free from pestilence; internal order is be ing maintained and pence with other powers lias prevailed. It is fittiug that, at stated periods, we should cease ftom onr accustomed pursuits and from the turmoil of onr daily lives, and unite in thankfnlness for the blessings of the past and in the cultivation of kindly feelings toward each other. Now, therefore, recognizing these considerations, I, Ulysses S. Grant, l*resident of the United States, do recommend to all citicens to assemble in their resj>eetive places of worship on Thursday, the *2tth day of November next, and express their thanks for the morcT and favor of the Almighty God, aud laying aside all political conten tions and secular occupations, to ob serve such day as a day of rest, thanks giving and prayer. In witness whereof, 1 have hereunto set my hand and seal, and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Doue at the City of Washington on this the 27th day of October, iu the year 1574. and of the Independence of the United States the ninety-ninth. U. S. GRANT. By the President, "H AMILTON FISH, Secretary of State. Farm, Garden and Household. Kemritlr* lor Cow il Vtnsls. A letter from P. Aldrieh of John son's Creek, to the Farmers' Club, says: For bloat in cattle, soft snap and new milk, half a pmt or so each, is a most sovereign remedy, the Jose seldom having to bo repeated. I have known it to do its work in half an honr. It is a great gas exterminator ; soon causes a lively eructation. For hollow horn —some cattle doctors say there is no such disorder—bore the horn on the under side with a nail, bit, or gimlet, not for the matter to discharge, it does that at the nose, but for the purpose of injecting strong vinegar, well peppered, red or black, blood warm. It has a very cleansing tendency, and produces a lively sensation iu the animal for good. * Keep the hole stopped with beeswax, or something else; repeat every two or three days. Hollow horns caused by interlacing their horns— nonsense that. Many queries as to what will destroy lice on stock I see. Tears ago I sent to the club, and it was published, a remedy that has been fre quently tried about here, and I have never heard cf it failing to effect the desired object, vis. : calomel. Apply as much as will lie on the point of a penknife on the top of the head ; rub into the hair well. A second applica tion is seldom needed, howsoever numerous may be the vermin. On horses, cattle and dogs it has proved an effectual lice exterminator ; though for dogs, I should say, from what I have heard, as I had no experience, that strychnine or pans green administered internally would be abont the thing. KtlucaUon of Farmers' tlojrs. How is it that we can see men who have moulded themselves on the anvil, who won't let their boys be moulded en the anvil too? As the leather-dealer pounds the leather together to make a sole, so the boy needs pounding to make him a man. If vou don't you bring np a tender child, a child that won't wear well And the same with a girl that is brought up without know ing how to work. There are mis fortunes enough that fall upon the fair sex: there are adversities and sudden revolutions in affaire that more often fall like pitiless storms upon their heads than upon those of men, but of all adversities a fooli-h mother for a fair daughter is the moat adverse ; one who will not teach the child how to earn her living, who will not teach her fruitful industry. Music may be heard instead of spinning ; but in some way or another work should be part of the education of every boy, and the boy who is brought up without knowing how to work is not brought up at all; he is abased. The old Jews used to say that s man not brought up to a trade is brought up to be m thief, and I am of the same opinion to a great ex tent. So, then, parents, if you would bring up the best crops here that your ground will allow, bring up stalwart boys that are able to work aud are not ashamed of it, and briog up good stal wart girls that are able to work in the kitchen and abont the house, and are not ashamed of it either.— llcnry Ward Becchcr. Kotatloa of Crop*. The " best rotation " in one place would not be the best in another. This question of rotation in different locali ties is a matter for experiment. Grass, corn, wheat,and grass in many localities is excellent rotation. In others -grass, Cora, roots, oats, barley, grass,is profit ably adopted. In some localities where dairies are kept there should be no ro tation with a view to securing good pastures and meadows—if the right kinds and proper number of varieties of grasses and clovers are sown, and the fertility ef the meadows and pas tares kept up by the proper topdre6A ing with fertilizers. Where timothy grass is sown for meadow, and where it is profitable to grow pure timothy hay for meadow, the beat wav to keep up the crop is not always to plow it up the third year, but to sow the second year timothy seed on the sod without plow ing, topdressiug it with manure after Bowing the seed. Because timothy "runs out " it does not follow that the soil is exhausted. It being a biennial plant, it requires reseeding every two years. This done with proper top dressing, a timothy sod can be " kept up " indefinitely. Peek's Kales and Regulations. Upon entering this office you are particularly requested not to "use the doormat, an we wish to accumulate soil inside for a potato crop. Please leave the door wide open, or, should you forget yourself and close it, slam it like thunder. (Winter arrange ment.) If the proprietor is engaged in con versation and it is your turn next, please lean your chair againßt the wall and whistle " Mulligan Guards;" if you can't whistle, sing. Never neglect an opportunity to im prove your mind. If we are temporarily absent sit on Lhe desk, pick your teeth with the gold pen and read the letters. More may be found in the right hand drawer. Smoking is particularly agreeable. If you are out of poor cigars we will lend you a pipe. If you see any spittoons please ex pectorate on the floor, as the former are only for ornament. Our office heurs for listening to so licitors of church subscriptions are from eleven to one, for book agents one to three, advertising men all day. We attend to our own business at night. We need about 81,000,000 more of life insurance. If you are acquainted with any agent please send him in ; ho hasn't been here since yesterday. Don't hesitate to ask for a loan, the larger the better ; but talk about some thing else half an hour beforehand time isn't worth a cent a year to us. Persons having no especial business with us will please call as often as their health will permit, or send doctor's cer tificates in case of absence. * Parties leaving date calendars will oblige us by placing them for the pres ent in the basket under the desk, or un til we can get a room with more com modious walls. But collectors will hang statements on the file and call on S&turdav at four A. 11. This store closes at three p. m. on Saturdays,— At, Louis Republican, A CONFEDERATE STORY, The I.Min ikti ( tiiiiil a DMfrtlan. At a recent political gatheriug in Tuscumbia, Ala., (lon. Oullen A. Rattle related the following touching story in th course of hi a sparoh: During the winter of 1863 64 it was my fortune to lo President of one of .lie courts-martial of the Army of Northern Virginia. One bleak l>eeem ber morning, while the anow covered the grouud aiul Uie winds howled around our camp. I left my bivouac tire to attend the Session of Uie court. Winding for miles along uncertain paths, 1 at length arrived at the court grouud at Round Oak ehnreh. Pay after day it had been our duty to try the aoldiers of that army, oharged with violations of military law; but never had 1 on say previous ooc -siou been greeted by arch anxious ajsvUtors as on that morning awaited the opening of the court. Case after case was dis posed of, and at length the cate id " The Confederate Statea vs. Edward Coopar" was called charge, deser tion. A low murmur rose spontane ously from the battle-scarred specta tors, as a yo.iug artiPeryman rose from the prisoners' bench, and, in reapouao to the question, " Guilty, or not guilty ?" answered, " Not guilty." The Judge Advocate was proceeding to Ojxui the prosecution, when the court, observiug that the priaouei was unattended by counsel, interposed and inquired of the accused, " Who la your counsel?" He replied, "1 have no eouusel." Supposing that it was In# pnrpise to represent himself before the court, the Judge Advocate was in structed to proceed. Every charge and specification against the prisoner was sustained. The prisoner was then told to ititr.shicc his witnesses. He replidl, " I have no witnesses." Aston ished at the calmueas with which he seemed to bo submitting te what lie re garded lis inevitable fate, 1 said to him, " lfarc you no defense ? Is it possible that you abandoned your comrades and deserted your colors in the pres< nee of the enemy without any reason ?" He replied, " There was a reason, but it will not avail uie before a military court" I said: " Perhaps you axe mistaken; you are charged with the highest crime known to military law, and it is vonr duty to make known the causes that influenced your actions." For the first time his manly form trem bled, and his blue eyes swam in tears. Approaching the President of the court he presented a letter, saying as he did ao, "There, General, is what did it," I opened the letter, aud in a moment mv eyes filled with tears. It was passed from one to another of the court until all had seen it, and those stem warriors who had passed with Stonewall Jaekson through a hundred battles wept like little children. Soou as I sufficiently recovered my self-pos session, I read tlw letter as the defense of the prisoner. It was iu these won! a : "Mv Dear Edward : I liaTe always been proud of Ton, and since your con nection with the Confederate army 1 have been prouder of yon than ever before, i would not have you do any thing wrong for the world ; but before God, Edward, unless you cotne home we must die ) Last night I was aroused by little Eddie s cryiug. I called and said : ' What's the matter, Eddie ?' J and he said: 'Oh, mamma, I'm so hungry!' And Lncy, Edward, your darling Lncy, she m ver complains, but ' she is growiug thinner and thinner every day. Aud before God, Edward, unless you come Lome we must die. "Yoca MaKT." 1 Turning to the prisoner, I asked : " What did you do when yon received this letter ?" He replied : " 1 made application for a furlough, and it was rejected; again I made application and it was rejected ; a third time I made application, aud it was rejected, and that night, as I wandered backward and forward in the camp, thinking pf my home, with the mild eyes of Lucy looking ui> to me, and the burning words of Mary sinking ia my brain, 1 was no longer the Confederate soldiar, bat I was the father of Lucy and the I husband sf Mary, and I would have passed those lines if every gun in the battery bad tired upon me. I went to my home. Mary ran out to meet me, her tngel arms embraced me ; ami she whispered, ' O 1 Edward, I am so bajv py I I am so glad you got your fur , lough !' She must have felt ine sliud -1 der, for she turned pale is death, and catching her breath at every word, she said, * Have yon come without your furlough ? O ! Edward, go back ! go bark ! Let me ami my children go down together to the grave, but O, for heaven's sake, save the honor of onr name !" And here I am, gentlemen, not brought here by military power, but in obedience to the command of Mary, to abide the sentence of your court." Every officer of that court-martial i felt the force of the prisoner's words. Before them stood, in beatific vision, the eloquent pleader for a husband's and a father's wrongs ; but they had been trained by their great leader, Robert E. Lee, to tread the path of duty, though the lightning's flash scorched the ground beneath their feet, and each in his turn pronounced the verdict—guilty. Fortunately for hu mamity, fortunately for the Confedera cy, the proceedings of the court were reviewed by the commanding general, and upon the record was written : HEADV CARTERS, A. X. Y. The finding of the court ia approved. The prisoner is pardoned end will re port to bis company. R. E. Lee, General. During the second battle of Odd Harbor, when shot aud shell were fall ing "like torrents from the mountain [cloud," my attentiou was directed to the fact that one of onr batteries was ; being silenced by the concentrated fire of the enemy. When I reaohed the battery every gun but one had been i di-muntled, and by it stood a solitary soldier, with the blood streaming from hia side. As ho recognized me he elevated his voioe above the roar of j battle and said, " General, I have one shell left. Tell me have I saved the honor of Mary and Lucy ?" I raised toy hat. Once more a shell went crash ing through the ranks of the enemy, and the hero sank by his gun to rise no more. An Incident of a Massacre. A magazine writer in a sketch of the United States a hundred years ago tells the following incident:" Brandt and his band of savages penetrated into Orango county. New York, and the massacre of Minisink alarmed the Hngnenot farmers in tho rich valleys of the Bhawangunk and tho Dnteh "in the hill country around Goshen. As tho savages pressed on into Orange county they camo to a school-houso which was yet filled with its children. Thev took the schoolmaster into the wooil and killed him. They clove the skulls of several of the boys with their tomahawks ; but the little 'girls, who stood looking on horror-strnck and waiting for an instant death, were spared. A tall savage—it was Brnuilt —dashed a mark of black paint upon their aprons, and when the other savages saw it they left them unharmed. Bwift as an inspiration the little girls re solved to save their brothers. They flung over them their aprons, and when tho next Indians passed by they were spared for the mark they bore. The schoolmaster's wife hid in a ditch and escaped. What He Wanted. A St. Panl merchant stepped out of his place of business the other day into the warehouse to get a customer a piece of pork. When he dodged back into the store with his meat, he discovered the customer occupying an unusually awkwurd relation to biß money-drawer, and yelled out, " I say, what are you doing around there ?" The cuss kind of dug out from behind that counter, and as he assumed the proper locution for a customer to occupy in anotLer man's store—on the south side of the counter—he stammered out, " Oh, I was just—ahem ! —I went around there to—ahem ! —was just—l thought—l was just looking around there to— ahem ! —I thought maybe little Charlie Bom waa in under the counter, like I" A REGULAR VENDETTA. Tw o Pamlllfi In liirrl far I rr— lit,toil Mir.l at KII after j ward, the Suttons also went to Texas, and, a fate would have it, settled in an adjacent county, but ob family ! lived iu ignorauce of the other's whereabouts until the close of the late \ war. .More than a decade had passed since i the original " difllculty" between Taylor aud Sutton, an.l one might im agine that the animosity of the injured fauulv would have l>rn somewhat ap peased by the flight of time, llut a lit tle circumstance, which once more brought the lsmiliea into collision, re sulted iu a vendetta whicil has few par allela in any country, ami certainly none in the United States. A yoiiug Taylor, finding lus desire for udven ture stronger than his prudence, made across the ixmuty line oue dav, ami stole a horse. 'The theft waa diaoov eied, and he was pursued, and fell by the rifle of a Sutton. This aroused all the angry memories of the past, aud iu a short time neither Taylors ror Sut tons dared to leave their houses with out being armed to the teeth. Open wax was declared, and the oitisena of the two counties in which the hostile families resided gradually took sides. It is said that as many as twelve hull ! ilre*l persons were at one time so much interested in the vendetta, and so com mitted to one or the other side of the : quarrel, that, had there been a general i fight, they would, without hesittaion, | hve joined in it. If they met on coun ' try roads, or at taverns, or in the mar ket places, the implacable feud was ear ried on with a mere intense bitterness than that of the Montagues aud Cap | ulcts ; a corpse was the result of every meeting ; ambushing was common ; a dead Taylor lying iu front of a clump of .-buahes, with his brains blown out, marked the vengeance of the Suttons ; and a lynched Sutton, takeu suddenly from his horse aud huug to a tree, tes tified to the sleeplo.-s hate of the Tay | lore. At last so many people be-cauie ' embroiled iu these occasional murders, which are said to have numbered fifty, that the condition of afiairs in the two ' counties became intolerable. Business t and agriculture were almost eulirelv suspended ; the courts wo-o blocked with the suits ami Counter-suits of the two principals in the vendetta, and both aides desperately determined to bring matters to a climax. So they took the field in warlike arrav. At this juncture, it wa- discovered that the Buttons were more numerous , than the Taylors, and that they also i had a larger number > f adherents. After some guerrilla warfare, the Tsv lors were surrounded, and, rather than become the victims ( a wholesale mas sacre, they consented to adjourn to the county seat of the county in which they •then were, and there enter iuto a solemu compact to cease the vendetta, aud "call it square.'* The compact we made ; the two oouuties were wild with excitement; travel was once more un obstructed, and some confident persons laid aside their arms. But oue mouth later, as a veteran Sutton was seated with a companion on the deck of a steamer at lndiauola, •bout to start for Galveston, a young Taylor shot them both dead. He waa subsequently arrested at Galveston, and when, two mouths ago, ho vas sent to Indianola for trial, he was s> coaipttnied by two militia companies, who had been ordered to protect the majesty of the law against auy further pursuance of the most remarkable ven detta of modern times. The murderer now lies in prison awaiting his sen tence, and, meantime, the Taylors aud Suttons are once more vigorously at war. The Long Ago. Not long ago, while some repairs were Ixiing made in the basement of the United States Assay Office, corner ol Nassau and Wail streets, New Y'ork, a vault near the corner-stone was hrokeu open, and some matters of historic in terest were revealed. A stone slab was found, with an inscription showing that the edifice was erected in 1823. Also a large glass bottle filled with various carious documents was discovered, a quart bottle of Jamaica rum, and a peck of hickory-nuts, which crumblixl to dust on being poured out from the measure in which they had so long re posed. L~i Uie bottle, among sundry papers, was found Lougworth's "Ameri can Almanac" for I*2l, which contains much interesting reading matter. A few brief parages are devoted to "Travelers" and some brief extracts will indicate tho changes fifty years have wrought: " Mail coach for Boston, through in thirty-eight bourn, via New Haven and Hartford—Starts from Xos. 1 and 5 Conrtlandt street every morning at half past 8 o'clock. Fare to New Haven, 65. "To Washington— United States mail coach from No. 1 Conrtlandt street ererv day at 12 o'clock ; fare, 824. "To Philadelphia—United States mail stage from No. 1 Cocrtlaudt street, i very day at 12 o'clock ; arrives at Philadelphia next morning at 5 o'clock ; fare, £10.50." The "rates of postage" on single letters are thus stated in the same almanac : "On Single Letters—For any dis tance not exceeding 30 miles, (1 cents ; over 30 and not over 80 mi'ea, 10 cents ; over 80 and not over 150 miles, 12} cents ; over 150 and not over 100 miles, 18} cents ; over 400, 25 oents." A Heroine of the Commune. The following was related to me re cently of a noble woman whose name should live in history. Hhe, together with her lover, a yonng snrgeon, had taken care of the wounded Communists during the days and nights of their fierce fighting with the Versailles troops. Upon the entry of tho latter into the city, when excitement was at its height.and when every one suspected of complicity with tho Commuuo was shot without a question being asked, the surgeon was arrested and brought before the drum-head tribunal, in the Place du Chatclet. Ilis life trembled for the moment in the balauoe, but was finally saved by the intercession of one of the judges present, who was an in timate friend of tho accused. As the latter was being led from the room he met the woman whom ho loved, who had helped him in tho care of the wounded, and who was now accused of tho same crime ns ho himself had been. "Good (tod, Marie!" are yon here, too ?" Tho woman took in tho whole scene at s glance, saw the danger into which she would plunge her lover should she recognize him, and drew herself up coldly, saying, " You are mistaken, sir."— New )',000, the prac tical work for the great ceremonies had been commenced, the principal build iug had been placed under contract, aud were now in process of rapid con struction, and the Hoard were happy tvi state that they would all be com pleted in ample time. The smaller buildings were to be placed under con tract in three or four weeks. The totsl flour space to be covered by tho build ings would exceed forty acres. The art building, which ia to cost $1,500,000 was to be the finest specimen of archi tecture in the country. More than half of the space of the buildings had al ready beeu applied for. Fx llov. Hig lor further stated that he Lad every assurance that ail sections of the Unit* <1 States would bo amply represented at the exhibition, and said if anything were wanting to show that it would bi a great success, it was to be furnished in the fact that Germany, llelgium, France, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Spain, China, Japan, Egypt, Switzerland, Mexico, Hraz.il, Chili, the Argentine Confederation, Ecuador, Peru, Yejuxui in, the Sandwich island#, Colombia and Hayti had accepted the luvitatiou to attend, and it was known that England, Italy, Persia, Canada and Australia had adopted steps to take part iu the exhibition, lie hoped the public would look Ujvoti it as an inter national affair, aud not alone eminently national. He expressed a strong hope that New York would take, in future, a more active interest iu the exhibi tion, and that its citizens would sub scribe something to aid in iii.suring its success. Thought* for Sxtnrdaj Night. Humility is the sweetest end fairest flower that groweth in the human m ud. Criticism is not religion, aud by no process can it le substituted for it. You have not fulfilled every daty uti les* you have fulfilled that of being pleasant. L-t friendship creep gently to a height ; if it rush to :t, it may soon ruu itself out of breath. Prudent men lock up their motives; letting familiars have a key to their heart*, a* to their gardens. Have the courage to show your re spect for honesty, in whatever guise it appears, and your contempt fi i dis honesty and duplicity by whomsoevtr exhibited. If all men were to bring their nus forttiues together in one place, most would bo glad to take then own home again, rather than take a purtiou out of the common stock. Morality without religion is only a kind of dead reckoning, an endeavor to flud our place ou a cloudy sea by measuring the distance we Lave to ruu, but without any observation of the heetvenlv bodies. I wouKl rather dwell in the dim fog of superstition than in air rarificd to nothing by the air-pump of unbelief, in which tho pmntiug broaat expires vainly and convulsively gasping for breath. ~Jcan I'wil. Tho ordar which is everywhere dis cernible in natue tlio order of num ber. form, color and time Tyndall's philosophy does not account for, and until *uch ooaditious are accounted for the doctrine of evolution must needs bo weak and unsatisfactory. The Suicidal Mania. Suicides in France are remarkable for showing concerted aetion between two persons to terminate their Uvea. Lately eases of this ktud have been exception ally numerous. At Houlogua a youth of eighteen fell desperately in love with his employer's daughter, who to some extent returned his passion. The re port that her parents contemplated her marriage with some other young mau drove her lover wild. He disappeared, and presentlv she, too, was missed. Three days later their remains were found on the sands, in a desolate and lonely spot. A revolver lay near by. Again, about the same date n man aged forty, accompanied by a woman of twenty-three, took lodgings in I'aris. They represented themselves as follow ing trades, but their manners, appear ance and conversation convinced the landlord that they were of a superior class. Their habits were exact and very economical. Failing to appear oneilay, their room was burst open. They were both dead—suffocated. A paper was found staling that they eared no longer to live. Their resources were evidently exhausted. They bequeathed their clothes aud a ring to pay the landlord's expenses, and the letter concluded with a touchiugly expressed request that the woman's rosury and cross might be buried with her. A vast number of the suicides in Franco seem to spring from the agonizing apprehension felt by persons who have been in comforta ble. circumstances of becoming money less. In no country, it is said, are poor relations mndc more acutely to feel that they tiro undesirable, than in France. A Miser. Ho inny bo called a minor. He liven near IJuffulo, and ia ricb. Lately ho was drawu on a jury in that city* and this ia bow ho turned the event, usually considered a misfortune,to actual profit. The pay was a dollar and a half a day for four weeks, aggregating thirty-six dollars. He found lodging* at fifteen cents a night with a poor and dirty family, the total bill being four dollars and twenty cents, lie bought a tin naj for twenty cents more, and there Lis expenditure ended. How did lie eat ? Every morning he went to a free soup house, established for tho feeding of newsboys and bootblacks, and had his tin pail filled. Clo ir profit for the month, thirty-one dollars and sixty cents. Ho is a self-made man. A Halt Lake City journal relates that a citizen of that place, while digging his turnips, had his attention directed to one monstrous turnip by reason of a Blight motion, observable while the turnip was lying on the ground. On cutting it open a good-sized frog tum bled oat and bopped off. A HIT OF MORMON HISTOID. I'lie Kerrwt of Hi* Terrlbla Mountain fflrihliw MMinrifa A writer tun newspaper article calls I to muni that tho killing of Kliler I'urlcj 11.I 1 . I'ratt, the aeooud elder in the Mor mon ehttreh at that tune (ill I HTM i I lie lieve it wna), ttear Van lluren, by Mr. 11. It. Mi'ljoan, of Han Frauoiaeo, waa the cause of the Moiiutiiiu Meadow maaaaere Mr, McLean, agent for the steamship company of Han Frinciwi, had lua wife atolen from hitu liy tine man, and made lua aeventh wife. Mr. Meliean cent hie two children, after thifl happened, to lua father-in-law in S. Orleans. They were a hoy and a girl, and aa uitereatuig aa ehildreu could he. Home time after they ar rtvol at New Orleans the mother left Halt Lake and went and got them and alerted to I'tah with them. The almost broken-hearted father left lua business to look after lua children. On arriving ut New York he heard of I'ratt, ami tracked him to Ht. lamia. Then he Unit all eight of him aud Went to New Orleans. Arriving there ho heard of hia wife and children in Texan with a caravan going to Utah. Ho went to Texan, ami there he intercepted letter# written in cipher to Mr*. P. I*. l'arker, Iho mummed name of hi* wife. Having become able to decipher the letlcrn, lie h-arned from them they were from I'ratt, and he desired the earavan to come to the neighborhood of Fort Oib- BOU. Mr. McLean returned to New Orleans, broken down in spirit, and knew uot what to do. He rcaolved le go to Fort Oilsaou, in the Cherokee nation. He did so, and under the name of JohllßoU (hi* secret being known to the officers d the fort Iho captured his wife and children, and I'ratt, slso. They w ere arrested by the Lulled States marshal, and takeu to Van Huron, be fore United Htatea commissioner John 11. Ogden, for trial. Tho charges fi.r stealing lus wife's clothing could not bo sustained, ami there being no crime km>wu to the laws of the United Btutes under which ho could le held, he was released. Never shall I forget the trial, the great excitement ami popular de sire for vengeance ou I'ratt. When Mr. McLean appeared in court and read the papers in cipher, written by the old seri>eut, and stated the history of his BO happy family being broken up, the jirople desired to lynch I'ratt, and he was put in jail to prevent it be ing done. himself, became so highly offended ami so deeply ex cited that at one time he commenced drawing ins pistol to kill him tu the court room. I'ratt was secretly dis charged early the next morning, but the watchfulness of McLean found it out, and he followed him and killed luui, ami returned to town and gave notice of the fact, lie then got some assistance of his friends, ami took his children to New Orleans or Han Frau cisco, and his wife, who had been a tughly intellectual woman, was, 1 think, taken to an insane asylum. Of Mr. McLean it may be said that he jras a gentleman of tine education,great busi ness habits, a kind, generous, true and trusty friend, overflowing with human kindness—indeed, there are very few like lum. His act was approved and juntitled by all tin* people. Many a time lias the melancholy reflection ( come over me that the murder of 12U iwrwons by the Mormon* was for the jlist death of this impostor and scoun drel. HU-ta-i' a* a UijffMiff Agent. The ftibaLtnce here named, sat a Dr. Collena Hunt, which 1# le --licrm) to be new a* a remedial agent, n first employed by William Elmer, M. p., of New York, who ha* given it a fair trial for a year or two, with mud gratifying result*. It not only aula in the digestion of utarchy [food, but seems to impart vigor to the digestive function* generally, atul through tLia action supplies energy to the brain and nervous r-y te-m. For some of the worst forma of iudige*tion, the use of diastase lias had the effect, in particu lar, of producing tbe moat tranquil and refreshing sleep, and that where, pre viously, aatifactory sleep had been al rnoat uuknown. This ruault i* at tributed to the digestive iKiwcr of diastaee more than t> any other |>rup erty it pos*e*ea. DintiM may be given in the form of a syrup or iu lozen ge*. The dose is from one to two grzina directly after each meal. Tho syrup should be used with glucose rather thuu with cane sugar ; but any aytup has the great objection that it * rc quirod to be kept ctdd, or the diastase is liable to tnru sour. He Surd ller. A very remarkable ra*e, showing the influence of mind over matter, was il lustrated at .Mmgaut Valley, N. Y. A peddler entered the tlwelhug of a citi zen, and endeavored to sell some of hi* ware* to the lady of the house. It the course of the conversation she remarked that her husband, who wo* iu tho next room, WBH a cripple ami had not been able to move from hi* ln-d in many yearn. On learning this the peddler made a dastardly iK-satilt upon the lady, who struggled with him bravely, but was about to be overpowered when, by a superhuman i ffort tho husband leaped from the bed. seized a crutch, and felled the scoundrel to the ground. lU'Artion immediately set in, however, and, having saved his wife's honor, he fell to tbe fltKir, ilea i. The (nnldler es caped, and great excitcmeut prevails in the neighborhood. Stealing. It is very singular how often people claiming to be respectable take soap and towels by mistake from hotel bed rooms when tliev depart. In s<>!n®of the large hotels this thoughtlessness on the part of guests has gotten to be a great annoyance and something of an expense to the proprietor. Wo fear that it will come to this—that soap will have to be charged and towels nailed lo the washstands, and on the buck of the door an appendix to the usual notice will request guests not to carry off the bedeteads by mistake! His REVKNOR, —His numler in the I'aris list of drivers whs 13,022. He had seen better days, but now he drove a cab. He was sent, with others, to carry a wedding party from the church to a wedding breakfast. In hia cab wore placed the bridegroom and the bride. He recognized in the bride groom a man who had ouce had him put in prison for debt. Once fairly on the way, he whipped up aud drove away from ihe other cabs ami landed tho bride and bridegroom, badly damaged, afti r an hour's hard drive in a desolate rural district on the wrong rosd. They got home at midnight. It was an epic vengeance. A MOTIIEB'S Cor RAOK. —A little girl, while plaving on a railroad track at llollidaysfitirg, J'a., got her foot so wedged in a frog that she was held fast. Her mother saw tho predicament and hoard an approaching train. She ran to the rosette of her child, but could not extricate the foot. The train enme on, and although the engineer npplied the brakes, it was clear that it conUl not be stopped quick enough. The mother, finding tlint the girl could not he less than maimed, held her as far ofT tlio track as site could while the ears went by. A foot was crushed, but a life was saved. Exports of Muslral Instruments. Official records of Custom House re turns at Washington show that the total value of musical instruments ex ported from the Uuited States during the year ending June MO, 1874, was $550,327. Of this, $258,170 were for pianos and $292,151 for parlor or reed i organs. Of this latter amount $103,- I 109, or more than one-half of the whole, were of the cabinet organs made by the Mason & Hamlin Orgau Co., which bid fair to become ns famous in Europe j as they have long been in America. This company certainly have reason to be prond of the fact that tho European demand for their organs is larger than that for all others combined— Motion Traveller. SUM M AID OF NEWS, Interesting Item* (ram llnms ami A troaol, picked up ff<>iii s rafl flvn pcieiiii# belonging to 111# nleain*blp Mary, winch foundered wtills on a voyage from lila'gow to 'Jiii.ulod. It I# prob able that with the excepting of Ilia live per ■ou# alxivn mentioned and the two tainted at Kalmoutb by tlie li>aiu#blp Hor#eg**lda, all UU#M> wbo were on the Mary, IN- hiding the caplalu, are luat The Time# of Itulta amtouuoas that <'<>). Mowbray Tliompnou, thn defender of I'awnporo, fall# lo identify lb* pejwou who claimed to !•* Nana Hsblh, though lie cava thero la certainly a llkelieaa. The prisoner declare* be waa drunk whan lie falee ly Confessed that be waa Nana Halilb. ll* sets Uiat bo waa arreatod by miataka In IKI, and aub*e<|ueutly relraaod, and clauna that he baa relativca who Wilt recogllKO blui .... Chicago elevator*oonlaln 1,539,359 bualiela of wheat, 1,035 552 btiabel* of corn, !MM1,37l bitabele of oala, (S ISJU bueliela of rye and 121,- 211 btiabel* of barley a grand total of 3,101,- 456 agaiuet 3,9)0,403 buabel* at tbl* tune laet year Mi. K. Colbert, of tit* Chicago ft i'n nr, all astronomer of aouie repute, dtmiee the etalerueiit that ah unusual gruup of auu a|H>ta are at present visible. He declare* aa a result of hla owu übaervatlou* with a glaa* of niudersle power lliat none are vVnible The CilcalN. V.) //rruM t summery of the cheese btislueee ahowa that 350 factories hava ma-te I'V iK) holes of cb< <-*o this year agaiuet 41G,- 03 hoii-B last year, a gain of four |*r cent. It la oompuleil that there are over 13.0UU po lygamirta in I tali. A poor woman lu Now York declared on her death bed that she waa kicked to death by her drunken buahaud .Almost every rlearner float I'.urope bring* Monuon immigrant* fur Halt 1.ake.... llov. Ihx, of New York, baa Oomuiuled the eeiiUmco of Mia. Johuaoit, who waa to he hanged at Mayville. Hhe will go to Mng Hmg ..Report# of dlatrnea In Nebraska and Kaitaae ale received dally lu Chicago, and the demand* for help are constantly becoming more urgent. The unfortunate eettlere are thus early iu the aoasi-u actually suffering for the lack of food, and the pruepect for the win ter la dismal beyond measure. It la elated Ilia*, the extent of the graeahopjier devastation has hot been fully appreciated, and that ad ditional torrltury la conelaiitly l-eing added to that where want la known to exist.... One luan was killed and several injured by the caving in of a bank at KprlugflcU, Mare .... Judge Knell, iu Washington, sentenced to six moulhe' imprisonment tu jail, a man who eel a hull dog upon a email girl. The dog nearly tore iff sue ear of the girl and ahuckingly lacerated the berk part of her head, aid stripped her of her clothing While Major II A. llurke wan attempting to aduiiiiial r a whlpj-iiig to tiov. Kellogg lu New Orleans, hell- gg drew Lis revolver and fired at his assailant, who returned the fire three or four limes without effect. The President of the I'ruled State* ha* it-sued a proclamation apputaliug the 2Cth day of November aa a day of public thanksgiving .. Oliver Gallien was hanged at llathurat. N It , for the murder of Xavter Tauhu . Tour # a fngUlful extent in Ohio A foreman :n a New York #torehott*e waa bratoily mur dered by two men whoa he bad dlachargod by order of In# etujh't cr. Tbe (Juebec I*-gi*lature bae l>een etimmoned to meet on December 3. Freeidenl Grant hoe written a congratulatory letter to the 1 uiperor of Itueia, on the mait.ape of tbe Grand l>uke, ill which be *y#; "Feeing a lively lulercat -n all lliat concern# your Majeetj august family. 1 |>arUcrpate In lb* satisfaction afforded by this happy event, and offer to your Majeety my sincere congratula tion# upon the occasion, with llie assurance that the iicwlT-marnd Grand Duke and A'nu re# have my bast wishes for their (irtMperily aud happiness, and o I commend your Ma jesty and your Slajesty's royal funi'.y to the Almighty Sixty Lundiug# wete burned at Helinagrove, Fa., causing a lo#| of $123,000. Feunsylvania ha# 125 blael fiirnmcee. 100 rolling mil)#. 15 roll mills. 1* ateel work*, and 31 1-loomeiie#. The Iron work* in all the other Hlatee are not #o numerous by one-half aa the Keystone State alone. In these iron work# there are not half the nntuber of men at work now that were employed six month* ago .. The late typhoon was very severely felt In Blurakawa Ken, Japan. Ten thoiiaaud liouae* were .destroyed, oml more than 1.000 persons iierished. some being drowned and i then crushed. Thirteen place* lately re claimed from llie sea were washed away Japan and Chin* are still trying to avoid war, but ore Mill urged ou to it by foreign in fluence Konr thousand women in Utah voted in favor of sustaining polygamy (told •Mil keeps in (ho neighborhood of lOj per cent, premium In the United Stales monied centers Fifteen hundred person* are sick witli typhoid fever in a Lancashire, England. country town Henons disaster# li*vc taken place to many grain-laden vessels on tbn lake* .... The United States Mar Dcpaitmeiil is reducing tho jwr-sonnW of the army to 25,(100 men. thero being about 27.000 ! iu service. Tho reduction will leave one oflioer I lo every eleven men. ....The first iron ever j manufactured in Utah was lately shipped Last. | ... Four HI 1.1 nicer* in Baltimore created cowodoralilo consternation and much painful injury to several jot Mr#. Itapp and bar htiabaud limn attacked Mr. Lick. th* former lining aimed with a knlf* and th* laltnr with a tinner'# #tddrlng Iron, and after knock! ug him ppwtrain they |>** Fur a I \'ctc- Yurktr, 78 Duaue street, N. Y.—. I Cbtn. (an It tie True! Within the last few months a con siderable number of persona have called upon lir. Walker, the proprietor of the popular medicine known aa Vinegar UitU-ra, and assured him that, in their belief, his preparation ia an infallible antidote for rum and tobacco. The , minute details which have been fur nished Lim forbid him to doubt the accuracy of the statements. This new i claim of a great remedy to the confi dence of the public will give a vast aud well-deserved impulse to its popularity. Heretofore the bitters have been recog nized as a pure vegetable tonic and ivjrrective, devoid of alcohol, aud thoroughly adapted to the cure of stomach and boweloomplainta, nervous disorders, bilious affections, muscular diseases, and, indeed, a majoiity of the ailments within the reach of medicine ; but if it will also cute the craving for liquor and tobacco, philosopher*,state* nun and theologians ought to unite the r voices in its praise. Can the good news be true ? It ie ea*y to test the queston.—(Xmi. Sent free, on receipt of neck and breast measure, height weight and price, our i isamplei ' Model i'l Shut " Filled br pa lentsU ni'-de) Hlyhsli and substantial. A( ailtsee.— Dost paint or in# ells H#ir ass urer#, (rat iisylr #t pl( ll#*s's Macao!!* fislm uj u jour is*. e#ck as* harnl*. ai.4 ut# Ly- n't XattUeua upon jour aalr. r*e Bala ail • your eomglealoD r>sail(, #ofl an* natural, and > n ras'i tail >w did It. It ■• freckle#, ten, esi. euii, rtr>* msrka. mulA jtkkit lit and lu (l#c# or* r#d ruaUc fee#, jow uses th# nartl# J-uriiy cf as *s#ui*it Ball#. II (Iki to latldle ><• the kUn* of |>#r|xl*al yout* add liter Set .# lo * #yl#udld *sad of kair yro dured by the *at h*i rcn. sad ■ lady ka# don# a#r usri In way of adorcsi#Bt. Broibar# will kit# a* Dr. Ilaa'l Wsever, of lioslon, isll down a eliitf #h#ft near D#av#r, It fret Be wa# larrtbly tru'.ied, I'm be bn ku, and icppvesd to be d#ad Memlran Muelat-* tiaism wee freely uead, eox.- I'treeiHl reiiersd, hla llf# tared, ant h# cam# b-m#ln#i*fct well. T*te te Ike moat em#d#rf#l erttcle for Broieee, *| etat. Kkcumatlem. iw.l. ne *p*vin. K:e*boue, Borse. #r *. y Beth, Worn# or tanec.lt *l!m#sl up*# man or baset, e*#r di#- i o vered. It It bumauity lo autmale ll ka# tared ntack #*a#naa had meay ceeleet doctor#' kllle Itcas b# hat loi Kelt aid I. OC per bettl* la any 4ru* Her#, liut beware of cowaDrfeil# Th# tenuis# ie wrapped Is * flu# at##l plat* label, attend - O W*. Vk ealbirnk. Chem-.el,"_ Th# Fcoplt'# tlauip at Vela*. - Th# Gov •rascal isdaraemeet, wbtck l*(tl are lb# tela of j riantaltos Bitter#, la sot tk# ooly attmp afiiad to tk*l fm:-ua Vcftukli Toatc. Ii bear*. 1* addi tion bo ikal cOl rial aa-icl.on. lb# *UII mor# valu abl# a tamp of public apprshatloa. Tk a Incatt m*b!# voucher of Ka rare proper Ilea at a Tonic i Corrective and Aiterauv#l# world wide ! —-_ The Markets. MZW TOk*. i Usef OaUla-PTfnie lo rrirk 4 .f*"#* 11% Ootniaoti lo foo.l Telana o*lj# .o*% I MUca ciowe dC.wti *W.(iu Uoa LJve .(%• ,C Drsaaat! (T# .oa% Bhaep jx r lb. .04 •# .M 0 ilea Miit-'.lls. 1S -lM F.aor— Kitr* Wectem d.so • h (Ki Bl#ie Krtr* d • IMI Wial--U<-siern. I.IT #l.l* 80. IVpriua I<4 lon hy# Bartsy—Mall. I J* #l)' (k!f-Mltso W—'TV... *o% 1 Oora-XUslVrahas k a .*< ll#}—per cwt -ho 1 <0 (Hraw—pet owl 40 a 6J Hop# 1. ISi M-a# .0# a .11 Fork—Mesa 20 Jt aOO .s- UK .... 13%* .13% Fetro!tc—CrwO# masad 12 Batter—(Hat* a .♦ Ohio rin# ._3 .24 * 2* •4 TsllOW an * .52 Wiwlsrr Dr-2Ui#l7 30 a .51 Fscnarlvuii# So# • .40 Ohaasi Ittal# racfory lt%* .Id " Bkln-nied (• a. Oh I# 14 •% a 1 Ka ir# -auu SJ a .31 IbMIT. Wheal 1J& l!. Hyt—HUts -Wl k .*0 Oaro—MiieJ • harlry Btab —.. 1.21 ■1 31 Oate—Ptow -•' a.(l temw. F10ur...... S.T* a TMI Wheal No. 2 HrHn* .94 a .99 Cora -M k .33 Oala k .M Bye W • Wl Barley. 1.50 • 1-3* Lard J -1% iiiritfosi. Dot#ra—Lew MhUUnsi 14 a .14% Floor—Kxtr*. U# B.TS Wheal . 1.20 • I*l Oorn-Y#Uow . .M • .BS 0>l.. gM,..,0..w.. 53 a .11 rnita.-ai-rwiA. Floor —Fran. Kxtr# S.W • *. Wheal—Watoni Bed 1.1- W I.l* Oorn-Tsllew '■*> k Mi Mixed W • .09 Fstrolsma—Orode. 04 #o*illsa*i!lo% MASON & HAMLIN CABINET ORGANS. Winner# of TIIB*B lItUIIRfIT MKUAL* awn Mr now* (If Ht.Mi* at VIBNNA. MCX. I'AKt 4, IMT. and In AVKtU. X At.W ATS. bo. la'srt by MUSICIAN* OKNBHAI.I.Y •<> be TKRIVAI Kl> and IBrxMI'AKABi * Bold al fl*ed onlbiim pric#a vo at, whu h are pr'"t beosuss thsy gel tuorispsi diNOvpif on thrm. S*ire orgsns srs currently sold to dealers st sesotay flee psr rsnt. dl r ir sitbe hik'hor ltd pilnled pries aud lb* ii real dlfcouM on 11 Tho * IIAMIAIN OHOAN H. srs now ((Tsrt.itf hps atylr •, tsilh ihpMiinl lirproTt mortt hhd srs •slfing not OU!t hf c*h xclc ■ Ivrly. but sis > ou > f* plans <1 sssy psymsnt*, rtinnlutf lhr*)itgh 0110 year or longsr Thsjr also rnt n*w Oiirsns with prirllfiffi rf pnrchsss. Krit* |alil llirts jcors purrliswi Ills OIKMII. . Hrml for th® Illnstrst®'' Cutsl •'• Clrcn- Isrs, which girv rcr? f ill lofdrmhtios. hhd • ••ut fr.-r. A'Mms.TIIK WAMIW A HAAIiIN (!|((* A N to., st vithcr Now lork, ttosfou, or i'lilrsgo. A Kditis WtDtsd.- Mflu orwoßin. fB4 wsck iV or SIOO forfeit®d. YohuibU mmptlsfr**. stone® to F. M. RFBD, Kiuhth Hlr—l# FSW York. GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK Off art to anil will ifiv# to very Bnbacrlboi.wbstW Suit Id or 111 * I lab, who pave lu Advauco for 1V76, and icralta direct 10 tbl# i Sic#, A Copy of " THE RESCUE." The Haudeomret Chroa*-< ever offarsd. For Circu lar loutatiiln* Term#, etc., addraa# 1.. A. OODBY, N r for. a.xili A I'heetnut 81#., Philadelphia, Pa. 1 f I Beautiful Tran#fc rFlctu re#, Inatrue tva-iileelmioia laallvj|r..lwr4. I liam CkriwKd I# ia. Afmioaabd. 2. L. FAfTZB A CO..UFtaeKXiY. TABLE KNIVES AND FORKS OF All K,ND# ' ari> axcLtrtivs hakim of I vary" orOaltalMA Kktfk. *M ■***•• "•*' ,***. by ..... watar. . ri U* W dmrbhtm >lfW >• " MKIIIIIKI I I II.WHY CtIXPUY™MI tk* l4 WMrßto* * toM k* all •*!*'• CHilarj •! I f t*- hfttii'#* rrTMIT rn . lir.iaM.i kir**t, Raw ¥*. I ¥■•-••• _ Gained Fifteen Pounds of Flesh. *ot>ti ilrnwu i, Mr., Jan. IT, 1§77. 11. It HlVvl.i, Kaq. : iMir Mr Iha id u*4 f>?*ts>*i* In ll* form lur thr Iml tru a*r*. bad b litre t,ui,|.lnla, diaturbod Hoop, and IngtiUul d/waua. FEEL MYSELF A NEW MAN. Jfurica, Maaa., J una 1,17J. Mr. M. It. Kttrui: I mar nir I httiual. thr adflr* ut-1 rwrnaat (wraua ai. ti of Itc*. t. K. that, at ibla Jilarw, I hat* bawn tahum Vrurriaa fur lrjr|w|u. at whtrb I bat# auffrtad lor yrwrw. i hv* naad only two ladtlaa, and already (awl myaatf a new man. HmyaaUuU/, Üb. J. W. (AKTEtt. A Soutoe ol OiMt Auxiety. My dauffciar baa r**t-d (twat l*arl from tha ua* of \ nomas.. Mrr dm itnlud health waa a auuioe uf st rat aniirti to all of has 1 Met,da. A lam buttiaa at the YauSf is* rrut..red her health.atrwngth and iptMttte X. It Tll-htK, In*, and Heal Kotato As' , to hear# bulidthf. Ihietoa, Maaa., J una I, I*7l. What I Know About VegetinA ho. TB Itoaros, May t, ITO. M. U. Urinal: lrrar hir—l haa had nonmdmtda eiperimo# with the V sooth a For l>) *|<*|*tto, (hawil IrrbUlty, and impure blued, tba Vauirtll la aujartor to any. Ihiii* Which I bate rear uard. 1 commanoad tat the Vsuettat atrout the middle at laat winter, a id after uetns a few Irdtlee it entirely cured me of J>*-p*f>- ata, end my tiluod tirtrr wae 10 bu food mtidtUrm aa at the jwrwrtil tin.. It will af old me phnaaura to glee any further particulate retaUra to what I know gUijt thl* feud fneduttne, to any one who will call or addrwae ma al my maidenne, Wt Athene Htted. Yery reaperiluiiy, MullK'lK PAhhEH, AM. Athene huwat. VKUKTIYK te teld by all t>-Ml*l. TXXN OBM[eHB THE CHEAPEST AND BEST PAPER IN THE COUNTRY. ANNUM Uneicelled by any Weekly Literary Publication, East or West. ' CASYASSERS WASTED IN EVERY TOWS IS THE UNITED STATES. Tha r-It Liberal Eraaatame aad Cl*k *'**••' < frrtd by any unwipapar Writ# lor a Cirraiar .u-ntair t>. full tt.f rroatton. ate iparimaa coplaa turntahad on applirauob AS4r-** TIIK I.KIMiRE mtll'ttY, CHICAOO. ILL. Thr OLDEST LITEEA&Y PA FEE Ik AMERICA IX April laat tha preaant Editor and pioprtaior tn.k cka>we of tha E<*t, a 4 neither money uor labor haee bear, enarrd tine* make it the. t>eet Literary and Family paper u thte caatry It te now a larwe n*at Jubrnal. prteta* ua flse wkita |>*j-*r, fcaar.on.ely t luetrated and reataiti. Mtf*t|tt soluma* of lb* rkotatel ma* tey-* 'aryrr fan* if tae rartioa, amßtem.nt and nt.taruiopient tkan I* any other paper pshliabod. Ttini l.r ITt - Ail poatawe pal i by a. - una m py. bur month., f! 0. .ta nmiti I Sr. on* year, §S Wv lint tar.e .--t e'.my. t"' p. nmeo enpy. i n. J. . U tI.KKK. Pdl'or and Fiey'r, TAT t% eleai a .. ril.irlybte. AQLKTB WASTED TOR THE TRUE HISTORY OX* THE BROOKLYN SCANDAL TK* ••4u.jf rtrtlAt ori asß BYArllitif dlF de In M br. Itnrk'a only IB |II |WI kutiau & Kurr Krtaeily. VI I Vlul NO CUAUGE tor treat men t until cunsl. (%11 on or add ma DR* J. C. BECK. CiktciaaaU. O. STEINWAY Grid, Spare & Dprijlt Pianos, ■u part or to al! othera. Ketry r.aoo Warranted for Fi.. Tear. lUaatratad t ul wttea, w.lk Prlo* Llat. matte* free on appl r.t 00. hTKtfiWAT 4 M*l. Xoa 187. W§ a I I Kett Utk htrret. ye Torlt. apL^jmn^KNßMßf Rtjrrl all Vtaleat rnnratlrca. Tkay rate tba ton* of tha bowata, aud weakan ifcadifftaMM. Tarrhct i Effarratoect Scltscr Apar*#• I •trtictiooa wit Bout ptln, Nod toipk*t rtffor to IB* orvmat wfairli ll l>oriß< and NfilllCl. ftnld by a 1 firogiiin FC o FOA rtr fy ti bom#. Tfrtas Frif. A4* #0 h 9V ftro. R|ttio*t 4 i o . 1 vrtUnd.Matd* Pf Lur h Wf'k. twi PlTttCt' t? i. lar# free J. AOKTH 4CO . (it tx,la. Mr. Subscription Books (treat Indu. eme*te to Ar,li . r t. rat. are rip ratal., acdreee Nr. V.tu PeatmraCr . 1 b ta FUR RKARLY THIRTY k ktßi TIIK Richmond Prints ha*r aee. heia to b.|ca a.teim ky th.-te we. u.e a (Wtie They are prodaced In ail lb* toeallteaol rhat ytey f.ahlou*. and la rooaereatiea alyle* • lilted t. the want* of maiiy pataona. Amctig tba latter are tha "STANDARD GRAY STYLES," lb# bout* or ftr*f b+anl-rtal in 4- •tiriia nrd t Inwliii tn wLortDf. CHOCOLATE STANDARD STYLES In grant enr.ety, and wtdtly kaoarn aa moat a*r eioaabl# prime X. , Vug batter f r daily waar. Thee* gueda hear ftrlrf* el ynofed al- iw T Be retailer ahnlJ haee them, and your < kemlnailon and approval wilt ootorldr \ K ralakVantertt ee:n 111 y; K► k a A.-: .■ ael* Can Opeuar, pat. Jaue IJM letg* proftia Aad'a ■ai.nfart ttret p o. 8., ttne. hi tdgap-irt, ft. OOK AGENTS WASTED nlw booJELL IT ALL Hf Vim Strnhno** of City, for t!* v*; lb# Wtit of • .Mtvmno lluh I'llNt la dotliirtkaa br Br. No Th Ntry of • omAtt'a cSfwt trnr Uy t*rr the " kt „stm k'f,* '• j at nn, irfuri iitBjjL *l f Um Ncmit n* m a •• wdt dtwßfr Ythwfk *r*§ iWik" Bnghl. Put ] Mid 1 *■*!. l I* the N4 t*r U-cV cat. fettiftUjr 1 0 with ci*l lw mU- It k ererym her*. * >th catwa taoki*. MmJ (HitarlL alt other Unl* tAirr a# rv M tnOif* jt iyarrW 1 " Etn icot wifnr* (hAww t f hToltpd* IRU tit 4 kfratY arv aaUnf Jmm 1 o to 8(1 • t! B y f fWfxiw/ Mir N • w sat .**> •*"▼ trwatk aeeaL MIH Mht or Mr\>nco —l*4 vr ill mail •( ni rht ii ihr who mill nann. jwrnphWU with lull perttrular*. Ktwr. ate. mrmt jtvr • uA AihlraM Aaih Wuiiumun > ilarUonl. OoiA l(|T riRtHN 1111 wtw-Mi, I>. W. Frtbri, Ml I/Mnoum. xf I, A( %ht> imly Autbrotlc aud AuthArtso4 Life yrcbllahcd , SOU p*e ; baau ttfnlljr lllritrttrd. Aptnit a^iafef . ular• at| all oar work* fre*. AddfWi nrSTIN. OIL MAW 8 CO.. HsrtlbH, Own. ( W ANTED ? r TIIK CKN IKNMAI. IV n i 7r r r r TVrD th * UDtted Stale* vI I\CJZ* 1 1 LLA Sbowtßir lh* grud ra •a ltd of our flrtl lUO Iran. Knrrbody bayi It. Bon I for circular. Zleflrr dt MTunli, Philadelphia. la , or Wprihflrflrld. Matt. niTD 1 41 •• contain* 7 article® UUU I by •▼•rjr Lady—Tatant Spool ---w_ I H ld*r, Bci*o- , Thimble, .to tfUArat UPWIIbbU wu*tkßl Ham pi* fk>K.by mnm.a V. 1,M0,(0 King*. ,V/gM TO.OOO Clagera, yAmT 8.C.00 Teag* MA X \i BMrdware Dealart j1 I Tbeaa. ■ ■ \ horrr s>, ki D y.,r KOdOcta, Te*r.|l,T,kyn..fl, UpiSr Cuckfth... Addr.ee 'SSBagagy .w.aiM.4oo t &imtiu. f|YHB OHOIXAL *l* ^LTJiLIu/ f oa dird*'! DbF iT f ! ... w. i a.ur.ri direct to Ik# Ft.etdeat at t25 rj;- si .V£"i7Vr yey it. apply hdW. >■ ■■■ 11' a l>*RTlaa I dan* • "'J-tor ?Mr WISHART'S PINE TREE TAB COBDIIL It t* hot* (I'traa year* alhd* tk* *• R*** put/It* wee ■ et ealidd ky lf. L t|, C. WiebhdTttJ • hi* wordarfut remedy, a..* do well lei It MM tha I**l at llm* thai ta dry II not oaly Aa* la* *•*• /U-*af Ik* itr* maaialt). but I* **nf* '(► ..in t .re* r.b#i ky phrdtctaa*t* thatr prdttlaw than ai y other propriatary pie yet allow tnth# email y, II id tk# eital principal at tk* Flo* Trnw uatmaAt ay a p euUar pr—ee .a tk. dltuUhdiM of tk. Ta/. ky aim It# fctfu* hMkoel tla* ar# ret*.and 1./ tha following Complain**, Iklenael on * Tea* Tar 0alkl, wklrfc had the. Be. to earing m* ta a tow day#. I hat* mead It IB aiy temlly lecenam.iaf MIM th* opinio* that it lite, iha I f. of mi tiefklM. wt* wae awßerlu, from a ****>* an a p.tatot aaagh. if taa pueitoattoa rf thia will b* to bay aateiea. yoa */# at Una. ty to tea it. (car* ta*p*ctfniJp Jul! ddOdfTT. •t. leohla. MM. * rot aai* ay ad maggitU aa* (wralMftfl ahO " Or. L Q. C. WISHARTS Office, Wo. 232 K SacoM BL Fhflkdolphia, Pa. 511 i>r. J. Walker's California f in egar Bitters ar a purely Veffet*Ma preparation, mads chiefly from tba na ture herbs found on iha lower ran gee at the Sierra Nevada mountains of Caludr nia, the mediciual properties of which 1 are exiracled there6otu without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked. "What is ibe cause of lbs unparalleled success of Vinegar Bit- TEHsf"* Our answer is. that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient re covers his health. They are the great blood purifier and a life-giving pnucipie, a perfect Kcnovator and lcvigorator of the svstem. Never before io the hisloiy of' the world be* s medians beea compounded poaaktoitig lbs remarkable quail urn of Yixkgab Dirntu in beshnftbe sick of every disease roan u beir to. Tbey ay s genUs Purgsuvs as well as s Touxj, relieving Cosgeaiion or lnflstcmslioe ol the Liver and Visceral Orgsas, in Bilious I Mif llfl The properties of Dr. Walter's Vikboas lIIT7 ku are ApenenL luanhoretic, Csnninsiire, Nutritious. Laxative, Diuretic, bedauve. Counter ImUuit, Sudorific, Altecse Lre. and Ar,L Bilious. Grateful Thousands proclaim Vrx eg ar Bitters the most wonderful In vigorsat that ever sustained the susktag system. No Person can fake these Bitters according to directions, and remain ion*: unwell, provided their bone* are not de stroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. Bilious Remittent and Inter mittent Fevers which are so preva lent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois. Tennessee, Cumberland. Arkan sas. Bed. Colorado. Brazos. KlO Grande, i'carl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro anoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during sea sons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive de rangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful influence upon these various or gans, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for "the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker's Vixegar Bitters, as tbey will speedily remove the dark colored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, aud generally restoriug the healthy fauctions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vixegar : Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head ache. Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness. Sour Eructations of the Stomach. Bad Tasto in the Mouth. Bilious Attacks. Palpita tation of the Ifcart. Inflammation of the Lungs. Pain in the region of the Kid neys, aud a hundred other painful symp toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise ment. . Scrofula, or King's Evil, Whito Swailing*. Ulcers. Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre. Scrofulous Inflammations Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of tho Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Bis rsse*. Walk kr'h Vixecar Bittkrx have shown their great curative powers in tho most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism. Gout, Bilious. Remit tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no euual. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood* Mechanical Diseases. —Persons en gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowel*. To guard against this, take a dose of Walker's Vix koar Bitt i?its occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tet ter, Sal'.-Khctim, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, CaYbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald head. Sore Eyes, Erysipelas. Itch, Scurfs. Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a'short time by the use of these Bitters. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, [ are effectually destroyed and re'moVed. No I system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an- thelminitics will free the system from worms like these Bitters. For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo manhood, or the tarn of life, these Tonic i Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when ever yon find its imparities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when yon find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it u | fool; your feelings will tell you when. Keep ! the blood pore, and the health of the system will follow. it. 11. Mcdonald tk co„ I Dintrpuu and Gen. A (to.. San Pr&nctoeo. California, and cor. of Wa*Uacvm and Chariton 6t0.. w. T. sold kg aUArafiUU aad Btakn, _ ,